FiestaEng
Mechanical
- Jul 15, 2003
- 7
We recently installed a Eurotherm 3508 controller, a Parker PCD00A Amplifier with two Denison R4R03 and Parker VP01 Sandwich valve assemblies.
It is a horizontal press that closes initially at 100 bars and ramps up from there to a maximum of 240 bars. That part of it works fine. The second cylinder controls the presusre at which we inject material between the press plates. We normally fill the cavity at 15 bars and then increase to 150 bars for part of the cycle. We disconnect the directional valve to the cylinder to eliminate everthing from that point on. On a pressure port on the block manifold before the directional valve; we see no pressure until the controller ramps from the 15 bars to the 150 bars, usually in the 50 bars range we see it start to increase but don't catch up to the controller until it reaches 100 bars or so.
I am thinking the set-up is unable to achieve what we need but not sure. I ran a test where I spiked 100 bars for 2 seconds and then went back to 25 bars and it looked fairly good on the gauge. The problem is, this in production would cut the dies that we use and cause additional issues.
Any suggestions on making this work or other options would be greatly appreciated.
It is a horizontal press that closes initially at 100 bars and ramps up from there to a maximum of 240 bars. That part of it works fine. The second cylinder controls the presusre at which we inject material between the press plates. We normally fill the cavity at 15 bars and then increase to 150 bars for part of the cycle. We disconnect the directional valve to the cylinder to eliminate everthing from that point on. On a pressure port on the block manifold before the directional valve; we see no pressure until the controller ramps from the 15 bars to the 150 bars, usually in the 50 bars range we see it start to increase but don't catch up to the controller until it reaches 100 bars or so.
I am thinking the set-up is unable to achieve what we need but not sure. I ran a test where I spiked 100 bars for 2 seconds and then went back to 25 bars and it looked fairly good on the gauge. The problem is, this in production would cut the dies that we use and cause additional issues.
Any suggestions on making this work or other options would be greatly appreciated.