Tank Question

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  • manike
    INCEPTIONDESIGNS.COM

    • Jan 2001
    • 3820

    #16
    Re: hydro tests

    Originally posted by Wat
    Then the tank is pumped with water (or is it air?)
    I believe it is water (or some fluid), because the fluid isn't as compressible as air and there are reduced risks if it does rupture.

    I agree the biggest risk is in fittings, we had a nasty incident over here just recently where a fitting blew and piece went through someone's eye. Thankfully after a week or so of hospital it looks like he will be ok.
    Inception Designs - My new company where Innovation is the Inspiration

    Comment

    • Lohman446
      Useful posts: 7
      • Jun 2003
      • 9315

      #17
      Here's me being hypocritical again... I just don't want to sound like I am doing something I am not.

      There is a good reason to where your paintball goggles at the fill station.
      "Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. Its not" - Dr Suess

      Comment

      • f3rr3+
        Six inches of furry fury
        • Apr 2003
        • 752

        #18
        yeah, ive had a gauge blow up at me on a fill station never went back to that place. (i had numerous other problems, them screwing that up was the straw that broke the camels back)
        Last week i thought i was indecisive, but now im not sure anymore...

        Comment

        • aaron_mag
          Registered User
          • Jul 2002
          • 1375

          #19
          Re: Re: hydro tests

          Originally posted by manike

          I believe it is water (or some fluid), because the fluid isn't as compressible as air and there are reduced risks if it does rupture.
          If I remember my physics correctly liquid CANNOT be compressed at all. Only a gas can be compressed and if it is compressed enough it becomes a liquid. I think that they compress it under water and check how much it changes in volume (all thanks to Archimedes). If it does not fall within certain tolerances then it is no longer usable (safely).

          Scott- quit being such a greedy bastard and just be happy that it rehydroed properly.
          ULE Body Level 10 Automag intelliframe + retrovalve

          Comment

          • 1stdeadeye
            Still around????
            • Jun 2002
            • 8501

            #20
            Re: Re: Re: hydro tests

            Originally posted by aaron_mag


            Scott- quit being such a greedy bastard and just be happy that it rehydroed properly.
            LOL!

            That is my loaner tank. I let all of my buddies use it and the R/T the first time they go out to play with me. I am like a crack dealer...the first one is free! Then they are hooked!!!

            Just get tired of them running back for air so much!

            I was suprised that it passed too. All the times I beat it against a rock while cursing the liberal dogma and it still works!

            Comment

            • Wat
              Registered User
              • Jan 2002
              • 105

              #21
              Liquids can be compressed but by only a miniscule amount. Its so small, that for just about every purpose outside the classroom it can be considered incompressable. However, i don't remember if it was all liquids or just most liquids.

              I'm pretty sure Manike is right that the tank is filled with water. If the tank fails you don't have all this gas expanding. The water may be incompressible but that is not the same as being unpressurizeable.

              Comment

              • dinger
                I AM THE BIG DINGER!!
                • Jul 2003
                • 1267

                #22
                this thread makes me wanna put 4500psi into a 3Kpsi tank...

                i mean i know better, but im just a dumb cucumber like that...
                Currently the 186th top poster on AO!! member# 13650
                Feedback :)

                "... i splooge when i touch it :D
                ~Ultimatepaintballer

                Comment

                • Skoad
                  Registered User
                  • Feb 2002
                  • 3265

                  #23
                  my 4500 tank was tested up to 7000 psi.

                  Comment

                  • manike
                    INCEPTIONDESIGNS.COM

                    • Jan 2001
                    • 3820

                    #24
                    Re: Re: Re: hydro tests

                    Originally posted by aaron_mag
                    If I remember my physics correctly liquid CANNOT be compressed at all.
                    Lies to children (anyone read disc world books?).

                    Some liquids can be compressed as Wat points out. At school you learn to start with that they cannot but as you learn more you learn that some can and that initially what you were told when you started education were 'lies to children'. It's not much in relation to gases but it is still possible.

                    It's why you DON'T put water in the brake system of your car, but use brake fluid (a type of oil maybe?) instead.
                    Inception Designs - My new company where Innovation is the Inspiration

                    Comment

                    • Doc Nickel
                      Unrepentant Gadget freak

                      • Jul 2001
                      • 499

                      #25
                      Actually, the two reasons you don't use water in your brake system are rust and the boiling point.

                      Rust is obvious, and the boiling point is important because brakes, after all, have to convert a whole cars' worth of momentum into heat.

                      Liquids are, for all intents and purposes, incomprsssible, but if the liquid boils, the resultant "steam" IS compressible, which would lead to loss of braking power.

                      Those are far more important reasons than water's .000001% compressibility.

                      Doc.

                      Comment

                      • manike
                        INCEPTIONDESIGNS.COM

                        • Jan 2001
                        • 3820

                        #26
                        Here's a table of water volumes at different temperatuers and pressures. Yes, water does in fact compress as you raise the pressure (no surprise here), but it doesn't compress by much.


                        temp F(C) 0 atm 500 a 1000 a 2000 a 3000 a
                        32 (0) 1.0000 0.9769 0.9566 0.9223 0.8954
                        68 (20) 1.0016 0.9804 0.9619 0.9312 0.9065
                        122 (50) 1.0128 0.9915 0.9732 0.9428 0.9193


                        A mile under water gives about 150 atmospheres of pressure, so that should be less than 1 percent compression, according to the table.

                        - If Lake Superior were compressed to its maximum its water level would drop around 9 inches.

                        i.e. The compression of water depends on more than just one factor, but for all intents and purposes you can pretend it conforms to ideal conditions.
                        Inception Designs - My new company where Innovation is the Inspiration

                        Comment

                        • aaron_mag
                          Registered User
                          • Jul 2002
                          • 1375

                          #27
                          Next thing I know you will be telling me my third grade American history class was not 100% accurate!!!!

                          Now I am curious on how they actually hydro test. I thought I knew but.......
                          ULE Body Level 10 Automag intelliframe + retrovalve

                          Comment

                          • Doc Nickel
                            Unrepentant Gadget freak

                            • Jul 2001
                            • 499

                            #28
                            I wrote an article for Paintball Magazine a few years back, but I lost track of the original files, so until I get a copy of the magazine, I haven't been able to put up a version on my site.

                            But, heavilty simplified:

                            The valve or reg is removed from the tank to be tested, and the tank is filled with water.

                            The tank is then attached with an adapter to the lid of the hydrotest vessel, which is a large, heavy-wall pipe with a locking flange at the top to secure the lid. This vessel is also filled to the top with water.

                            The lid is dropped into place (usually spilling at least some water, to make sure the vessel is as full as possible) and locked down. The equipment is set, and a powerful compressor connected to the fitting in the lid, pressurizes the tank inside.

                            As Wat noted, the tank expands, literally like a balloon (on a much smaller scale) when it's pressurized. The slightly larger tank displaces some of the water in the test vessel, water which is moved to something very much like a very accurate scale and/or very finely-graduated tube (like a thermometer; the fluid rises and indicates a mark on the tube.)

                            This displaced water is calculated to determine how much the tank has expanded.

                            Now, the pressure in the tank is released, and it shrinks back down to normal. Again, the water is drawn back into the test vessel by the contraction of the tank.

                            However, sometimes not all the water is drawn back in- this indicates the tank has expanded and stayed slightly expanded. This means the shell of the tank has literally stretched (and weakened slightly.)

                            The hydrotester (hydro = water, of course) has reams of books and reports from the makers of the tanks themselves, as well as the DOT (Department of Transportation) and the CGA (Compressed Gas Association) and others who oversee the production and use of pressurized-gas bottles. This information tells the tester how much initial expansion isto be expected, and how much permanent stretch can be allowed.

                            If the tank expands too much, this indicates the shell is weak- a weak wall expands too much, which means it moves more when filled, and that leads to metal fatigue as the tank is cycled (filled and emptied.)

                            Metal fatigue weakens the wall further- as in Wat's paperclip analogy, one I used in my original article, as I recall - and once it weakens to a certain point, it can rupture (that means fail catastrophically- it can explode.)

                            Some permanent stretch is to be expected, which is why the fiber-wrapped tanks have been limited to a fifteen-year/five-test lifespan- the testing itself stresses the tank, and after five tests they expect the tank to have weakened slightly just from that.

                            Newer fiber-wraps have changed the spec somewhat, almost entirely due to the demands of paintball players, but they still have a fixed lifespan.

                            Doc.

                            Comment

                            • Muzikman
                              Everything AGD
                              • Dec 2000
                              • 6229

                              #29
                              Re: Re: hydro tests

                              Originally posted by manike


                              I believe it is water (or some fluid), because the fluid isn't as compressible as air and there are reduced risks if it does rupture.

                              I agree the biggest risk is in fittings, we had a nasty incident over here just recently where a fitting blew and piece went through someone's eye. Thankfully after a week or so of hospital it looks like he will be ok.
                              This is the reason why I use NO macro (or Micro) line and also do not use those swivel 90 fittings (like KAPP and other companies make). It's steel braid and solid fittings for me!!!!

                              Comment

                              • aaron_mag
                                Registered User
                                • Jul 2002
                                • 1375

                                #30
                                Fascinating. I figured since water could not be significantly compressed you couldn't use it to hydrotest. I figured the hydrotest referred to the displacement of water test. As Wat pointed out, however, there is a difference between compression and pressurized.

                                Interesting.....

                                Limited life span works fine for me. Won't holographic paintballs in the future make compressed air unneeded anyway....
                                ULE Body Level 10 Automag intelliframe + retrovalve

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