Stuffing Box Assembly Machine Drawing Dwg.pdf Free Download Here MACHINE/ELECTRICAL CHECKLIST - Mine Safety and Health. A Stuffing Box Design and Installation of Compression Packings The importance of packing glands correctly cannot be over-emphasised. Many packing failures are due to. Claudia gorbman unheard melodies. Online download stuffing box assembly drawing Stuffing Box Assembly Drawing Now welcome, the most inspiring book today from. • • • This article is within the scope of, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the and see a list of open tasks. This article has not yet received a rating on the project's. This article has not yet received a rating on the project's. Merge discussion [ ] I am suggesting that this article be merged with as, apart form the electrical usage, I think the terms are virtually synonymous. () 21:33, 24 January 2010 (UTC) • Weak oppose The terms have a lot of overlap, but is IMHO far narrower. It's only used in one or two fields, is generally anachronistic, refers specifically to the type that can be compressed onto a soft packing, and it certainly doesn't have the other meanings (i. Tom waits orphans rapidshare. e. Static electrical seals) that gland does. As we have two articles that are well linked, there seems little scope for confusion. Stuffing box is also the larger article at present, so there's an issue of, unless gland was to be expanded quite a bit first. () 21:44, 24 January 2010 (UTC) I think that the three terms: groove, gland and stuffing box could all be accused of having the same meaning. Check out the Wikipedia entry for 'Groove (machining)'. It would be best to clean up the way Wikipedia handles all three of these, so that overlap and non-overlap are properly described. As it is, Wikipedia says a gland is a type of stuffing box, and a stuffing box is a type of gland. This is a circular definition. -- () 22:50, 4 August 2010 (UTC) OK, I looked. Is not relevant. () 23:42, 5 August 2010 (UTC) In the aerospace industry, the words groove and gland are used fairly interchangeably. For example the grooves for the seals of the hydraulic actuators on the wing control surfaces are often called glands. I think this is also true of other industries. -- () 06:33, 12 August 2010 (UTC) Westwind, I've never heard the two used interchangeably and I'm not in the aerospace industry. () 13:36, 12 August 2010 (UTC) Andy - I agree. 'Gland', as a term is far too general, and its meaning varies far too much between industries for smaller articles such as this to be merged into it. 'Stuffing box', as a term, refers only to what is shown in this article or variants thereupon, and this in itself should guarantee its own article. I have experience in aeronautics, marine and the electronic industries and whilst coming across many interpretations of 'Gland', this is the only thing that I have come across called a 'Stuffing Box'. () 09:32, 15 August 2010 (UTC) I am not advocating merger. ![]() I am just advocating a clear Wikipedia explanation of the overlap and distinction between groove, gland, and stuffing box. In certain situations I think all three may overlap. For an example of 'gland' meaning 'groove', see the 5th pdf page of, Section 1.2 'The seal assembly consists of an elastomer O-ring and a gland.' It is fairly obvious that they are talking about a groove for an o-ring. -- () 05:25, 24 August 2010 (UTC) Westwind, that's a good reference. Why don't you add a note to the and article noting their interchangeability in o-ring applications?
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