Pressure testing how long and how much psi?

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Okie294life

Brush Popper and Amateur Tree Butcher
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I have a mini mite pressure tester have got the saw case sealed up and holding pressure. How long should it hold positive pressure, and how many psi? How long should it hold negative pressure and how many psi?
 
+/- 8 psi on both. I start with vacuum and then pressure. Pressure first can pop a seal out and make a better seal missing a vacuum leak.

While testing, rotate the crank around. The gauge will go up and down in value but should not loose value overall.

Time, a few minutes or so per test checking for no drop. Drops then more time and searching for why.

Edit to add...
If I can't get the hand pump to build up any pressure. I hook a hose to my air compressor tank turned down to 10 psi and spay it down for finding the leak. Good continuous air source. Even put it in a bucket of water at times.
.
 
+/- 8 psi on both. I start with vacuum and then pressure. Pressure first can pop a seal out and make a better seal missing a vacuum leak.

While testing, rotate the crank around. The gauge will go up and down in value but should not loose value overall.

Time, a few minutes or so per test checking for no drop. Drops then more time and searching for why.

Edit to add...
If I can't get the hand pump to build up any pressure. I hook a hose to my air compressor tank turned down to 10 psi and spay it down for finding the leak. Good continuous air source. Even put it in a bucket of water at times.
.
 
I agree with the 10 to 20 second time frame. WIth me, it is usually really good, or really bad.
I have one saw that I will chase down it leaks, somewhere... someday... no hurry on that one.
It seems that I use about 5psi for pressure, not sure what I shoot for with the negative.
 
+/- 8 psi on both. I start with vacuum and then pressure. Pressure first can pop a seal out and make a better seal missing a vacuum leak.

While testing, rotate the crank around. The gauge will go up and down in value but should not loose value overall.

Time, a few minutes or so per test checking for no drop. Drops then more time and searching for why.

Edit to add...
If I can't get the hand pump to build up any pressure. I hook a hose to my air compressor tank turned down to 10 psi and spay it down for finding the leak. Good continuous air source. Even put it in a bucket of water at times.
.
Agreed! One has to remember that when pulling vacuum, in/hg, you need to double the psi value to get the proper vacuum number. Husky states 5 to 10 psi for pressure checkout. I use 7.5 psi, middle road here. If your vacuum is given in psi, not in/hg, you need to double the psi figure to obtain you vacuum target. In this example you need to pull 15 in/hg for a proper vacuum leak test. I wait 30-seconds on both test, no loss is pass.
 
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