abycat
0
I had a hot tub sand filter explode and thankfully i wasn't around it. It shot sand everywhere. I vote never play around with safety!
Fill the crack with gorilla glue and then let it dry for 48 hours then dremil excess glue flush with filter. Works every time. Been in pool filter repair for 5 years with a company doing it for 8 years. This will work. GuaranteedMy opinion is that there is no acceptable fix for a cracked filter.
Does anyone have any methods that they think would provide a good fix?
Fill the crack with gorilla glue and then let it dry for 48 hours then dremil excess glue flush with filter. Works every time. Been in pool filter repair for 5 years with a company doing it for 8 years. This will work. Guaranteed
I do a good deal of defect witness work.
You are wide open to fiscal & plausibly criminal liabilities.
By repairing those tanks you have created your own untested uninsurable product.
I won’t comment on anything ongoing, do a search for Tony Anthony Label Pool Filter Exploded Bomb.
In a former life I was a SCUBA instructor and a certified hydrostatic technician and I have performed many tests on tanks.It's interesting. When testing real pressure vessels, you use a hydraulic test as the relatively incompressible water just kinda goes "boomph" and makes a bit of a splash if they rupture, and that is at several orders of magnitude more pressure than you get from a domestic pool pump.
A 3,000 PSI tank is filled with water and is then submerged in the test chamber, also filled with water.
That is correct, it does measure the change in displacement of the water in the outer vessel. It was 35 or so years ago, but IIRC we had to record the original displacement, the displacement under pressure and the final displacement at the end of testing. These were all part of the calculation to determine pass/fail.Since the thread is already out of the park, I'll digress and seek clarification on this point.
It is my understanding that the purpose of the secondary "containment" chamber is to measure the displacement of the tank under test. As you pump up the tank under test, the change in displacement indicates the wall flex/deformation of the tank under test and forms one of the test parameters.
That is correct, it does measure the change in displacement of the water in the outer vessel.
As I said, Pressure vessels are not toys. Any damage to the vessel is cause for immediate condemnation.
I do a good deal of defect witness work.
You are wide open to fiscal & plausibly criminal liabilities.
By repairing those tanks you have created your own untested uninsurable product.
I won’t comment on anything ongoing, do a search for Tony Anthony Label Pool Filter Exploded Bomb.
I did, and a few similar searches and found nothing
Pressure vessel = bomb
Play stupid games, win stupid prizes
I don't think you could find anyone to re-certify a pool filter. Unless the manufacturer or another organization (like the US Department of transportation who sets the standards for other tank re-certification, like SCUBA & LP Gas Cylinders in the US) approves of the process and creates a "standard" no second party is going to makeup standards.I think it's possible to repair a pressure vessel, under one condition, it is re-certified afterward. You would need to remove your filter, remove all the sand and other parts, repair it. The take it to a facility that does pressure vessel certification to have it re-certified, then reinstall it. The re-certification would most likely be the expensive part, partly because it's specialized work, requiring specialized equipment and also they are assuming some if not all of the liability if it fails.