thanks Alasdair
and now for the hassle of insterting an image

hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
That two check valve design is largely what I did for HEAL's pump, but I would advise against using 15mm copper as the shaft - it will bend really easily loaded like that and I assume you don't want that.ALIHISGREAT wrote:well this is my pump design which i need some advice on, firstly is the basic design satisfactory? i will be using 22mm copper as the body and 15mm as the shaft?
yes i'm using the check valve to bypass that and how would you suggest getting little dead space?jackssmirkingrevenge wrote:make sure the head is designed in such a way to seal on compression but allow air to refill the chamber on the upward stroke, or have you decided to bypass this by including the extra check valve? If using this system make sure that at the bottom of its stroke there is as little dead space as possible, as this would limit the maximum pressure you can reach.
so i need a 28mm body and a pvc shaft? maybe i could get my grandpa to cut some grooves for o-rings in some pvc rod on his lathe then i could use that as the piston.That two check valve design is largely what I did for HEAL's pump, but I would advise against using 15mm copper as the shaft - it will bend really easily loaded like that and I assume you don't want that.
Get some 18mm or 3/4" PVC rod and use that instead, it will take the stresses much better.
I would suggest copying what I did and having a 28mm outer sheath for the pump body, which helps to protect the inner shaft both from bending, and possibly more importantly, denting. You won't regret it after a few months - some of the dents in the outer cover for my pump would have been the death of it if that had happened to the inner body.
By seconding what Hawkeye saidALIHISGREAT wrote:how would you suggest getting little dead space?
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
hmm floating o-ring i will have to look think about that... but the reason i want to use check valves is that i think it would be more reliable (maybe) i will carry on thinking though.Hawkeye wrote:I'm not sure why you would want to complicate it with extra check valves. The floating o-ring is far easier to incorporate into the piston head and makes it much easier to eliminate dead space.
A copper pump rod is surprisingly durable. There is little chance for lateral pressure to bend it because the pressure doesn't build noticeably until the pump handle is almost fully depressed into the pump body.
thats a good idea ! i could have the air being drawn in up the shaft and encase the check valve in a piston with 0-rings or cast an epoxy piston with the check valve inside... hmmMaxuS wrote:They're rated for 17 bar, but I'm sure they'd work at much higher pressures quite well.
Why not put a Check Valve inside of the shaft?
You could compress the air already inside the pump body and allow new air to flow in on the upstroke.
I'll let you in on a secret. The 10 bar ones work just fine for HEAL and the pump at over twice their rating. Sure, stick to the rating on pipe (especially PVC) but usually components will handle some extra just fine.ALIHISGREAT wrote:edit: check valves are rated to 17barlooks like i will be using a floating oring and a homemade check
unless the non-return valves on another site are rated higher.
I can't see why anyone would, they're a bitch when you want them refilled.Ragnarok wrote:and doesn't want to use gas bottles.
ok i'm waiting for the designFloating o-rings are easy with a lathe, but they are still prone to going wrong. I've added all of 2 cubic centimetres of dead space by using a twin check valve arrangement, and it's more reliable. I'd personally recommend an almost direct clone of my pump to anyone that decides they want medium volumes at high pressure, and doesn't want to use gas bottles.
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
yes but i get enjoyment from pestering peopeSimple and effective, I would pester Ragnarok for detailed instructions if I were you
Not yet, but I wrote a long list of how I did the pump shaft - which is the majority of the work. If only I could remember where.ALIHISGREAT wrote:There's a whole thread on it?!?