Seal Input and Design Options
Enter dimensions in one unit system. The calculator preserves your values after calculation.
Example Data Table
This example is a planning demonstration. It is not a production specification.
| Input | Example value | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Seal type | Static face seal | Sets a preliminary squeeze screen. |
| O-ring inside diameter | 47.00 mm | Defines free ring centreline length. |
| Cross-section | 3.53 mm | Controls squeeze and ring area. |
| Gland depth | 2.70 mm | Creates nominal squeeze. |
| Gland width | 4.80 mm | Provides volume for fill and swell. |
| Pressure | 10 bar | Supports clearance-gap screening. |
| Expected volume swell | 3% | Adjusts operating gland fill. |
Reliable O-Ring Gland Design
An O-ring works by deformation inside a gland. The gland creates contact pressure through squeeze. It must retain space for thermal growth, media swell, and tolerances. Design balances these needs.
Static face seals can use more squeeze than moving seals. Radial static seals need controlled bore and groove geometry. Reciprocating and rotary seals need lower squeeze. Lower squeeze reduces friction, heat, and wear. Match the application setting to the actual joint.
Stretch changes the installed ring diameter. Moderate stretch can retain an O-ring during assembly. Excessive stretch reduces cross-section and raises tensile stress. Compression can cause waviness or buckling. Compare the calculated stretch with material and manufacturer limits before releasing drawings.
Gland fill compares O-ring volume with available groove volume. High fill leaves little space for swell and thermal expansion. Low fill can allow unstable positioning. The calculator shows nominal and operating fill. The operating value includes entered volume swell. Treat it as screening, not material qualification.
Temperature affects the elastomer and hardware. Different expansion rates change effective squeeze. Fluid compatibility can alter hardness, volume, and strength. Use the selected material as a planning aid. Confirm compound chemistry, temperature range, pressure limits, and fluid resistance from current supplier data.
Pressure can energize an O-ring. It can also force material into a clearance gap. Small gaps are important at higher pressure. Harder compounds and backup rings may be necessary. This page flags clearance concerns. It cannot replace an extrusion chart or proven seal arrangement.
Formula Used
Nominal squeeze equals cross-section minus gland depth, divided by cross-section. The result is a percentage. Stretch equals installed inside diameter minus free inside diameter, divided by free inside diameter. Gland fill equals ring volume divided by gland volume. Ring volume uses a torus approximation. It multiplies circular cross-sectional area by centreline circumference.
How to Use This Calculator
Select the seal application units first. Enter free O-ring inside diameter and cross-section. Then enter installed diameter, groove depth, width, and mean gland diameter. Add realistic tolerances. Include pressure, clearance gap, temperature change, and expected volume swell. Submit the form and review the calculation panel above it. Check squeeze, stretch, nominal fill, operating fill, and warnings together. Export the summary for design review. Verify final dimensions against the latest manufacturer handbook. Test the assembled joint under actual conditions.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What does O-ring squeeze mean?
Squeeze is the percentage reduction of the O-ring cross-section when the gland closes. It creates initial contact pressure. Too little can leak. Too much can raise assembly force, compression set, and wear.
2. What is gland fill?
Gland fill is the percentage of available gland volume occupied by the O-ring. It helps assess whether room remains for swell, thermal growth, and tolerance variation.
3. Why does the calculator need an installed diameter?
Installed diameter determines ring stretch or compression. Stretch can help retention during assembly. Excessive stretch may reduce section thickness and change effective sealing behavior.
4. Can this tool select the correct elastomer?
No. It provides a basic material screen only. Final compound selection depends on media chemistry, temperature, pressure, cleaning methods, approvals, hardness, and supplier compatibility data.
5. Is the clearance warning an extrusion rating?
No. It is a relative screening warning. Extrusion resistance requires current pressure-gap charts, hardware deflection review, compound behavior, backup-ring choice, and pressure-cycle testing.
6. Why are tolerance inputs important?
Nominal dimensions can appear suitable while the production stack-up creates too little or too much squeeze. Tolerances reveal the possible squeeze and fill range.
7. Does temperature change gland fill?
Yes. Elastomers and hardware expand at different rates. Fluid swell can also increase ring volume. Both effects can change squeeze and available gland volume during service.
8. Can I use this calculator for dynamic seals?
Use it for preliminary screening only. Dynamic sealing also needs surface-finish, lubrication, speed, friction, wear, eccentricity, pressure cycling, and heat analysis.
9. Why is suggested gland width shown?
The width is calculated from the target fill, selected cross-section, and target depth. It is a starting value, not a complete groove specification.
10. Does it work with inches?
Yes. Choose inches and enter every length in inches. The percentage calculations remain valid because all related dimensions use the same unit system.
11. What should I verify before release?
Verify groove geometry, tolerances, material compound, media compatibility, temperature, pressure, clearance gap, surface finish, installation method, and application-specific supplier guidance. Then test representative hardware.