Which O-Ring for piston ring?

Home Model Engine Machinist Forum

Help Support Home Model Engine Machinist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Jack3M

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 11, 2017
Messages
294
Reaction score
140
There are so many out there, I have no clue which to use for a piston ring. The one I got at the hardware store lasted about 10 minutes of run time.
McMaster-Carr has a huge selection of types?
https://www.mcmaster.com/o-rings
 
Use a Viton o-ring. they are heat resistant and last forever. You want 1/16" cross section, with outside diameter to match the cylinder bore. Groove in piston should be .094" wide x 0.058" deep. Only use one ring.---Brian
 
Jack

I agree with Brian on the Vitron (hard not soft), I have over 800 hours on my Gade with the same ring. I have found another ring that I am using on a steam cylinder that gets much hotter than our gas engines. It is an Ultra-Chemical-Resistant Aflas O-Ring, get it from Mc Master. I will be trying it on my next gas engine. Also you really want minimum wall pressure so the depth of the groove in the piston needs to be based on the cylinder diameter. I attached a PDF that shows how to calculate for whatever cylinder diameter you have relative to your piston. Also remember that a 1/16 O Ring is not 1/16 in diameter but .070 so you need to account for that also. Your goal should be to get a nice rock and bounce like this.

https://youtu.be/1QazAr4b3KY

Let us know how it comes out for you

Good Luck

Bob
 

Attachments

  • O Ring Data updated.pdf
    53.9 KB
Backing up what Brian said - if you use two "O" rings - in any application, a pressure builds up between the two rings sufficient to cause extrusion / premature failure.
You can use two (to prevent "rocking" for instance) but then the gap between the "O" rings must be vented (just a small "drain" hole) to either the HP or LP side to prevent this pressure build up.
Two rings in a wide groove will fail - two grooves are obviously separated - but the void between them must be vented
Seems a bit counter intuitive but it does work.
Regards, Ken
 
If the Viton are only lasting 10mins what is the surface of your cylineder like? At a minimum it wants to be honed but better if it is lapped.
 
Has anyone considered these seals? The bronze filled ones are good to 575 degrees F.

Lohring Miller
 
Here is where I get them, buy by the quantity and share them to other builders, what size do you need?

here are the Vitron - McMaster-Carr

Bob
 
I get mine at the local hardware store for a little over a buck. Very pleased with longevity, especially with the temps involved. My engines power things with no forced cooling so, I have an excuse to tear them down clean the carbon from the valves, head and piston and replace O-ring after about a year. Chain reduction turns 2qt. ice cream maker for 30 minutes.
 

Attachments

  • 20200227_160314[1].jpg
    20200227_160314[1].jpg
    323 KB
  • 20200227_160334[1].jpg
    20200227_160334[1].jpg
    306.3 KB
I have used Nitrile O-rings from the hardware store when I didn't find the size needed in Viton. Viton performs just as well though and costs 3 times more from Ace.
 
Parker handbook on o-ring has a temperature chart: Perfluorinated Elastomer (FFKM) 250C to 300C, TFE/Propropylene (FEPM) 235C to 250C, silicone rubber (VMQ) 210C to 250C, and Flourocarbon Rubber (FKM) 205C to 250C.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top