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  1. #1
    Does any one know where I could get a bottle jack with a pressure gauge port in the UK? I been searching for ages and can only find them available in the US, with a £70 delivery from one place!

    4 ton would be ideal, 8 ton would do at a push.

  2. #2
    Depends what your intended use is so difficult to point you in one direction but you just need to alter your search a bit. I found a few under hydraulic ram but you could also try actuator.

  3. #3
    Tangye Superline Bottle Jacks

    "Base fitted for optional gauge and accessories"

    Still quite expensive!.

    However; Ive got a normal bottle jack at home... it has a screw is 'release' valve... similar to a trolley jack... (you turn it when you want it to go down).

    well; just an idea... could you not fit a guage to that port? perhaps even engineer a t-peace to maintain the release functionality at the same time?

  4. #4
    Thanks Martin, I tried that and many other variations without luck. (I really want to avoid putting together a hydraulic system because it's too expensive and I don't know how ;-))

    These are the sort of things I'm after:
    http://www.jackxchange.com/images/pdf/345.pdf

    I didn't really want to say what I want if for because it'll probably generate a lot of negativity but I'm trying to build a press on the cheap for laminating that I can monitor with an electronic sensor.

    It's really frustrating to know that the ideal thing is available for under $50 but I can't hold of one for under £180!


    Kingcreaky, thanks for the link :-) One extra option.

    I have been wondering about the release port, but surely its an indirect link otherwise wouldn't it leak? My mechanical knowledge is not good :-)

  5. #5
    if you unscrew this valve altogether it does leak!. im pretty sure it would work. il try in tonight i think ive got a valve

  6. #6
    a bottle jack is hydraulic so you are already playing about with hydraulics lol
    Take it you don't need a lot of control over the pressure you require, be very difficult to get any sort of accuracy with something like that. Is it just a case of squeezing it together under pressure?

  7. #7
    Kingcreaky, thanks for the help and the PM!

    Martin, I know it's hydraulic but since it's all contained in one unit I don't have to work out what to get in the way of pumps, hoses etc :-) To be honest I don't know how much control is necessary to get perfect results but I'm sure that I can get useable results from quite a wide range, I've seen what I want to do done with a sublimation clamp even though the proper pressure is far higher. At any rate I'm generally pretty good at teasing out more performance from something than it's intended to give and if it doesn't work out then I end up with a very useful bit of kit anyway :-)

    BTW, the problem may be solved! :-)

  8. #8
    You could probably use a load cell or strain gauge to measure to the pressure. Then you wouldn't need a special jack. Maybe you can utilise something like this: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Lincos-Hydra.../dp/B009M3SDN2

  9. #9
    Hi Birchy,

    Thanks, for the suggestion and the link. I'm coming around to the idea that I'll have to use a system such as you suggest. It's just that (can we swear on here?) it annoys me greatly that every time I look at a project such as this there's something in the USA that's ideal for the job at a fraction of the price of a less suitable alternative that's all we can get here, assuming there is even an alternative available here at all.



    Anyway, what I'm doing is hooking up a transducer (with a home brew USB interface) into a hydraulic line and using it with a ram and pump that I've borrowed for now so that I can concentrate on the rest of the system. There's plenty of other things to deal with :-)

    For the record here's what I've considered so far:

    Using a bottle jack and tapping it myself, cheap if I manage it but time consuming and prone to failure (will I get a jack that will dismantle, will I damage while taking it apart, will I introduce a weak spot that will fail...).

    Using a bottle jack and using an existing hole, e.g. the release valve or safety valve! I've found a source of bottle jacks that come with an internal diagram now so I know how they operate and what's inside. The release valve would require a bit of precession engineering I think. The safety valve, apart from the obvious drawback of the potential for serious injury, would probably require the jack to be taken apart anyway to clean it out after I'd finished tinkering.

    Using a bottle jack with a load cell, easy but the cost is in the region of getting the pump, ram and transducer etc. and then there's the extra mechanics to take care of too. I have considered using a system of lever and cheaper load cells but it's too much hassle.

    Using an air cushion (air cushion jack, inner tubes or self built cushion), not outside the realms of possibility but the accuracy would be bad and the precision may be inadequate too.

    Using a pneumatic ram, can't get one that will do the job directly for less than the cost the whole hydraulic system put together. I have considered using a smaller ram and a system of levers but there is too much to go wrong.

    Using small load cells on my pressing plates, possibly a good solution but I'd need to experiment with a system that applies a known amount of force to get it calibrated which takes me back to step one :-)


    If I get this thing working I intend to share the details so that others can benefit from it too, for that reason I want to keep the built as simple and cheap as possible (the bias being towards simple in the case of conflict).

  10. #10
    m_c's Avatar
    Lives in East Lothian, United Kingdom. Last Activity: 1 Day Ago Forum Superstar, has done so much to help others, they deserve a medal. Has been a member for 9-10 years. Has a total post count of 2,908. Received thanks 360 times, giving thanks to others 8 times.
    Figure out where the high pressure part of the jack is, and drill and tap for G1/8?

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