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Old 11-05-2014, 10:20 PM   #1
RICE RACING
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Lightbulb Turbo gasket failure.... bye bye BDC, and HC pardigm shift right here LOL

Well who is sick to fuck of V'Bands leaking? or failures of SS gaskets or even inconel ones! in flange turbo's ! I know I am!!!!

Well now thanks to aviation and military use there is a solution!

This stuff allows PROPER metal to metal CONTACT with no pre load lost over time via ANY GASKET!, there is NO GASKET to melt away once the pre load is lost either! this shit is liquid GOLD!

The problem!



The solution!







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Old 11-05-2014, 10:45 PM   #2
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Needs a turbo blanket to keep those post turbine EGT's in check

Got your email... I'm intrigued.... so is it a paste that hardens? can it be removed and reapplied? Does it allow the turbo to be removed easily?

I'm guess it's a compound that remains tacky throughout it's life. So smear a bit on both sides of the gasket, assemble, and when you need to take the turbo off, the gasket is garbage and the compound can be mechanically removed?

I may have to pick up a tube of this, as well as something else x2
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Old 11-05-2014, 10:52 PM   #3
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Looks like you would use this on two flat machined surfaces without a gasket of any kind to seal
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Old 11-05-2014, 10:55 PM   #4
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Default BDC = gaylord to HC paradigm wind chill shift calculations

Quote:
Originally Posted by TitaniumTT View Post
Needs a turbo blanket to keep those post turbine EGT's in check

Got your email... I'm intrigued.... so is it a paste that hardens? can it be removed and reapplied? Does it allow the turbo to be removed easily?

I'm guess it's a compound that remains tacky throughout it's life. So smear a bit on both sides of the gasket, assemble, and when you need to take the turbo off, the gasket is garbage and the compound can be mechanically removed?

I may have to pick up a tube of this, as well as something else x2
NO GASKET! Gaskets are always the problem as they loose preload over time and then FAIL.

This is a paste that allows metal to metal contact in the high spots between V'Bands and Flat flanges and the paste fills in the voids, creating a leak free joint, for rigid flanges like turbos, v'bands etc.

The compound is slightly flexible at 800deg C but at room temperature after curing it is 'brittle' to remove tap part with plastic/nylon mallet and to remove cured compound soak in water for 1 hours then wire brush it off.

Its a great product! say good by to BDC and HC styled failures LOL
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Old 11-06-2014, 04:45 PM   #5
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Cool find. Is that first pic one of my manifolds ?
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Old 11-06-2014, 10:18 PM   #6
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Yeah its one of yours, I ripped the pic off the net and added my own color chart to show the temperatures in various zones.

This product is 'un believable' I do recommend when you use it on flanged turbos that you have enough room to 'tap' the exhaust housing relative to the manifold flange, to crack the seal cause at room temperature on disassemble you will need to 'break' the joint, once its cured it sticks to the mating flanges and itself like shit to a blanket.............. best thing I have ever used.

Def will never leak again though Ass loads of OEM gas turbine, turbocharger, reciprocating engine manufacturers, and military use and specify only this product for rigid exhaust connections.
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Old 11-07-2014, 03:58 PM   #7
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very interesting find. what kind of abuse did this hold up to on your setup, peter?
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Old 11-07-2014, 05:17 PM   #8
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Originally Posted by jacobcartmill View Post
very interesting find. what kind of abuse did this hold up to on your setup, peter?
Initially: I got it on the recommendation of a Borg Warner engineer who has used it on 'everything' for a decade. Also others I know who work/ed in aviation and have used it only as stated with zero failures/leaks.

For me I tested it only recently to ~1100deg C EGT on a T4 flanged set up that was prone to EATING gaskets, problem solved so far.

This came about due to me doing research on alternative sealing methods (spent 2 months on it with various people around the world) and wanting to go away from the use of gaskets on normal bolted flanged turbos, but also eliminating leaks on V'bands... I have other systems that I will/am testing such as Nickle based wire in a groove machined into the turbo flange, but so far that system is not needed with the use of this product
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Old 11-11-2014, 05:07 AM   #9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RICE RACING View Post
Initially: Nickle based wire in a groove machined into the turbo flange[/I]
Done this and it works well, the only downside is the setup time for machining. Until we discovered even this wasn't necessary.

We stopped using gaskets on the drift cars a couple of years ago, and stopped having problems too. No paste either. Just flat mating faces, and most importantly, black cap screws in place of studs - less stretch.
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Old 11-11-2014, 05:56 AM   #10
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Done this and it works well, the only downside is the setup time for machining. Until we discovered even this wasn't necessary.

We stopped using gaskets on the drift cars a couple of years ago, and stopped having problems too. No paste either. Just flat mating faces, and most importantly, black cap screws in place of studs - less stretch.
Try the paste mate, your turbo supplier got me onto it as NOTHING is ever perfectly flat, I know being a machinist by trade
p.s. he is my supplier now, real top bloke!
p.p.s G8 or higher BOLTS and nuts clamping the two flanges are the ONLY way to do it, you see this on OLD 1970's turbo cars too!
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Old 11-11-2014, 06:12 AM   #11
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Marmon clamps. We used those and metal seals inside the high temp bleed air systems on supers.
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Old 11-26-2014, 02:35 PM   #12
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You think this could work on a set of stock twins for a FD? I go thru gaskets about once a year and it's annoying. Just how hard is it going to be to get them apart if I wish to do so later?
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Old 11-26-2014, 08:11 PM   #13
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You think this could work on a set of stock twins for a FD? I go thru gaskets about once a year and it's annoying. Just how hard is it going to be to get them apart if I wish to do so later?
I dont see why It wont work? tests so far have been 100%.
To get apart at room temp all it takes is a 'tap' with a soft mallet (brass).
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Old 12-03-2014, 12:26 AM   #14
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Looking around I found this.
Deacon Industries - Deacon 8875 paste sealant (500 deg F to 1800 deg F) almost 1000 deg C
Renolit 762 (800 deg C)
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Old 12-03-2014, 11:23 AM   #15
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Quote:
Originally Posted by targarx7 View Post
Looking around I found this.
Deacon Industries - Deacon 8875 paste sealant (500 deg F to 1800 deg F) almost 1000 deg C
Renolit 762 (800 deg C)
Most high-powered turbo rotaries will exceed that max...


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