MrGearhead
Mechanical
- Jan 17, 2009
- 15
New to the use of NPT. The key problem is the taper which introduces a question in the context of the design:
Threaded hole goes directly into an aluminum enclosure that has numerous parts installed, and a flat gasket at the parting line of the enclosure. The threaded holes provide the interface to run Helium in and out of the enclosure. After the enclosure is assembled, a Helium leak acceptance "manufacturing check" is done to ensure the box can pass a MIL-STD-810 rain test.
After the He Leak mfg check is complete with a pass, The inlet valves that allow Helium to flow into the enclosure are removed and then replaced with metal "plugs" (NPT bolts) that are covered over with Epibond sealing compound to make the box airtight, even around the seal.
All this is to say that the thread spec on the enclosure was machined "per the mfg dwg", and the finish plugs won't seat all the way down against their heads because the top dia of the thread where it contacts the underside of the bolt head is not large enough to tighten the plug sufficiently.
I'd assume then that part of a proper NPT thread callout on a mfg print is to specify the NPT thread OD in the plane the thread is cut into?
Threaded hole goes directly into an aluminum enclosure that has numerous parts installed, and a flat gasket at the parting line of the enclosure. The threaded holes provide the interface to run Helium in and out of the enclosure. After the enclosure is assembled, a Helium leak acceptance "manufacturing check" is done to ensure the box can pass a MIL-STD-810 rain test.
After the He Leak mfg check is complete with a pass, The inlet valves that allow Helium to flow into the enclosure are removed and then replaced with metal "plugs" (NPT bolts) that are covered over with Epibond sealing compound to make the box airtight, even around the seal.
All this is to say that the thread spec on the enclosure was machined "per the mfg dwg", and the finish plugs won't seat all the way down against their heads because the top dia of the thread where it contacts the underside of the bolt head is not large enough to tighten the plug sufficiently.
I'd assume then that part of a proper NPT thread callout on a mfg print is to specify the NPT thread OD in the plane the thread is cut into?