rScotty
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2001
- Messages
- 9,544
- Location
- Rural mountains - Colorado
- Tractor
- Kubota M59, JD530, JD310SG. Restoring Yanmar YM165D
I am assembling a hydraulic pump and the gaskets determine the gear to case clearance. The first set of gaskets I made were .004” thick and they compressed.002” when I tightened the pump body studs, the clearances were too tight and the internals bound up. Would not turn. I may double up on my gasket material to get the correct clearance.
Would you happen to know the compressed thickness of that 3145?
No, I don't. But since it cures to a rubbery solid I would imagine that compressed thickness is going to depend a lot on compression force. And I wouldn't trust any real measureable thickness of gasket goo with high hydraulic pressure. Frankly, as much as I like the stuff, I would be careful in that application. Much better to remove some shims if you have any on the gear shafts of the pump... but if not, here's my thinking...
In a high pressure hydraullic pump I'd go with a single thin high quality cross-woven fiber gasket or maybe two of them since yours are so thin. If I used any goo, it would be applied just as thin as I could get it. Less - way less - than the thickness of a single coat of paint would be what I'd aim for. Just as thin as you can do it. You can do that, it's not impossible. And I see what you are wanting...but if it were mine I'd get the clearance by stacking gaskets and use only enough gasket goo to fill in the highs and lows.
luck,
rScotty