Bruce,
Designed Aircraft hydraulic electric motor pumps, We used 20 drops per
CC, which is consistent with 1.14 gal per day. The Phosphate Ester
fluid used has a specific gravity of .975 so it is a little thinner than
water but close enough. That said, if you a dripping at 1 drop per
second you need to tighten up or replace the packing. We used a
specification of 12 drops per hour on electric motor pumps running at
8,000 RPM.
Neil Schiller
1983 C&C 35-3, #028, "Grace"
Whitehall, Michigan
WLYC
On 3/14/2020 8:38 AM, bwhitmore via CnC-List wrote:
Hi Pierre,
I was interested in your comment and went to verify it, and found a
huge disparity in results, everything from the 1.14 you mention to as
much as 8 gallons per day, and some of those coming from seemingly
reputable websites.
Comments anyone?
Sent from Samsung tablet.
-------- Original message --------
From: Pierre Tremblay via CnC-List <cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
Date: 3/14/20 7:12 AM (GMT-05:00)
To: C&C List <cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
Cc: Pierre Tremblay <tremblay.pie...@yahoo.ca>
Subject: Re: Stus-List Stuffing box leak rates
Just for reference, 1 drop per second is 1.14 us gallon per day.
Regards,
Pierre Tremblay
Avalanche #54988
C&C38-3 WK, hull #76
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