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Datsun pump
Air conditioner pumps work in a closed loop so the oil level doesnt change. You will need some way to re-fill the oil after each use. You will need to match the pump capacity to the diff pump size if you check out Lesker company web Site you can match various diffusion pump sizes to the minimum rough pump size needed. You may be able to calculate the air conditioner CFM speed by timing how long it takes it to blow up a large plastic bag measure the diameter of the bag or push it into a large box to measure the cubic feet. Keep an eye out for used refrigeration service pumps many of these can be re-built for very little effort.
? Ron White Charles Mitchard wrote: In my never ending search for goodies that will do something they were |
Re: plans for vacuum system
Charles Mitchard
In my never ending search for goodies that will do something they were never designed for I've come across a vane type compressor from a datsun.
at present I do not have a motor to drive it so cannot test it out. Anyone think it may be ok for a roughing pump? Spinning it by hand produces a nice pok pok sound and some suction but I've yet to dismantle it to check the seals. It seems like it runs dry. Charles I just got lost in thought. It was unfamiliar territory. |
Re: plans for vacuum system
Just a couple of other thoughts (sometimes I talk more than I say) You probably do not need a vacuum gauge at all, of course it helps but ?from my limited playing around when the rough pump gets quiet and the glow discharge is very impressive its time to turn on the diff pump when the glow discharge dims out the pressure is probably ok to start the evaporation. I have seen very large e-Beam welders (Walk in sized) that were square boxes made from 5/8 plate many tank shaped 24 bell jars are from 1/8 thick stainless steel, I have used .090 for a 20 base plate it did oil pan but did hold up with 1 X 1/8 reinforcement angles across the flats, ?you should be able to build your 24 X 11 tank from 3/16 or steel ?with thicker steel only where the o-rings get cut in. ? Ron White ? James Lerch wrote: ----- Original Message ----- |
Re: plans for vacuum system
Tons and tons of great info Thanks James used propane tanks are available for free from propane filling stations just fill with water or blow out with air while cutting? I found a 21" dia water tank from a well on the side of the road --cutting was with a sawzall --fast and clean the bottom all ready had the hole for the diff pump with a large o ring groove in it. I welded the pin hole leak, ?added 2 -1/4" thick rings ?for flanges with the o-ring set up per James Lerchs design. I have ?a free air conditioner ?for a cold trap, shop the deals on E-Bay I bought 3 thermocouple gauge controllers hoping that one would work all 3 do although they all need re-wiring paid less than 50.00 total -? gauge tubes are dirt cheap and any can be adapted to work in different brand controllers they are rugged ?so dont worry about buying the tested ones just take your chances if the first is no good the next one will be. My e-Bay rough pump was an old tired yellow jacket that would barely start I cleaned it honed the cylinders and rotated the vanes (you get 4 sides per vane) it runs like a champ for less than 150 bucks, I bid on 2 diff pumps 6 and 2 hoping to get one cheap? got them both real cheap along with valves and a cold trap (dry ice style) add in free neon transformer, spare hi volt transformer from an old oil burner, I use my welder for the evaporator coil, all in all probably? 500 bucks and I have 2 or more of many items I need. Now just a bit of pump oil and time to finish putting it all together and I can coat my mirror, ? Regards Ron White James Lerch wrote: ----- Original Message ----- |
Re: plans for vacuum system
James Lerch
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----- Original Message -----
From: "Ken Hunter" <atm_ken_hunter@...> To: <VacuumX@...> Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2003 12:17 Subject: [VacuumX] plans for vacuum system Hi Gang...Hi Ken, Here a copy of the post, I had meant to putting it over here as well, just life's been a touch busy. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Dominic-Luc Webb" <dlwebb@...> Hi Dominic, I scrounged my 11" aluminizing system together for less than $800us in parts (the labor and experience were / are priceless :) You will need more than just a roughing pump, as a high vacuum pump is a must, but a 'cheap' diffusion pump will do the job nicely. Towards the bottom of this post I'll place some references to possible parts supplies, and a 'rough' guess at what it would take for me to start-over again.. To avoid this being one of those "look at what did" posts (that are frowned upon for some reason), I'll first include the list of things I'd do differently. #1 Electrical Pass throughs / Glow discharge cleaning: Automotive Spark Plugs make terrible electrical pass throughs. A simple piece of 1/4" plate glass, siliconed to the tank, with a hole for a bolt and an O-ring, work much better. Once you get the High Voltage (from neon sign transformer) inside the tank, attach it to a simple aluminum wire and use it as an antenna (or "glow bar" as its called in the trade) for the purpose of "glow discharge cleaning" of the optic. #2 Pressure measurement While unconventional, a simple (and cheap) thermocouple vacuum gauge will suffice as the *only* pressure measurement tool. While the thermocouple gauge won't give you a value for your ultimate pressure, it will tell you when it is NOT ok to evaporate. TC gauges are good to about 10-3 torr, so if the gauge reads more than its lower limit, your pressure is too high. BTW, my TC gauge is NOT calibrated (nor do I find this to be a problem!) I have a mark on the gauge face that tells me where my mechanical rough pump bottoms out at (about a 1/3 of the needle travel on the display gauge). Once the mech pump is done, I switch over to the diffusion pump and the gauge rapidly heads towards my "zero" mark (which is about an 1/8 of the needle travel on the display gauge). Once the TC gauge gets to my "zero" mark and stays there, I've never had a problem evaporating aluminium. BTW, if you can get a TC sensor, you can build the display gauge for it! see: Another trick I use to tell when its time to evaporate (when my penning gauge is acting up, and your mileage may vary) is when the "glow" from my glow discharge cleaning, flickers out. Finally, you can use the TC gauge and a bottle of automotive carburetor spray cleaner to find leaks. Pump the chamber down as low as it will go. Spray suspect areas with carburetor cleaner in small squirts. When you get close to a leak, the TC gauge will JUMP. Large leaks need to be mechanically fixed, Medium sized leaks can be plugged with Silicone, Small leaks can be plugged with "Vacuum Leak Sealant" (looks like small bottle of clear finger nail polish) see: If you have a REALLY small leak and its inside the chamber somewhere, coat the outside of the chamber with pump oil, pull your best vacuum, evaporate some aluminum, leaks will be revealed by black stains where the aluminum reacted with the oil #3 Vacuum Mythologies I'd like to dismiss: First, let me start by saying the below mentioned myths are probably TRUE, but only when a vacuum system is operated at pressures below what we need for evaporating aluminum (IE less than equal to 10-6 torr). Your mileage may vary if your doing Di-Electric coatings, or have a really large chamber and a small diffusion pump which can't keep up with the out-gassing. A) "A single finger print will ruin your vacuum" Bullocks! I have 6 tungsten filaments and 6 bits of aluminum I install with often SWEATY fingers and I've never worn gloves. I do wash my hands before installation to remove most of the oils, but sweat from my hands and arms bumping into the chamber while loading it are all too common. Clean up is done by simply wiping the obvious stuff up with a paper towel, blow drying with an electric heat gun, and "dusting" with O2 from my oxy-acetylene torch. B) "You must use expensive Viton O-Rings and Stainless Steel Chambers" FALSE! I used Buna-N o-rings for the base-plate seal, and "Home-Depot Plumbing Supply" o-rings in the electrical pass-troughs, and a rusty propane tank for a chamber (yes it had rust on the inside, which I lightly sanded to get rid of the really bad parts, but rust STILL exists on internal parts of my chamber and no problems as it all gets overcoated in evaporated aluminum, and is now nice and shiny rust :) C) "You must use expensive synthetic diffusion pump oils, and purpose built roughing pumps" NOT! If your wondering what expensive is, try $500us for 500ml bottle of synthetic oil! (ouch!!!) I use 'cheap' $60us / gallon Invoil-20 diffusion pump oil in both my diffusion pump and my 'roughing pump' and I have a LOT left over! See: for reference. Oh, my roughing pump is a used HVAC service pump, that was locked up solid when I got it. I took it apart, cleaned out the goo that used to be the pump oil, put it back together and it works fine! For reference I'm using a Dayton model 4Z577 1/3hp refrigeration vacuum pump, and it will pull my 12" diameter, 11" tall chamber down in less than 10 minutes and has no problem backing the diffusion pump. D) "A liquid nitrogen cold trap is a must" No Sir! First, the Mt. Wilson observatory coated their 100" optic for many years with out a cold trap. They now use refrigerated Glycol and a copper chevron baffle as their cold trap. See: I use a loop of copper coil with R-22 freon at about -50C and an old refrigeration pump. However I've coated a few mirrors without using the freon based cold trap (freon leak, now fixed). I believe its possible to build a simple coating system with out a cold trap, instead use baffles to prevent a "line of sight" between the diffusion pump opening and the optical surface of the mirror and the evaporative source. For instance the mirrors I coated w/o the cold trap all had a slight coating of oil on the backside of the mirror (VERY SLIGHT). The optical side of the mirror came out just fine! E) No myth here, but I found it interesting that PVC irrigation pipe can be used for the rough pump plumbing lines. While I haven't done this, I would consider it when its time to build a new coating system. See: for my reference on the above suggestion. BTW the reference is an EXCELLENT paper on how the monolithic MMT mirror was coated :) Now, here's a parts list for a "no-frills" coating system. This system is going to be on the slow side as it doesn't have a provision to "Rough Out" the chamber and then switch over to the diffusion pump for the final vacuum. Instead, we pull a rough vacuum in the chamber THROUGH the diffusion pump, once the chamber is down to the rough vacuum, we turn on the heaters for the diffusion pump and wait for it to warm up. Once the diff pump is up to operating temp, the pressure will drop rapidly in the chamber and we evaporate our aluminum. Once the aluminum is evaporated, we close the large valve between the tank and the Diff pump, and vent the chamber revealing our coated optic. Word of advice, "Never expose Hot Diffusion Pump Oil to atmospheric pressure!!!!!!" It makes a terrible mess, been there done that during an ill timed power outage! Parts: #1 Rough Pump: Ebay, $150.00 #2 Diff Pump with valves: A) small system, Ebay, $200.00 B) large system, Ebay, $500.00 #3 Thermocouple Gauge w/ tube Ebay, $25 #4 Diff / Rough pump oil, quart $17 #5 High Voltage transformer Ebay, $10 #6 Tungsten Wire .032", smallparts.com, $14 #7 Ceramic Standoffs, smallparts.com $36 #8 Transformer filament power supply, A $50 smart ups 1250 on ebay that's minus the batteries. Buy it, salvage the big old transformer out of it, and power it off a 600watt 120vac dimmer switch from hardware store.. #9 20lb propane tank, new, *empty* $25 hardware store #10 1/2" sheet steel, 14" x 48", salvage, ~$50??? #11 O-ring, 0.25" thick, 12" ID, $9 #12 Two part silicone adhesive / sealant, $38, #13 Misc: wood to build cart, glass for windows and electrical pass thrus, bolts, Filament holders, Tank vent valve (Hose Bib, brass), electrical switches and housings. Tools: Oxy/Acetylene cutting - brazing torch and supplies Angle Grinder Hand Tools Assembly, #1 Cut 14" square piece of the 1/2" sheet steel to use as base-plate. Cut center hole to match diameter of Diff Pump opening. Drill holes to match diff pump bolt pattern. Sand off rust, and coat with diff pump oil to prevent rust. Place O-ring on Diff pump opening, use silicone sealant on diff pump to base plate bolts. Bolt base plate to diff pump. #2 Build wood cart to support base plate and diff pump assembly, leaving room for a work platform, and rough pump support. Also good time to run water cooling lines to diff pump, if water cooled. #3 Install rough pump, and run a Copper / PVC plumbing line between rough pump and Diff pump outlet. #4 Remove valve from propane tank. Cut bottom off the propane tank with angle grinder or cutting torch (it was a new empty, never been filled tank, yes?). Precision not needed, but try to make a straight cut... #5 Cut out a 12" ID, 13" OD steel ring from remaining sheet steel with cutting torch. Braze this ring onto bottom of propane tank, leaving 1/4", or slightly more, of the tank wall sticking down past steel ring. #6 Grind the propane tank portion that sticks past steel ring down to ~0.2" relative to bottom of the steel ring. This is where base-plate to tank O-Ring goes.. #7 Install brass T where the old valve of the propane tank went. One side of the T goes to Thermocouple Gauge tube, other side goes to tank vent valve (brass hose bib) #8 Cut 2x 1" holes in top of tank, braze 1" ID steel fender washers to opening as re-enforcement. Cut 3" square piece of 1/4" (or thicker) plate glass. Drill 1/4" ID hole in center with ceramic tile drill bit. Silicone these to the holes in the top of the tank. After silicone cures, slip a 1/4-20 bolt, with on o-ring installed, thru hole, and hand tighten nut. #9 Build 6 point filament system using ceramic stand-offs around perimeter of tank near the top. Wire one side of filaments to tank ground, other side to 1 of the two electrical feed-thrus at the top of the tank. #10 Install aluminum 'antenna' for glow discharge cleaning. Do Not Ground this! Connect antenna to the remaining electrical pass thru. #11 Install HV neon sign transformer, use only one side of the HV output and connect to Glow Discharge antenna. #12 Install low voltage / high current transformer, connect one side of output to tank ground, other side to filament pass-thru. #13 Install thermo couple gauge display #14 Assemble and leak test, play with glow discharge system, evaporate some aluminum onto a test piece of glass. BTW, in above styled system, the optic will be coated face up (the back of the optic used as a baffle for the diff pump) Every now and then (if you put too much Al on the filaments) you will get a drip of molten AL. Its important to make sure your filaments are as close to the tank walls as possible, and the optic is centered in the chamber. If a drip should happen it will safely land on the base plate BESIDE the optic, not ON the optic!! (really, really important!!!) So, there ya go, an 11" diameter coating system for ~$800us and a ton of labor. If you want a larger system, buy the $500 diff pump, and build a large BOX chamber out of heavy sheet steel. (I have one in progress that will coat upto 24" diameter mirrors. The box is being built from 1/2" sheet steel, and has inside dimensions of 25"x25"x11", I'm pretty sure it'll work, but the first time I pull a vacuum, I'll be standing back a fairly good distance!) Best of luck James Lerch |
Re: plans for vacuum system
Gomez
On Wednesday, September 17, 2003, at 10:17 AM, Ken Hunter wrote:
Hi Gang...How would we do that? Is there an archive somewhere? James... I am requesting that you also post the info here or give meThat sounds like a better idea. |
plans for vacuum system
Ken Hunter
Hi Gang...
James Lerch has posted to another forum (atm@...) a description of how and why he made his system. I recommend that you read it and see if this information is applicable to your use. James... I am requesting that you also post the info here or give me permission to copy it to the VacuumX GROUP for our use here also. I think it is very appropriate as a basic vacuum system description. Thanks, Ken Hunter |
Re: plans and things
James Lerch
Charles,
A good book to read, which I found rather helpful is: Procedures in Experimental Physics John Strong, Ph.D. Lindsay Publications, Inc. ISBN 0-917914-56-2 Here are some websites that got me started. I also have a bunch of pictures of my "junkyard wars" alluminizer on my site below. Take Care, James Lerch (My telescope construction,testing, and coating site) "Anything that can happen, will happen" -Stephen Pollock from: "Particle Physics for Non-Physicists: A Tour of the Microcosmos" |
Re: plans and things
Gomez
On Sunday, September 14, 2003, at 06:53 AM, Charles Mitchard wrote:
Hi all, would anyone have any drawings (sketches) or plans that show how aI would suggest you start with some sort of books that explains the fundamental concepts, so that you will gain an intuitive understanding of what has to happen to make your system work. possible titles include: search.cfm?qwork=5936307&ptit=Scientific%20foundations%20of%20vacuum%20t echnique%2E&pauth=Dushman%2C%20Saul&pisbn=&pbest=23%2E16&pbestnew=100000 0%2E00&pqty=8&pqtynew=0&matches=8&qsort=r search.cfm?qwork=6983871&ptit=Vacuum%20deposition%20of%20thin%20films%2E &pauth=Holland%2C%20Leslie&pisbn=&pbest=21%2E95&pbestnew=1000000%2E00&pq ty=7&pqtynew=0&matches=7&qsort=r search.cfm?qwork=2899135&ptit=High%20vacuum&pauth=Maine%2C%20Charles%20E ric&pisbn=&pbest=2%2E95&pbestnew=1000000%2E00&pqty=45&pqtynew=0&matches= 45&qsort=r And the classic "Procedures In Experimental Physics" should be on every hobbyist's bookshelf: search.cfm?qwork=5366428&ptit=Procedures%20in%20experimental%20physics&p auth=Strong%2C%20John%2C%20and%20Neher%2C%20Henry%20Victor&pisbn=&pbest= 18%2E10&pbestnew=1000000%2E00&pqty=10&pqtynew=0&matches=10&qsort=r ........................................................................ .. You start life with a bag full of luck and an empty bag of experience. The trick is to fill the bag of experience before you empty the bag of luck. |
plans and things
Charles Mitchard
Hi all, would anyone have any drawings (sketches) or plans that show how a vacuum system suitable for aluminising would be set up?
In other words how do all the bits and pieces join together? The mechanicals and general wiring I would be ok with but valves, gauges, route taken by the pipe work I am at a loss. Failing any plans can a suitable book be recommended that is easily available? Many thanks Charles I just got lost in thought. It was unfamiliar territory. |
Re: old parts anf stuff
Alberto
did you get my e-mail to you personally
It might be best to shop Ebay-- right now?there is? two controllers for sale, both are thermocouple and ion combination these are not tested and may not work but chances are they are repairable, all of the gauge tubes (both types) work the same but the pin locations are different so you may need to swap the wires around a bit. the thermocouple?guage tube only needs 3 wires to work even thou the socket has 8, and ion gauges you can see thru. I have 3 thermocouple controllers I bought for 5 to 10 dollars a piece hopeing one would work--they all do,, but all needed re-wiring because of there age,
? ---I will use the system for cathode ray tube recovery, |
Re: Ho Hummmmm
Gomez
On Thursday, August 28, 2003, at 10:06 AM, Ken Hunter wrote:
I've been thinking of picking up one of the printed collections of olderI thought The Bell Jar was sort of a internet tie-in to the paperI haven't kept up on the Bell Jar as they were heading into deeper issues, but if they're into serious esoterica, I may reconsider. I'm hoping that we can keep this forum mainly for the beginningFine by me, because that's what I am! It surely doesn't hurt to have some of ourHahaha. I went to an auction in Boulder for a company that had made micro-electro-optic devices, and they had a number of plasma cleaning devices that they had home-made from microwave ovens, home-brew acrylic (!) chambers and other such stuff. I probably won't have $20,000 tied up in my whole vacuum coatingDitto! - Gomez ............................................................ The Mad Scientists Club: equations solved, tigers castrated, virgins enlightened, computers verified, taverns drained, doomsdays averted, governments run, test rockets piloted, liberties preserved, revolutions quelled (or started), despots overthrown, dominant paradigms subverted. |
Re: Ho Hummmmm
Ken Hunter
I thought The Bell Jar was sort of a internet tie-in to the paperI haven't kept up on the Bell Jar as they were heading into deeper water than I could swim in and had progressed to projects that I wasn't interested in. I'm hoping that we can keep this forum mainly for the beginning vacuum enthusiast. It surely doesn't hurt to have some of our members that are well versed in the details and have years of experience in vacuum work though! They are a great resource but I find that the other web resources I'm finding are mainly for PRO's with deep pockets. For instance, on one forum I asked a question about glow discharge cleaning and got many replies from folks trying to sell me hardware with beginning prices well over $20,000. I probably won't have $20,000 tied up in my whole vacuum coating system (including the cost of the building). I am a beginner, a novice, it's a hobby and I'm just NOT interested in what happens on the sub-atomic level or in using calculus to figure the details for multi-layer coatings. I just want to make the glass shiny! Ken Hunter |
Re: Ho Hummmmm
Gomez
On Wednesday, August 27, 2003, at 04:17 PM, Ken Hunter wrote:
Hi Bill,I thought The Bell Jar was sort of a internet tie-in to the paper publication. Is that still around? So I started up this group. Participation goes in spurts and I have toThat's the way most special interest groups are, it seems. Once I get a digital camera, I'll post some pics of my system, and later, some related projects. Not really thinking of pulling the plug.Cool. - Bill "Gomez" Lemieux ................................. 1 megafurlong per microfortnight- it's not just a good idea, it's the law. |
Re: Ho Hummmmm
Ken Hunter
Hi Bill,
Thanks for stopping by and joining... I searched and searched for a forum and found the Bell Jar too... seems they are on a "linear track". They started out simple and progressed to complex in short order then for all practical purposes disappeared from the net. So I strarted up this group. Participation goes in spurts and I have to stir the pot every so often to get some posts on here... Not really thinking of pulling the plug. ;o) Ken Hunter --- In VacuumX@..., "Bill Lemieux" <gomez@o...> wrote: --- In VacuumX@..., "Ken Hunter" <atm_ken_hunter@y...>wrote: going?What a boring group! Can anyone give me a reason to keep it and stumbled across itThere must be someone out there that is doing some vacuum work!(just found this msg, since I just joined) quite by accident, you might need to allow some time for others todo the same, or find a way to promote it. Have you posted anything about thisgroup to The Bell Jar? it to a couple of other mailing lists I'm on. |
Re: Ho Hummmmm
Bill Lemieux
--- In VacuumX@..., "Ken Hunter" <atm_ken_hunter@y...> wrote:
What a boring group! Can anyone give me a reason to keep it going?(just found this msg, since I just joined) Well, given that it's a somewhat specialized field of interest, and stumbled across it quite by accident, you might need to allow some time for others to do the same, or find a way to promote it. Have you posted anything about this group to The Bell Jar? I mentioned your group to two others, and will probably also post it to a couple of other mailing lists I'm on. |
introduction
Bill Lemieux
Hi folks, just found the group and joined, thought I'd say hi. I'm a general
experimenter / mad scientist type, currently in the process of rebuilding a Veeco VE- 300 general purpose vacuum system. (no bell jar for it yet). The system has been disassembled, cleaned and reassembled, and about all that remains is to finish mounting the roughing pump (a bit big to fit completely within the original cart, but I have a hack for it) I am interested in a variety of high voltage, laers, physics, and general high energy phenomena. I didn't have an immediate need for a high vacuum system, but they are just so darned handy sometimes, and I picked this one up, missing a roughing pump, at an auction. I won't make anyone cry by telling you how little I paid for it. :) Looking forward to reading the message archives as time permits. |
Re: old parts anf stuff
Ill let you know what I can do in a few days.?? All thermocouple gauges work the same only the pin locations are different so if you dont need high accuracy and are willing to play around with the wires to make it work it may be easier (cheaper) to just grab one off the shelf. If you dont get a direct e-mail from me in a few days let me know ? |
Re: old parts anf stuff
AGUSTIN GASPARINI wrote:
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