truckpoor
Mechanical
- Sep 8, 2005
- 5
I'm hoping I can get some help here, as I'd like someone to reassure me this is as easy as it seems. We've got a gage that we're having manufactured that has to be leak tested at 5000 psig for not less than 3 minutes and the air equivalent leak rate not to exceed 5x10-5 atm cc/sec. The manufacturer, in the interest of speeding the process up, would prefer to do a helium leak test, measured in mbar*l/sec. To convert from cc/sec to mbar*l/sec, you just multiply by 1.013, which comes out to 5.1x10-5 mbar*l/sec. With this, they're willing to test to 1x10-6 mbar*l/sec, which exceeds our requirement.
I was thinking I need to convert the air leak rate to a helium leak rate, which according to my books equates to dividing the air leak rate by .374 for molecular flow, and that comes out to 1.3x10-4. Either way, what they're willing to test to seems to exceed our requirement just based on these basic conversions.
What I haven't been able to figure out is if this an equivalent/acceptable conversion? To me, it sounds like the original method is a pressure decay, fill whatever volume they have to 5000 psig and after 3 minutes, check the pressure to see if it has dropped enough to exceed the leak rate. I've seen helium leak detectors in operation, but is it equivalent to a pressure decay leak rate? Thanks for any insights into this.
I was thinking I need to convert the air leak rate to a helium leak rate, which according to my books equates to dividing the air leak rate by .374 for molecular flow, and that comes out to 1.3x10-4. Either way, what they're willing to test to seems to exceed our requirement just based on these basic conversions.
What I haven't been able to figure out is if this an equivalent/acceptable conversion? To me, it sounds like the original method is a pressure decay, fill whatever volume they have to 5000 psig and after 3 minutes, check the pressure to see if it has dropped enough to exceed the leak rate. I've seen helium leak detectors in operation, but is it equivalent to a pressure decay leak rate? Thanks for any insights into this.