donkitrk99
Member
Anyone use their products? Considering purchasing a pump and chamber from them. I'm in Canada and can order the same products from www.ledab.ca. with free shipping within canada (and no border crossing/customs).
They sell a heat mat to heat it. I use an electric skillet (water bath) connected to a BBQ Guru to maintain precise temperature.Pyrex is exactly what I was looking at. Cheapest and can't see it being a lesser product? Do you use something to heat it?
You will need some temp control. The oil needs to be pliable enough to let the bubbles form and solvent to escape. Too much heat combined with vacuum and you can boil off all of the desirable goodies. Water can boil at room temperature in a total vacuum.Thanks for the reply. I was hoping for a cheaper solutiin than the mat they offer. Heat isn't actually neccesary right, just speeds up the process?
Also I had someone tell me elsewhere that that the "railing on the lid sucks" and you need to "constantly rewrap it". I'll admit, I don't know exactly what he means - I still don't have the product and I've never seen or used anything like it before. But is this a problem you've experienced?
I purge from 85f to 97f so I need more precise control. Cold boil= preserve terps.I see people using digital induction heaters and pads set to 120F. Does the temperature need to be perfect or consistent or just keeping the oil pliable. As it stands now I hot water purge and have found my tap water gets to 120-125 and I use a temperature gun and replace it at 100-110. Could something similar work with the pyrex chamber? Maybe a heating pad to lessen the amount of times the water needs replacing.
Price it out first on the main site first, I found LeDab to be more expensive even after the exchange rate and taxes. You could also see if they can match it, worth a try. I ended up ordering directly from BestValueVacs, it arrived quickly via FedEx and they undervalued it at $100 so the customs weren't that bad.Anyone use their products? Considering purchasing a pump and chamber from them. I'm in Canada and can order the same products from www.ledab.ca. with free shipping within canada (and no border crossing/customs).
I did think le dab was a little pricey but I figured part of it was that the pump and chamber didn't come as a package.
Also free shipping on ledab and no need to worry about border crossing.
I see the heating pads sold separately on there - I never would have thought they were attached.
Herbivore - they sell a filter separately. Would this combat/help combat any/all of these problems?
When you refer to safety here, do you mean to the user or the pump itself? I expect there would be some damage to the pump over the long term even with frequent oil changes but I think you'll still get your money's worth at ~$100. A cold trap with dry-ice should reduce or eliminate the solvents from getting into the pump too and is still much cheaper than an oil-less pump. I just try not to run the pump more than a few minutes at a time and it still seems fine almost a year later. I wanted to get an oil-less one but they're way too much starting out.These 2 stroke oil based pumps with non ptfe internals are generally not safe for use with the solvents we use, which will cause leaching and/or offgassing of the internals with cumulative exposure to the recovered solvent.
Oilless pumps that have PTFE internals are a must for this purpose. There are a lot of good reasons that only these kinds of pumps are used in the lab for these kinds of applications. The only pump on that website which is suitable that I can see for our purposes is the Welch 2052B PTFE diaphragm pump, which costs 3.5k or so.
Sorry my friend, should have been clearerWhen you refer to safety here, do you mean to the user or the pump itself? I expect there would be some damage to the pump over the long term even with frequent oil changes but I think you'll still get your money's worth at ~$100. A cold trap with dry-ice should reduce or eliminate the solvents from getting into the pump too and is still much cheaper than an oil-less pump. I just try not to run the pump more than a few minutes at a time and it still seems fine almost a year later. I wanted to get an oil-less one but they're way too much starting out.
I've got the filter canister on the pump exhaust, it's just filled with activated charcoal. The oil-level drops slowly over time so should be whatever's in the oil that exhausts out.
Not sure if you're understanding it right, the charcoal filter is attached to an exit hole at the top of the pump, it's the big blue thing:I do not believe that a charcoal filter is likely to do the job on it's own for stopping solvents getting through, although it is certainly useful to keep various other nasties out of your pump
Lol no sorry, I was not understanding properly! I thought you were using activated charcoal between chamber and pump.Not sure if you're understanding it right, the charcoal filter is attached to an exit hole at the top of the pump, it's the big blue thing:
The most it can do is filter any nasty fumes coming out of the pump and into the room, there's no filter between the pump and the chamber besides a ball valve to prevent oil being sucked into the chamber by accident.
I don't use a cold trap since I don't have easy access to dry ice unfortunately. No idea why, I live in a major metropolitan city and the only two places that sell it are in an industrial park that takes forever to get to. Super jealous of people who can get it at their corner store.
If I stick with QWET I'll consider an oil-less one when this one breaks down if I can find one cheap enough.
The oven has bigger capacity and is heated on more sides than just the bottom.For just a little more than a quarter of the price of the vacuum oven I can get the pump, chamber, and heatpad. What is the big difference between the two set ups?
Hard to say but you'll want to get as much surface area as possible. I went with the 3 quart flat chamber and I figure I can get up to 20-30g if I maximize the surface area. You need to watch the muffin a bit more with the flat chamber but I personally haven't had any issues.Thank you. What kind of capacity would a 1.75 quart chamber have?
Brother you really need to explore the literature on backflow contamination in processing of food/pharma products under vacuum to understand the various ways that oil-based pumps can fuck up your meds. There are ways to protect your medicine from this contamination, but there is a lot of know-how involved!Hey! I found an old thread that has exactly what I'm looking for in it! I've got the 3 qt flat pyrex chamber and a 3 CFM 2 stage pump in my cart, as well as an additional piece of 5' hose. The additional hose is for either a spare, or in case I build a cold chamber and plumb it in. Mine might be a bit ghetto (juice can with ice, below the level of the vessel and pump), unless I get keen...
I'm not so worried about the fume issue as my Bubble Buddy @herbivore21 is, mainly because I'm assuming that the chamber will hold a vacuum, and not need the vac running for extended periods of time. A minute or two to get to pressure, and the valves should handle maintaining vacuum, no? And if not that might mean another pump in a couple of years.
Heck, I've been looking around the 'free' websites looking for an old refrigerator that someone is tossing, as it's already got a compressor in it.
http://www.instructables.com/id/Making-A-Fridge-Compressor-Into-A-Vacuum-Pump/