O-ring?
 What is it?

o-ring
 Seals | Hydraulic Sealing | Metric Seals | Oil Seals | O-Ring | Gaskets

O-ring Described

An O-ring is a torus, or doughnut-shaped object, generally made from an elastomer, though O-rings are made in PTFE and other plastic materials, and in metals, both hollow and solid. They are used primarily for sealing. Another use is for light duty drive belts.


Basic Principles 


An O-ring seal is a means for closing off a passageway preventing an unwanted escape or loss of fluid. The seal consists of an O-ring installed in a gland and  is exactly that - a circular run in which the elastomeric material has a section that is virtually a circle. The gland is the cavity (usually within metal) into which the Oring is placed. The combination of these two elements comprises an Oring seal.


Operation

All fluid-tight seals are characterized by the absence of any passage by which fluid might escape. detail differences exist in the manner by which zero clearance is obtained - welding, brazing, soldering, ground or lapped fits or the yielding of a softer material wholly or partially confined between two harder and stiffer member of the structure. The Oring seal falls in the latter class. The rubber seal should be considered as an incompressible, viscous fluid having a very high surface tension. 

How To Order 

When you order, Absolute Seal needs to know the inside diameter (I.D.), the cross section diameter (W), and the compound (rubber material) from which it is to be made, these three pieces of information being sufficient to describe an Oring completely.

Ordering information...

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