by bnelson » Sat Apr 10, 2004 12:56 pm
The pipe leading from the test hole down to the filter plenum is 5" o.d. mandrel bent exhaust tubing.....16ga I think if memory serves. The outlet from the LFE into the fan plenum is 4" o.d. mandrel bent exhaust tubing. BTW this tubing is available real reasonable at a large truck parts and repair shop. The ones I have are by Fleet Guard Products......Fleetguard.com I think. All of the tubing flanges are made from 1/4" plate with 8 equally spaced 3/8" bolt holes. I'll take some more pictures of the details later and post.........the batteries in my camera just died. The check valves are some of the same 5"o.d. tubing that has been welded to a 1/4" plate flange on the bottom. Inside, down about 1/2" from the top is a piece of 1/4" x 1" flatbar welded across the i.d. of the tubing with the 1" width facing up. It has 3 holes drilled in it. One in the center to oil the top motor bearing in the fan and the outside two to screw the check valve to the 2 tapped holes in the top of the fan motor frame. On the side of the check valve tube I welded on a bracket for the flap hinge. The bracket is made from a piece of 3 1/2" x 1/8" wall square tubing. I cut it in half first to make a channel, where the legs are about an inch long. The bracket is about an 1 1/4" tall and the top sits about 1/8" below the top of the tubing. The flap is made from a piece of 2a sided 1/2" plywood, cut out with a circle cutter in the drillpress. On the bottom of it I glued a piece of 1/16" neoprene rubber. The flap hinge is just a regular old door hinge thats been re-drilled to move the screw holes to better fit the bracket on the side of the tube and the flap diameter. Speaking of diameter, the flap is 5 1/2" o.d. The wood screws into the top of the flap were cut off on the bottom with a hacksaw before installing the rubber. The screws on the bracket side are just regular machine screws and nuts in slightly oversized holes. To true the top of the tubing where the flap sits, I had to chuck each valve up in the lathe and face the top after the bottom flange was welded on.
BTW, all of the Meriam instruments I bought on ebay for a fraction of what they sell new for. I could never have afforded any of it without buying them this way. A word of caution: never buy an LFE unless you can get ahold of the calibration papers that go with it, otherwise it is useless because the papers contain all of the correction factors and formulas that you need to calculate the flow. All LFE's are flowed at the factory and given a correction factor that you plug into a formula. Each and everyone of them are all a little bit different. They compare them with a master and then assign two unique factors to the LFE for doing calculations based on how it compared to the master.
I have pictures of the filter plenum under construction and will post along with others if anyone is interested.
Here is a current picture. (well, if it uploads anyway!!)