Industrial Window Case Study: Barge Unloader Cab

We’ve recently have had several inquiries from power generation plants having issues with barge unloader cab windows.  Cincinnati Gasket was able to draw on our long experience with tough industrial window applications to provide the perfect solution for these problems.

 Inside of barge unloader cabCincinnati Gasket & Industrial Glass window assemblies recently installed in a barge unloader

 

It’s basically just a large crane cab, so what’s the big issue?

Due to the high overwater location and outward slope of the cab windows, they are not accessible for cleaning from the outside.  The windows must be easily removed and taken outside the cab for periodic cleaning.  In particular, lime dust clings tenaciously to the windows, reducing visibility.  This involves acid-based cleaners, so the windows must be made from materials that can stand up to the chemicals.

The previous window systems had removable inner frames glazed with dual-pane insulated glass (referred to as “sealed units”Windows from original equipment manufacturer in barge unloader in the window business).  These inner frame assemblies were held using threaded hold-downs on “all-thread” studs.

Mounted on the structural  steel between panes,  in one case the studs protruded several inches into the cab.   As a result, they were a “catch” hazard. Some were  bent at various angles from being impacted many times.

Another issue was that the fit of the removable inner frames in the existing structure was poor, allowing outside air, dust, rain, and snow to come into the cab. 

 OEM windows – poor fit, hard to remove and clean

Finally, the large size of the windows resulted in the inner frames being quite heavy and awkward to maneuver into and out of the cab for cleaning.

   

CINCINNATI GASKET & INDUSTRIAL GLASS  WINDOW SYSTEM

 After visiting the sites to discuss the issues and measure the existing window openings, Cincinnati Gasket & Industrial Glass proposed replacement systems that included new permanently mounted outer frames, to hold replaceable inner frame assemblies.  Features of the new system include:

  • Mullions to split the removable frames into smaller units, for lower weight and easier handling during cleaning operations.

Cincinnati Gasket windows inside barge unloader cab

  • The mullions were located at an agreed-upon height to minimize sight line interference during barge unloading

 

  • Cincinnati Gasket’s wedge-and-retainer retention system
    • Easy removal and re-installation of inner frames for cleaning
    • Tight and secure mounting of the inner frames
    • Low profile system has no parts protruding into the cab

Close up of Cincinnati Gasket barge windows in barge unloader cab

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • A combination of heat reflective and tinted glass to minimize heat gain and glare in the cab.
  • Stainless steel inner frame construction for resistance to potentially corrosive cleaning chemicals
  • Silicone rubber seals in the inner and outer frame construction to minimize leakage of air, dust, rain, and snow into the cab
  • Handles on all inner frames to facilitate changes and cleaning

Barge unloader cab windows

 

 

Since the installation of the Cincinnati Gasket & Industrial Glass system, customer feedback has been extremely positive.  With the careful positioning of the mullions, operators report that the smaller size and weight of the removable frame assemblies makes the cleaning operation much safer and easier.   Even with the added mullions, there is no interference in operator sight lines during barge unloading.  The improved fit of the high quality stainless steel inner frames has eliminated intrusion of dust, rain, and outside air into the cab.   With the Cincinnati Gasket & Industrial Glass window system, the barge unloader has become a cleaner, safer, and more comfortable place to work.

 

 

FOR INDUSTRIAL WINDOWS IN DIRTY, HOT, AND TOUGH ENVIRONMENTS, CALL CINCINNATI GASKET & INDUSTRIAL GLASS 

 

 

Gasket Terminology Primer from Machine Design, Volume 2

We recently ran across a very nice primer from Stephan Mraz of Machine Design, and passed along the first installment in our last newsletter.  Below is the second one.  We hope you find it helpful!

Gasket Glossary, Vol. 2 (E through L)

Questions about a term that has something to do with gaskets? Get a concise definition here.

Elasticity: The property of an part or material which tends to return to its original shape after deformation.

Elastic Modulus: The value of the load (in pounds per square inch of original cross-section) required to give an intermediate elongation. It is also called the modulus at that elongation. Tensile-stress observations of this sort are useful in characterizing compounds by referring to the position and shape of its stress-curve.

Elastomer: A macromolecular material which in the vulcanized state at room temperature can be stretched repeatedly to at least twice its original length and which, upon release of the stress, immediately returns to approximately its original length.

Elongation: In the physical testing of rubber, the increase in length of a test-piece when stretched, usually expressed as a percentage of the original length; for example, a 1-in. piece stretched to 6 in. has an elongation of 500%. Elongation at break, the elongation of a test-piece at the moment of rupture, is usually expressed as percentage of the original length.

Emboss: A process of forming a portion of the substrate that rises above the normal level of the substrate.

Embossed sheet: An embossed sheet is one with a prominent, impressed texture or pattern on its surface(s). If the defined texture is applied only to the surface, it is most properly termed a coined surface. If the texture or pattern carries through the entire body of the sheet and appears on both surfaces, it is a true embossed surface.

Embrittlement: The process in which a rubber compound becomes brittle during low or high temperature exposure or in the process of aging.

Encapsulated O-rings: A rubber O-ring with a thin jacket of PTFE or PTFE surrounding the softer core material, which lets it be used in chemical applications.

EPDM: Ethylene Propylene Dienemethylene Terpolymer: A polymer created in a sulfur cure system. Known for resisting weathering and high temperatures, EPDM rubbers are used extensively in outdoor applications. They withstand exposure to all types of weather, including sunlight, ozone, and oxidants. Excellent resistance to animal and vegetable oils, water, steam, and oxygenated solvents.

Etching: To produce a pattern or design on a hard material by eating into the material’s surface.

Excluders: Also called wipers or scrapers, these devices are used in hydraulic and pneumatic cylinders to scrape the rod clean and keep debris out of the cylinder.

Expanded Rubber: Cellular rubber with closed cells made from a solid rubber compound.

Extra Deep Drawing Steel: Sheet of this designation has superior formability and excellent uniformity. It is produced from steel having a very low carbon content with stabilizing elements added to make it interstitial-free. It is a non-aging steel sheet with high resistance to thinning during drawing, and is suitable for critical forming applications.

Extra Smooth Galvanized: This extra-smooth finish is imparted to hot-dip metallic-coated steel sheet by temper rolling after coating to decrease the surface relief that occurs when the molten coating solidifies. The spangle pattern (grain pattern) is made distinctly less visible by the matte finish imparted by the rolling operation. Most extra-smooth sheet is intended for either pre-painted or post-painting applications.

Extrusion: (1) Distortion, under pressure, of portion of seal into clearance between mating metal parts. (2) Material, under pressure, which is forced through the opening of a die in order to obtain a desired cross-sectional shape.

F

Face Seals: Rubber rings used like a gasket between two flat pieces of metal.

Failure Modes Analysis (FMA): A formal, structured procedure used to analyze failure mode data from both current and prior processes to prevent similar failure modes in the future.

Fastener Seals: See Bonded Seals.

Feasibility: A determination that a process, design, procedure, or plan can be successfully accomplished in the required timeframe.

Fiber Seal Rings: A gasket or other die cut, waterjet cut, or formed ring used to seal between two surfaces.

Filler: Any compounding material, usually in powder form, added to rubber in a substantial volume to improve quality or lower cost. The most important reinforcing filler is carbon black. The most important inert filler, diluent, or extender is whiting.

Finish, Mold: The quality or appearance of the machined surface of a mold.

Finish, Product: The quality or appearance of the surface of a rubber product.

Finite Element Analysis: A technique for modeling a complex structure. When the mathematical model is subjected to known loads, the displacement of the structure may be determined.

Flange Packing: A pipe flange gasket.

Flange Seals: A seal used on the bolt-up flange on a hydraulic system, usually on the hose fitting or pipe flanges.

Flash: Excess rubber on a molded product caused by cavity overflow at the parting lines where the mold sections are separated.

Flatness: Flatness is a measure of a cut length sheet’s ability to conform to a flat horizontal surface. Maximum deviation from that surface is the degree to which the sheet is out of flat. Flatness is often expressed quantitatively in either Steepness or I-Units.

Flex Cracking: Cracking of the surface of rubber articles such as tires and footwear resulting from constantly repeated bending or flexing in service.

Flow Marks: Surface imperfections due to improper flow and failure of stock to knit or blend with itself during the molding operation.

Foil: Another name for thin-gauge aluminum.

Friction: Resistance to motion due to the contact of surfaces.

G

Gap Seals: A seal ring used to seal between the gaps of metal or plastic.

Gasket: A flat, non-moving, compressible rubber-like device squeezed between two flat surfaces forming a static seal. Gaskets can be made from homogeneous rubber, fabric reinforced rubber, fibrous materials with rubber binders, flexible graphite, PTFE, and many other materials. Some gaskets are made from a combination of metal and fibrous materials and some are all metal. An O-ring, while not flat, is also referred to as a gasket at times.

Gasket (Mechanical): Usually a deformable material clamped between stationary faces to effectively seal the coupling. Gaskets are used to guard against the passage of liquids, gases, etc.

Gate: (rubber injection or transfer mold): The orifice used to control the flow of rubber, and through which a shaped cavity in a mold is filled with rubber.

Gland Bearing Rings: Also called guide rings or wear rings. Used as a bearing surface for the rod of a hydraulic ram or cylinder.

Gland Seals: Seals or packings used as the main sealing device in a ram or cylinder.

Glass Temperature (Tg): The temperature at which a rubber becomes glass-like. A more recent name for the Second Order Transition point.

Glass Transition Point: Temperature at which a material loses its glass-like properties and becomes a semi-liquid.

Globe Valve Discs: PTFE rings used to seal in a globe valve.

Gloss: The property of a surface related to its ability to reflect light. The most common type of gloss in term of appearance is specular gloss. The parameters which must be specified for determining this property are the angles of incidence of the light source, the angle of viewing of the gloss, and the angular dispersions of the measuring beams.

Glyd Ring: Also known as wear rings or guide rings. Made from plastic, PTFE, or soft metal to act as a bearing surface for a cylinder rod.

Grain: The unidirectional orientation of rubber or filler particles occurring during processing (extrusion, milling, calendering), resulting in anisotropy of a rubber vulcanizate.

Grain Direction: The arrangement of a pattern on the material.

Grease Seals: Also called oil seals, rotary seals, or shaft seals. They are made of rubber to seal grease in housings with rotating shafts.

Green Strength: (1) An uncured rubber’s resistance to deformation, (2) Uncured adhesion between plied or spliced surfaces.

Grommets: A rubber ring used to fit into a hole in sheet metal. They let wires, shafts and rods through a housing without touching the metal.

Guiding Elements: Wear rings, guide rings, and bearing rings for hydraulic cylinder rods.

Gauge: The thickness of a material.

Guide Rings: See also wear rings, guide rings, or bearing rings. They are usually made from a form of PTFE.

H

H-Ring: Also called H-Wiper. An H shaped rod wiper ring made from NBR or polyurethane for a hydraulic or pneumatic cylinder.

Hand: The subjective or relative “feel” of a material, indicating pliability, texture, and even desirability of a material for tactile contact.

Hardness (a): The relative resistance of rubber to the penetration (without puncturing) of a blunt point impressed on its surface.

Hardness (b): Resistance of metal to penetration of the surface.

Hat Packings: Usually made from leather, it is used as a rod seal or ram seal in a hydraulic cylinder.

Heat History: The accumulated amount of heat a rubber stock has been subjected to during processing operations, usually after incorporation of the vulcanizing agents. Incipient cure or scorch can take place if heat history has been excessive.

Heavy Gauge Foil: Aluminum foil greater than 0.008 thick (8 mils).

High Pressure Seals: Seals to be used in high pressure hydraulic applications made from PTFE, urethane, or fabric reinforced material.

Hot Rolled Sheet: Steel sheet that is processed to its final thickness by rolling at high temperatures on a specially designed hot-rolling facility. Also commonly known as hot rolled unprocessed.

Hot Rolled Sheet Non-Temper Rolled: A U.S. Steel definition for product supplied as a coil directly off the hot strip mill with no additional processing.

Hot Rolled Sheet Pickled: A U.S. Steel definition for a mill edge coil that is pickled, oiled, and temper rolled with coil ends cropped back to meet gauge tolerances.

Hot Rolled Sheet Pickled Non-Temper Rolled: A U.S. Steel definition for a mill edge coil that is pickled and oiled with coil ends cropped back to meet gauge tolerances.

Hydraulic Cylinder Kits: A selection of seals used to completely repair a cylinder or ram.

Hydraulic Packings: Packing rings used in a hydraulic ram or cylinder.

Hydrolysis: Chemical decomposition of a substance involving the addition of water.

Hysteresis (a): The heat generated by rapidly deforming a vulcanized rubber part. It is the difference between the energy of the deforming stress and the energy of the recovery cycle.

Hysteresis (b): Hysteresis or energy loss is the difference between the work input and the work output as measured under the curves or extension and retraction (stress and elongation curves). The difference becomes heat build-up.

I

Inclusions: Particles of foreign material (such as oxides, sulfides, or silicates) in steel as cast.

Impact Test: A test which is intended to evaluate the brittleness, toughness, adhesion, and hardness of paint films applied to metals by subjecting them to an indent impact force.

Injection Molding: A method of forming articles (such as plastic) by heating the molding material until it can flow and injecting it into a mold.

Insert: A part, usually metal, placed in a mold that appears as an integral part of the molded product.

Internal Mixer: An enclosed mixing machine for rubber or other suitable material, inside or which two heavy mixing rotors revolve in opposite directions with a small clearance between themselves. The mixing chamber is jacketed or otherwise arranged for water-cooling, and is provided with a feeding hopper which can be closed by a pneumatically operated, vertical ram. Leading examples are the Banbury, Boiling, and Shaw mixers.

IRHD (International Rubber Hardness): For complete definition, see ASTM D 1415-68 Standard Method of Test for International Hardness of Vulcanized Natural and Synthetic Rubbers.

Isolators: A term used to describe a bearing seal, which replaces an oil seal and provides more reliable sealing.

K

Kantseal: A brand name of a special seal.

Kiss-Cut: Die-cutting material so that it remains attached in sheet or roll-form. The finished pieces are easily peeled from the release liner. It is often used on release liners to accommodate their use.

Knit mark: Visible mark where raw stock did not unite into a homogeneous mass during the vulcanization. This is also called poor knitting. See Flow marks.

K-Type Fluid Seals: A K shaped sealing ring used in hydraulic or pneumatic cylinders.

L

Labyrinth Seals: A non-contacting, rotary seal with a series of internal grooves to divert the flow and lubricating fluids in the direct of its source used on a shaft.

Laminate: Product made by bonding together two or more layers of like or unlike materials.

Lantern Rings: A spacer ring with grooves and port holes used in the stuffing box of a pump or other rotating equipment utilizing braided packings, allowing an outside source of lubrication.

Lathe Cut Seals: A seal or gasket ring cut square on a lathe.

Liner Side: The adhesive side covered by the release liner.

Lip Packing and Rings: Could be the description of a U-cup or of an oil seals. A seal with a lip design to provide sealing.

Lip Seals: Seal rings having lips to provide a flexible, dynamic sealing against a shaft.

Loaded Lip Seals: A hydraulic U-cup which has an O-ring or quad ring fitted into the U-shaped groove to assure good low pressure sealing on a reciprocating shaft.

Loaded U-Cups: Same as loaded lip seals.

Low Film: A thin film of oil on the shaft of a hydraulic cylinder.

Low Temperature Flexibility: The ability of a rubber product to be flexed, bent, or bowed at specified low temperature without loss of serviceability.

Gasket Terminology Primer from Machine Design: Volume 1

We recently ran across a very nice primer from Stephan Mraz of Machine Design, and wanted to share it with our subscribers.  Like the guys at MD, we’ll split it into separate installments to keep the length down.  We hope you find it helpful!

Gasket Glossary, Vol. 1 (A through D):

Questions about a term that has something to do with gaskets? Get a concise definition here.
Go to a specific letter:A B C D

Image courtesy of Thinkstock

Gaskets embody a host of different technologies. There are the myriad natural and synthetic materials they can be made out of, the cutting and finishing processes used to tailor them to specific applications and conditions, and the measurements and test engineers rely on to evaluate them. Here’s a long list of words and terms used in one these aspects of gasket design, manufacturing, and application, from abrasion to zinc oxide:

Abrasion: The wearing away of a material surface by friction. Particles become detached by a combined cutting, shearing, and tearing action. Furnace carbon blacks are the best ingredients found for increasing the resistance of rubber compounds to abrasion.

Abrasion Resistance: The resistance of a material to loss of surface particles due to friction.

Accelerated Aging: These are procedures for subjecting pressure-sensitive label stock (and other materials) to special environmental conditions to predict the course of natural aging.

Acetate: A plastic synthesized from cellulose dissolved in acetic acid which exhibits rigidity, dimension stability, and ink receptivity.

Acid Resistant:Withstands the action of acids.

Acrylic Adhesive: Adhesive made from acrylic monomers that have been polymerized. They have good resistance to UV radiation, plasticizers, and extreme temperatures.

Adapters: A V-shaped ring, either male or female, to fit together with V-shaped rings to form a set of adjustable hydraulic packing.

Adhesion (a): The state in which two surfaces are held together by interfacial forces which may consist of molecular forces or interlocking action, or both.

Adhesion (b): The clinging or sticking of two material surfaces to one another. In rubber parlance, the strength of bond or union between two rubber surfaces cured or uncured. It also describes bonds between cured rubber surfaces and non-rubber surfaces such as those of glass, metal, wood, or fabric.

Adhesion Failure: The separation of two materials at the surface interface rather than within one of the materials itself.

Aging (a): (1) The irreversible change of material properties after environmental exposure for an interval of time; (2) Exposing materials to an environment for an interval of time.

Aging (b): Changes in physical and mechanical properties that occur when low carbon steel is stored for some time. Aging is also accelerated by exposure of steel to elevated temperatures.

Aging (c): A progressive change in the chemical and physical properties or rubber, especially vulcanized rubber, usually marked by deterioration. Aging may be retarded by the use of antioxidants.

Artificial Aging: Speeding up the natural aging cycle by heating the metal for a short time.

Air Curing: Vulcanizing a rubber product in air, as distinguished from vulcanizing in a press or steam vulcanizer.

Aluminum: A pliable, lightweight metal that has good electrical and thermal conductivity, high reflectivity, and resistance to oxidation.

Aluminum Seal Rings: Sealing rings for pistons made from high-grade aluminum alloy.

AMS: American Military Standards.

Annealing: A process involving high-temperature heating and cooling of the as-rolled cold rolled steel substrate to make it softer and more formable.

Anodize: The controlled oxidation of aluminum using an electro-chemical process to create a porous surface that is receptive to color dying.

Anti-Extrusion Rings: Also called back-up rings or anti-extrusion rings, used to fit behind rubber O-ring seals to prevent extrusion into the gap between the metal pieces.

Antioxidant: Usually organic and nitrogenous. A substance which inhibits or retards oxidation and other types of aging. Some antioxidants cause staining or discoloration of rubber compounds on exposure to light and are used only in black or dark-colored goods. Others (phenolic), described as non-staining, are used in white or light-colored goods.

Anti-Stick Coatings: Surface treatments that prevent gasket materials from adhering to flanges.

Anti-Vibration Mounts: Rubber molded pieces used as padding between a motor and the frame to prevent vibration transfer to the machine to which it is mounted.

Apportionment: Referred to here as a part of Reliability Engineering. Synonymous with the term Reliability Apportionment, which is the assignment of reliability goals from system to subsystem in such a way that the whole system will have the required reliability.

Assortment Kits: A convenient package containing several sizes of the same seal, O-ring, or retainer ring.

ASTM: American Society for Testing and Materials.

Automatic U-joints: Also called u-cups, these shaped sealing rings are made from a strong pliable plastic or rubber.

B

Backer Coat: Usually refers to the coating on the reverse side of a prepainted sheet. The backer coating is generally not as narrowly specified with reference to its color, thickness, and composition, as is the topcoat.

Backrinding: Defect in which the rubber adjacent to the mold parting line shrinks below the level of the molded product, often leaving the parting line ragged and torn.

Backringing: Distortion at the mold parting line, usually in the form of wrinkles, folds, tears, or indentions. In severe cases may cause overall dimensional changes.

Baffle Rings: A ring used to slow the flow of fluids along a shaft.

Ball Valve Seats: A PTFE ring shaped to fit against the ball in a flow control valve.

Batch: The product of the one mixing operation in an intermittent process.

Bearings: A machined or molded plastic ring used as a guide ring or wear ring in a hydraulic cylinder.

Beater Additives: A water-based process used to make gasket material where the elastomer is chemically deposited onto the fibers and fillers.

Bearing Seals: A seal ring made to snap-fit into a ball, roller, or spherical bearing to exclude dust, dirt, or trash.

Bellows: A corrugated rubber or plastic piece which can stretch with a shaft to keep the shaft clean.

Belts: A v-belt, flat belt, or drive belt made from plastic or rubber.

Bezel: A grooved rim, which holds another covering or item. Similar to a frame.

Bias Angle: (1) Acute angle between the direction of the cut and the diameter of the wrap in the production of wrapping for hose; (2) Acute angle between the direction of the cut and the direction of the cords in the production of fabric plies.

Bill of Material: Total list of all components/materials required to manufacture the product.

Binder: The elastomer (or rubber) used in gasket material.

Bloom: An efflorescent coating creating a discoloration or visual change on the surface of a material. Sometimes caused by the migration of a substance to the surface of product, it can also be normal in some organic materials (sulfur or wax bloom).

Blister: A cavity or sac that deforms the surface of a material.

Blowing Agent: Chemicals mixed with a compounded into many formulations that form gases to create cellular structures, such as sponge rubber.

Bond: The union of materials by use of adhesives.

Bonded Seals: A seal created by a flat steel washer with a rubber sealing ring molded into the center that fits over a bolt.

Bonding Agents: Substances or mixtures of substances used for attaching rubber to metal, fabrics, or other substrates. Generally the rubber compound is vulcanized by heat in the process. Cyclized rubber or rubber isomers, halogenated rubber, rubber hydrochloride, reaction product of natural rubber and acrylonitrile, and polymers containing diisocyanates are all used.

Brittleness: Tendency to crack when subjected to deformation.

Bumpers: A rubber or plastic part used to prevent metal-to-metal contact.

Buna N: A general term for the copolymers of butadiene and acrylonitrile. Typical commercial polymers are Hycar and Paracril.

Buna S: A general term for the copolymers of butadiene and styrene.

Bushing: A rubber or plastic spacer to provide a wear surface around a shaft.

Butadiene: CH2 = CH – CH = CH2. A gaseous hydrocarbon of the diolefin series that boils at 5°C. Also known as erythrene, divinyl, pyrollylene, polymerizable, and polybutadiene. Butadiene is the chief raw material for making the synthetic rubbers today. Co-polymerized with styrene it yields SBR or GR-S; with acrylonitrile the various Buna N or nitrile synthetic rubbers are obtained.

Butyl: Isobutylene isoprene (IIR). Produced by copolymerizing isobutylene with isoprene. These rubbers exhibit excellent impermeability to gases, excellent dielectric properties, good tear-resistance, good aging at elevated temperatures, and good chemical stability.

Butt Joint: Joining two ends of material whereby the junction is perpendicular to the ID of an O-ring.

Butyl: A synthetic rubber of the polybutene type exhibiting very low permeability to gases.

Butyl Rubber: A copolymer of isobutylene and isoprene, polymerized almost instantaneously in methyl chloride with aluminum chloride at about ≤140°F. Butyl is resistant to ozone and the action of many other corrosive chemicals. Butyl rubber is resistant to permeation by gases.

C

Caliper: The thickness of a sheet material. The thickness is usually expressed in one thousands of an inch and in millimeters (e.g., 0.050 is expressed as 50 mils).

Camber: The deviation of a side edge from a straight line, the measurement being taken on the concave side with a straight edge.

Carbon black (a): Elemental carbon in finely divided form used to reinforce elastomeric compounds.

Carbon Black (b): Finely divided carbon formed by the incomplete combustion of natural gas or petroleum in large, closed furnaces.

Carbon Steel: Steel which owes its properties chiefly to carbon without substantial amounts of other alloying elements; also known as straight carbon steel or plain carbon steel.

Catalyst: A chemical in small quantities which accelerates a chemical reaction without itself necessarily becoming part of the final product.

Cavity: The area on a die where blades are formed to cut. A die with one or more cutouts that are the same size for each label cut.

Cellular Rubber: Rubber products which contain cells or small hollow receptacles. The cells may either be open or interconnecting or closed and not interconnecting.

Characteristics Matrix: An analytical technique for displaying the relationship between process parameters and manufacturing stations.

Checking: Short, shallow cracks on the surface of a rubber product that are created by damage from environmental conditions.

Checking Sunlight: The development of minute surface fissures as a result of exposing rubber articles to sunlight, generally accelerated by bending or stretching.

Chemical Resistance: The resistance offered by elastomer products to physical or chemical reactions as a result of contact with or immersion in various solvents, acids, alkalis, salts, etc.

Chemical Treatment: An aqueous solution of corrosion-inhibiting chemicals, typically chromates or chromate/phosphate.

Chevron Packings: Also called v-packing, vee packing, Chevron packing, parachute packing, or v-set packing. A complete vee packing set contains multiple v-shaped sealing rings stacked and nested together with a male adapter on one end and a female adapter on the other end.

Chloroprene: 2-Chloro-l, 3-butadiene, a volatile, colorless liquid which boils at 59°C, synthesized from acetylene. It is used in the manufacture of neoprene, which is obtained by polymerizing chloroprene under suitable conditions.

Chevrons: See Chevron Packing above.

C.I.: The abbreviation for cloth-inserted, indicating a sheet of rubber containing one or more plies of fabric covered with rubber.

Closed Cell: A cell totally enclosed by its walls and hence not interconnecting with other cells.

Coil Breaks: Creases or ridges in sheet that appear as parallel lines across the direction of rolling, and that generally extend the full width of the sheet or strip.

Cold Flow: Continued deformation under stress.

Cold Rolled Products: Flat rolled products for which the required final thickness has been obtained by rolling at room temperature.

Cold Working: Applying a mechanical force (such as deep drawing) to metal at room temperature at such a rate that strain-hardening occurs.

Color Standard: A painted sheet panel with a prescribed color of paint representing the precise color it is intended to produce in the pre-painted sheet. The color standard will preferably also be expressed in terms of physical attributes of hue, lightness, and saturation called tristimulus values or derivatives of these values. A complete color standard definition will usually include painted panels representative of the limits of acceptable deviation from the precise standard color, as well.

Coefficient of Expansion: The coefficient of linear expansion is the ratio of the change in length per degree to the length at 0°C. The coefficient of surface expansion is two times the linear coefficient. The coefficient of volume expansion (for solids) is three times the linear coefficient. The coefficient of volume expansion for liquids is the ratio of the change in volume per degree to the volume at 0°C.

Commercial Steel (CS): Sheet of this quality is for simple bending or moderate forming. Commercial Steel sheet can be bent flat upon itself in any direction at room temperature.

Compact Seals: Multi-piece seal sets which are generally used as piston seals in a hydraulic cylinder. Made to fit in a limit space, compact piston seals contain a primary sealing component, guide rings, and back-up rings in one convenient set.

Compound (a): A term applied to either vulcanized or unvulcanized mixtures of elastomers and other ingredients necessary to make a useful rubber-like material.

Compound (b): In chemistry, it is the material resulting from the chemical union of two or more elements in definite proportions and in which the properties of the individual elements have disappeared. In rubber manufacture, it is the composition or formula of stock, the ingredients of which, however, may not all be chemically combined and is therefore more of a physical mixture.

Compression Deflection Characteristics: The tests for compression-deflection characteristics constitute methods of compression stiffness measurement. One compression test involves the determination of a load required to case a specified deflection, and another is a compression test in which a specified weight or compressive force is placed on the specimen, and the resulting deflection is measured and recorded.

Compression Set (a): The residual decrease in thickness of a test specimen measured 30 minutes after removal from a suitable loading device in which the specimen has been subjected for a definite time to compressive deformation under specified conditions of load application and temperature. Method a measures compression set of vulcanized rubber under constant load. Method B employs constant deflection.

Compression set (b): The residual deformation of a material after removal of the compressive stress.

Compressibility: The percent of loss of thickness when subjected to a given load applied by a disc of a given diameter for a specified short time and at a specified temperature. Defined by ASTM F-36 test procedures.

Conductivity: To conduct or transmit heat or electricity.

Conductive Adhesive: An adhesive that incorporates conductive fibers. These fibers have the ability to conduct electricity through the thickness of the adhesive and/or in the plane of the adhesive. Ideal for EMI/RFI shielding and EMI/RFI gasket attachments.

Conformability: The ability of an adhesive tape to mold itself to the shape of an object without wrinkling or creasing.

Converting: The process of taking a material or adhesive and altering it from one form to another.

Contact Stain: Discoloration of a product by another material or by a rubber article in the area directly touching it.

Copolymer (a): A polymer consisting of two different monomers chemically combined.

Copolymer (b): A copolymer is a polymer consisting of molecules containing large numbers of units of two or more chemically different types in irregular sequence. Butadiene and styrene form a copolymer known as GR-S.

Copper Seal Rings: Rings made from thin copper formed over fibrous filler to seal in high temperature.

Corrosion: Gradual chemical or electrochemical attack on a metal by atmospheric moisture or other agents.

Crazing: A surface effect on rubber parts characterized by many small cracks.

Creep: The deformation, in either cured or uncured rubber under stress, which occurs with lapse of time after the immediate deformation.

Creep Relaxation: In a flange gasket, loss of stress accompanied by constantly decreasing compressed thickness. This type of relaxation is encountered in bolted flange joints.

Cross Linked: The establishment of a chemical bond between the molecular chains of a given polymer, thereby enhancing physical properties.

Critical Surface: Intended for material applied to critical exposed/painted applications where cosmetic surface imperfections are objectionable. The prime side surface will be free of repetitive type imperfections, gouges, scratches, scale, and slivers. This surface can only be furnished as a pickled product.

Cross Section: An O-ring as viewed if cut at right angles to the axis showing internal structure.

Crush Washers: A washer made to be crushed to form a seal.

Crown: A contour on a sheet where the thickness increases from some edge measurement to the center.

Cup Packing: Sealing devices made in the shape of a cup with outer lips curved upward usually made from rubber, fabric reinforced rubber or polyurethane.

Cure: The act of vulcanization. See Vulcanization.

Cushioning Seals: Sealing rings mounted into a cylinder to cushion the stroke or prevent metal-to-metal contact.

Custom Molded Products: Special shaped parts molded from rubber or plastic made to fit the machine or device it is used in.

Cut: The distance between cuts or parallel faces of articles produced by repetitive slicing or cutting of long pre-shaped rods or tubes such as lathe cut washers.

Cut Edge: Removal of the as-rolled hot mill edge. Coil ends are cropped back to gauge when cut edge is ordered.

Cut Outs: The spaces or holes designated in the label. This material is punched and removed during the manufacturing process.

Cystalinity: Stretched natural rubber forms a highly oriented state and shows X-ray diffraction patterns and other properties common to truly crystalline materials. The amorphous and crystalline regions are not mechanically separable phases, but the same molecule may at the same time have part of its length in a crystalline, and the remainder in an amorphous region.

D

Damper: The use of a variety of materials to deaden or damp a vibration.

Deep Drawing: The process of working metal blanks in dies on a press into shapes which are usually more or less cup-like in character.

Deep Drawing Steel (DDS): Sheets of this designation should be used when drawn steel will not provide enough ductility for fabricating parts to stringent drawing requirements, or applications that require the sheet be free from aging. DDS is made by special steelmaking and finishing practices.

Density: The weight per unit volume of a material: usually expressed in PCF (pounds per cubic foot).

Design Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (DFMEA): An analytical technique used by a design responsible engineer/team as a means to assure, to the extent possible, that potential failure modes and their associated causes/mechanisms have been considered and addressed.

Design for Manufacturability and Assembly: A simultaneous engineering process designed to optimize the relationship between design function, manufacturability, and ease of assembly.

Design Information Checklist: A mistake proofing checklist designed to assure that all important items are considered in establishing design requirements.

Design Reviews: A proactive process to prevent problems and misunderstandings.

Design Validation: Testing to ensure that product conforms to defined user needs and/or requirements. Design validation follows successful design verification and is normally performed on the final product under defined operating conditions. Multiple validations may be performed if there are different intended uses.

Design Verification: Testing to ensure that all design outputs meet design input requirements. Design verification may include activities such as:

Dielectric Strength: The measure of a product’s ability to resist passage of a disruptive discharge produced by an electric stress; the voltage that an insulating material can withstand before breakdown occurs.

Die Cutting: When parts are cut into individual pieces using a steel rule die. A sharp steel rule die is formed to the desired shape in a wooden carrier for cutting labels. A die may be one or more up (one cavity or more).

Die Guide: A guide around a label that assists with positioning of die and/or keeping art to edge tolerances.

Die Impression: A piece of material that has been cut with a die, but not cut all the way through.

Discs: Flat, round, saucer-shaped pieces made from rubber or plastic.

Disperse: To cause particles or molecules of matter to separate and become uniformly scattered throughout a medium. In a rubber compound, the particles of compounding ingredients are dispersed in the rubber. In latex, rubber globules are dispersed in an aqueous medium.

Distributor Seals: Sealing rings used to seal in oil and seal out dust, dirt, or trash on an automobile engine electric spark distributor.

Double Acting Seals: Seal rings which seal in two directions, on the push and the pull stroke of a hydraulic or pneumatic cylinder.

Double-Coated: Tape with adhesive on both sides.

Drawing Steel (DS): Sheets of this quality have more ductility and is more consistent in performance than commercial steel due to higher standards in production, selection, and melting of the steel.

Duck: A firm, compact, heavy, plain weave fabric made from cotton, synthetic fibers, or a combination of both. Duck is also known as canvas, army duck, belt duck, harvester duck, hose duck, and shoe duck.

Ductility: The ability to permit change of shape without fracture. In flat rolled steel, ductility is usually measured by hardness or mechanical properties in a tensile test.

Dumb-Bell (Test-Piece): In the physical testing of rubber, a test-piece is used that is shaped like a dumb-bell, i.e., constricted in the middle and flaring out at the ends, as distinguished from circular or ring test-piece. The dumb-bell is the most commonly used form or test-piece. Dimensions are set by ASTM standards.

Duocone Seals: A special cone-shaped sealing ring.

Durability: The probability that an item will continue to function at customer expectation levels at the useful life without requiring overhaul or rebuild due to wearing out.

Durometer: The most common Durometer, Type A or A-2, is an instrument for determining the hardness or rubber by measuring its resistance to the penetration (without puncturing) of a blunt indentor point impressed on the rubber surface against the action of a spring; a hand and special scale indicate the resistance to penetration. The scale reads from zero to 100, zero (0) being very soft and 100 being very hard. The Type D durometer has a sharp indentor point and is used to measure varying degrees of hard rubber up to ebonite.

Dust Seals: Seals used to keep dust out of machines or devices.

Photonics West 2017

Industrial Glass Newsletter SubscriptionIndustrial Glass Newsletter Feb. 7, 2017 

CINCINNATI GASKET AND INDUSTRIAL GLASS AT PHOTONICS WEST 2017

We just got back from an exciting trip to the Photonics West Exhibition, which had a ton of glass-related companies and applications.

Exhibition floor of Photonics West 2017

 

 

 

Schott Borofloat and Schott Supremax are the world’s highest quality borosilicate plate, and are made by our friends from Schott.

 

 

 

Custom branded shot glass

 

 

These  “Schott Glasses” are quite desirable, and were used for a charitable fundraiser.  The photo doesn’t really do them justice!

 

 

 

 

Our customers combine diverse expertise, and make a wide range of precision items.  As a result, they serve many lighting, laser, and opto-electronic applications.   For example, S.I. Howard Glass brought this display of precision wares:

Precision glass parts

 

Close up of precision cut optical glass

 

 

 

 

 

 

Experienced glass fabricators know it’s tough to make some of these pieces!

 

 

Many companies attend Photonics West, and the technology on display is fantastic.   We spoke to a lot of people who reported a strong order book for the month of January, so let’s hope this is the start of a trend!

We wish you all a safe, happy, and productive February.

 

 

 

Tungsten Inert Gas (TIG) welding provides high quality, accurate, fabrication capabilities to Cincinnati Industrial Glass’ services

Complete Tungsten Insert Gas (TIG) welding capabilities for challenging fabrications including thin to medium gauge carbon & stainless steel, aluminum, magnesium, and copper alloys.

Our tungsten inert gas method welding staff has decades of experience with the efficient application of this challenging welding technology. Contact us today for a prompt quote for your welding needs.

tig-welded-assemblies
TIG welded sub-assemblies

TIG welded sub-assemblies in our shop, awaiting cleanup

(Following from Wikipedia)

Tungsten inert gas (TIG) welding, is an arc welding process that uses a non-consumable tungsten electrode to produce the weld. The weld area is protected from atmospheric contamination by an inert shielding gas(argon or helium), and a filler metal is normally used, though some welds, known as autogenous welds, do not require it.  constant-current welding power supply produces electrical energy, which is conducted across the arc through a column of highly ionized gas and metal vapors known as a plasma.

The Tungsten Inert Gas method is most commonly used to weld thin sections of stainless steel and non-ferrous metals such as aluminummagnesium, and copper alloys. The process grants the operator greater control over the weld than competing processes such as shielded metal arc welding and gas metal arc welding, allowing for stronger, higher quality welds. However, TIG is comparatively more complex and difficult to master, and furthermore, it is significantly slower than most other welding techniques. A related process, plasma arc welding, uses a slightly different welding torch to create a more focused welding arc and as a result is often automated.

Operation

Tungsten Inert Gas Welding

Tungsten Inert Gas weld area

Manual gas tungsten arc welding is a relatively difficult welding method, due to the coordination required by the welder. Similar to torch welding, TIG normally requires two hands, since most applications require that the welder manually feed a filler metal into the weld area with one hand while manipulating the welding torch in the other. Maintaining a short arc length, while preventing contact between the electrode and the workpiece, is also important.

To strike the welding arc, a high frequency generator (similar to a Tesla coil) provides an electric spark. This spark is a conductive path for the welding current through the shielding gas and allows the arc to be initiated while the electrode and the workpiece are separated, typically about 1.5–3 mm (0.06–0.12 in) apart.

Once the arc is struck, the welder moves the torch in a small circle to create a welding pool, the size of which depends on the size of the electrode and the amount of current. While maintaining a constant separation between the electrode and the workpiece, the operator then moves the torch back slightly and tilts it backward about 10–15 degrees from vertical. Filler metal is added manually to the front end of the weld pool as it is needed.

Sight glass frame showing TIG welding and Spot Welding
Sight glass frame showing TIG welding and spot welding

This sub-assembly in our shop uses a combination of TIG welding and spot welding techniques

Tungsten Inert Gas welders often develop a technique of rapidly alternating between moving the torch forward (to advance the weld pool) and adding filler metal. The filler rod is withdrawn from the weld pool each time the electrode advances, but it is always kept inside the gas shield to prevent oxidation of its surface and contamination of the weld. Filler rods composed of metals with a low melting temperature, such as aluminum, require that the operator maintain some distance from the arc while staying inside the gas shield. If held too close to the arc, the filler rod can melt before it makes contact with the weld puddle. As the weld nears completion, the arc current is often gradually reduced to allow the weld crater to solidify and prevent the formation of crater cracks at the end of the weld.

Blast Resistant Window TIG
Starting a TIG welded blast-resistant window frame

Getting started on a new fabrication – even with TIG, careful setup, clamping, and welding techniques are key to achieving straight assemblies built from long, thin sections.

Applications

While the aerospace industry is one of the primary users of gas tungsten arc welding, the process is used in a number of other areas. Many industries use TIG for welding thin workpieces, especially nonferrous metals. It is used extensively in the manufacture of space vehicles, and is also frequently employed to weld small-diameter, thin-wall tubing such as those used in the bicycle industry. In addition, TIG is often used to make root or first-pass welds for piping of various sizes. In maintenance and repair work, the process is commonly used to repair tools and dies, especially components made of aluminum and magnesium. Because the weld metal is not transferred directly across the electric arc like most open arc welding processes, a vast assortment of welding filler metal is available to the welding engineer. In fact, no other welding process permits the welding of so many alloys in so many product configurations. Filler metal alloys, such as elemental aluminum and chromium, can be lost through the electric arc from volatilization. This loss does not occur with the TIG process. Because the resulting welds have the same chemical integrity as the original base metal or match the base metals more closely, TIG welds are highly resistant to corrosion and cracking over long time periods, making TIG the welding procedure of choice for critical operations like sealing spent nuclear fuel canisters before burial.

Quality

TIG fillet weld

A built-up fitting assembly

TIG fillet weld

Tungsten Inert Gas welding, because it affords greater control over the weld area than other welding processes, can produce high-quality welds when performed by skilled operators. Maximum weld quality is assured by maintaining cleanliness—all equipment and materials used must be free from oil, moisture, dirt and other impurities, as these cause weld porosity and consequently a decrease in weld strength and quality. To remove oil and grease, alcohol or similar commercial solvents may be used, while a stainless steel wire brush or chemical process can remove oxides from the surfaces of metals like aluminum. Rust on steels can be removed by first grit blasting the surface and then using a wire brush to remove any embedded grit. These steps are especially important when negative polarity direct current is used, because such a power supply provides no cleaning during the welding process, unlike positive polarity direct current or alternating current. To maintain a clean weld pool during welding, the shielding gas flow should be sufficient and consistent so that the gas covers the weld and blocks impurities in the atmosphere. TIG in windy or drafty environments increases the amount of shielding gas necessary to protect the weld, increasing the cost and making the process unpopular outdoors.

TIG welding for blast-resistant window frame
TIG welding for blast-resistant window frame

Another assembly in process at Cincinnati Gasket

The level of heat input also affects weld quality. Low heat input, caused by low welding current or high welding speed, can limit penetration and cause the weld bead to lift away from the surface being welded. If there is too much heat input, however, the weld bead grows in width while the likelihood of excessive penetration and spatter increase. Additionally, if the welding torch is too far from the workpiece the shielding gas becomes ineffective, causing porosity within the weld. This results in a weld with pinholes, which is weaker than a typical weld.

If the amount of current used exceeds the capability of the electrode, tungsten inclusions in the weld may result. Known as tungsten spitting, this can be identified with radiography and can be prevented by changing the type of electrode or increasing the electrode diameter. In addition, if the electrode is not well protected by the gas shield or the operator accidentally allows it to contact the molten metal, it can become dirty or contaminated. This often causes the welding arc to become unstable, requiring that the electrode be ground with a diamond abrasive to remove the impurity.

What is Borosilicate glass?

Borosilicate glass is a type of glass with silica and boron trioxide as the main glass forming constituents. Borosilicate glasses are known for having very low coefficients of thermal expansion (~3 × 10−6 K−1 at 20 °C), making them resistant to thermal shock, more so than any other common glass. (from Wikipedia)

Welcome to Cincinnati Gasket and Industrial Glass’ Newsletter. We’ll be publishing application examples and technical information here. Please subscribe if you would like to be notified when we have a new post.

Borosilicate glass is less subject to thermal stress and is commonly used for the construction of reagent bottles. Borosilicate glass is sold under such trade names as Simax, Borcam, Borosil, Suprax, Kimax, Heatex, Pyrex, Endural, Schott, or Refmex, Kimble.

History

Borosilicate glass was first developed by German glassmaker Otto Schott in the late 19th century. Otto Schott is also the founder of today’s SCHOTT AG, which sells borosilicate glass under the brand name DURAN® since 1893. Another manufacturer of DURAN® is the DURAN® Group. After Corning Glass Works introduced Pyrex in 1915, the name became a synonym for borosilicate glass in the English-speaking world. However, borosilicate glass is the name of a glass family with various members tailoring completely different purposes. Most common today is borosilicate 3.3 glass like SCHOTT Duran and Pyrex by Corning.

In addition to quartz, sodium carbonate and aluminum oxide traditionally used in glassmaking, boron is used in the manufacture of borosilicate glass. The composition of low-expansion borosilicate glass, such as those laboratory glasses mentioned above, is approximately 80% silica, 13% boric oxide, 4% sodium oxide and 2–3% aluminum oxide. Though more difficult to make than traditional glass due to the high melting temperature required (Corning conducted a major revamp of their operations to manufacture it), it is economical to produce. Its superior durability, chemical and heat resistance finds excellent use in chemical laboratory equipment, cookware, lighting and, in certain cases, windows.

Pyrex_newspaper_ad_1922Pyrex (trademarked as PYREX) is a brand introduced by Corning Inc. in 1908 for a line of clear, low-thermal-expansion plastic borosilicate glass used forlaboratory glassware and kitchenware. Pyrex sold in the United States is made of tempered soda-lime glass; outside of North America the costlier borosilicate is still used.

Corning no longer manufactures or markets PYREX-branded borosilicate glass kitchenware and bakeware in the US. World Kitchen, LLC, which was spun off from Corning in 1998, licensed the pyrex (all lower case) brand for their own line of kitchenware products—differentiated by their use of clear tempered soda-lime glass instead of borosilicate.

The European manufacturer of Pyrex, Arc International, uses borosilicate glass in its Pyrex glass kitchen products;[1] however, the U.S. manufacturer of Pyrex kitchenware uses tempered soda-lime glass.[2] Thus Pyrex can refer to either soda-lime glass or borosilicate glass when discussing kitchen glassware, while Pyrex, Bomex, Duran, TGI and Simax all refer to borosilicate glass when discussing laboratory glassware. The real difference is the trademark and the company that owns the Pyrex name. The original Corning ware made of borosilicate glass was trademarked in capital letters (PYREX). When the kitchenware division was sold, the trademark was changed to lowercase (pyrex) and switched to low thermal-expansion soda-lime glass. The bottom of new kitchenware and old kitchenware can be inspected for an immediate difference. The scientific division of Pyrex has always been using borosilicate glass. (from Wikipedia)


Cincinnati Gasket & Industrial Glass occupies over 65,000 square feet with state-of-the-art machinery and the finest quality inspection. Dependable, quick service, and competitive prices have made us one of the oldest and largest in the field with some of the newest and most innovative ideas in the industry.

We specialize in a wide range of machined glass products for use in nearly every major industry in the world; from the steel and chemical industries to machine tool and power generation. Whether replacing existing equipment or developing a new design, we can provide creative solutions to your industrial glass needs that will help increase efficiency and save countless hours of downtime in years to come. Contact us.