Will a centrifuge get rid of bubbles?
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- MillenniumFalsehood
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Will a centrifuge get rid of bubbles?
I was thinking about resin casting, and it occurred to me that pressure casting is potentially dangerous, because I've heard of people having bad experiences with exploding pressure pots. Then I started to think about centrifuges and how they pull all the liquid to the bottom of the container. Would this work well for casting thin resin?
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Look in to spin casting.
Works for metal...I'm sure it would work for urethanes.
Of course..if people were in the habit of testing the relief valves on their pressure pots..there wouldn't be so many "horror stories" of exploding pressure pots.
To test safely.... fill the pot nearly full with water...then pressurize the pot to just over the rated release point of the pressure valve ( approx. 85 PSI ? ) till the valve releases.
Why water ?
Water does not compress as highly as air...so, any failure/fracture in the pot will release only the small amount of air pressure...not a full tank at 85 + PSI all at once. ( that would be quite a boom...certainly enough power to send the lid through a floor or roof )
Works for metal...I'm sure it would work for urethanes.
Of course..if people were in the habit of testing the relief valves on their pressure pots..there wouldn't be so many "horror stories" of exploding pressure pots.
To test safely.... fill the pot nearly full with water...then pressurize the pot to just over the rated release point of the pressure valve ( approx. 85 PSI ? ) till the valve releases.
Why water ?
Water does not compress as highly as air...so, any failure/fracture in the pot will release only the small amount of air pressure...not a full tank at 85 + PSI all at once. ( that would be quite a boom...certainly enough power to send the lid through a floor or roof )
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if he's doing just resin, that the same rubber material can be used as it doesn't need to be vulcanized and yes, centrifugal force could be your enemy - staying with a pressure pot would be simplere
and i need to find Vulcanize rubber (in it's liquid form)
and i need to find Vulcanize rubber (in it's liquid form)
Chris,
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The process involves a touch of sulfur iirc...OdysseySlipways wrote:if he's doing just resin, that the same rubber material can be used as it doesn't need to be vulcanized and yes, centrifugal force could be your enemy - staying with a pressure pot would be simplere
and i need to find Vulcanize rubber (in it's liquid form)
Abolish Alliteration
The rubber typically used in spin casting is a sheet material.
Much firmer than the silicone most guys use.
I'm sure that you can find "RTV" rubber in a liquid form ... that's "Room Temperature Vulcanizing" silicone...AKA Mold-Max, GI-1000,etc.
I would say standard silicone would work fine..provided you design your molds with the pressures and forces taken in to consideration
i.e...large "keys" for no mold slip
heavier exterior walls along parting lines ( the spinning mold/resin pushes outward with a fair amount of force.)
Much firmer than the silicone most guys use.
I'm sure that you can find "RTV" rubber in a liquid form ... that's "Room Temperature Vulcanizing" silicone...AKA Mold-Max, GI-1000,etc.
I would say standard silicone would work fine..provided you design your molds with the pressures and forces taken in to consideration
i.e...large "keys" for no mold slip
heavier exterior walls along parting lines ( the spinning mold/resin pushes outward with a fair amount of force.)
IMHO I would see where these bad experiences are coming from. Are they guys building their own pots and not knowing what they are doing?
There are far to many guys in the GK hobby pressure casting for it to be truly dangerous.
Just my 2¢
There are far to many guys in the GK hobby pressure casting for it to be truly dangerous.
Just my 2¢
Kev
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Re: Will a centrifuge get rid of bubbles?
A centrifuge wouldn't be more dangerous than a pressure pot?MillenniumFalsehood wrote:I was thinking about resin casting, and it occurred to me that pressure casting is potentially dangerous, because I've heard of people having bad experiences with exploding pressure pots. Then I started to think about centrifuges and how they pull all the liquid to the bottom of the container. Would this work well for casting thin resin?
Seems like trading one set of troubles for another, though I'd love to hear a comparison from someone who has done both...