Simple DIY Vacuum Chamber and Pump

 by bassman76jazz
Featured
2011-07-08 16.01.58.jpg

This is an easy to build vacuum chamber that is power with a garden hose.  you can draw 30 cm of vacuum with your hose. simple and easy way to degas fluids like silicone for mold making without buying an expensive vacuum pump.
 
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Step 1: Parts

you will need the following parts. many of they can be found or scrounged for free is you have the time.

1 - 6" x 24 " PVC pipe                                Lowe's                                       $16
2 - 1/4 " x 12" x 12" acrylic sheets           (www.estreetplastics.com)   $12
2 - 1/ 8" x 12 " x 12" neoprene sheets   (www.smallparts.com)           $20
1 - vacuum Aspirator                                 (csrscience.ecrater.com)      $25
1 - vacuum gauge                                     harbor freight                            $13
1 - 3" x 3/8" air hose                                  harbor freight                            $4

                                                                                                                                                                 Total = $90


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vincent7520 says: Feb 12, 2013. 1:02 PM
nice kids !…
bassman76jazz (author) in reply to vincent7520Feb 23, 2013. 10:44 AM
thanks...
rf says: Jul 16, 2011. 7:32 PM
The big production with the 6" tube, acrylic and neoprene was to create a vacuum reservoir?

That 6" tube has end caps and all kinds of other fittings waiting at the hardware store to be used with it. One or two end caps and some glue would seem to simplify things quite a bit. Or perhaps I'm missing something. If you want the ends to be removable there are threaded fittings too.

End caps are nice and thick and can be drilled for smaller fittings too.

Just a thought.

bassman76jazz (author) in reply to rfJun 20, 2008. 3:39 PM
for one i wanted to see into the chamber and the end caps are rounded not flat so its difficult to degases fluids without a flat bottom. i actuality was looking for a pressure cooker at the thrift shop but i did not find one. also the fittings for 6" pvc are about the same price as the acrylic.
rf in reply to bassman76jazzJul 18, 2011. 1:44 AM
What you want is a bell jar. They're really not that expensive. You can get a 14-inch diameter bell jar for about the same cost as your materials here. And you can see into it much better.

Not that you didn't learn a lot building yours.

stringstretcher in reply to rfJun 3, 2012. 11:24 AM
You guys need to be careful when pulling a vacuum on a piece of glass. I managed to avoid the shards when the lid, a piece of 8mm thick glass exploded and flew all over the room. I learned a lesson that day :) Keep the pressures down to safe levels and let time do its part.
TheREALfatNINJA says: Jul 24, 2011. 5:36 PM
Hmm.... I wonder if this could be used to construct a home food freeze drying device.
Pazzerz in reply to TheREALfatNINJAOct 23, 2011. 7:54 AM
You need a much higher vacuum, preferably with a piston type pump which can be gotten rather inexpensively at places like Harbor Freight. This is one of the projects I am currently working on, which is why I happened to come across this Instructable. The chamber is good, just need a heavier duty pump.
TheREALfatNINJA in reply to PazzerzOct 27, 2011. 7:43 AM
Well I was thinking of re-purposing an old vacuum pump used for the repair and maintenance of automotive air conditioning systems. Is that what you're referring to?
Pazzerz in reply to TheREALfatNINJAOct 29, 2011. 8:32 PM
Yes! I just got a fairly new one and it works very well for that. I'm hoping to find a short section of fairly large PVC drain pipe to better accommodate a standard drying tray, otherwise I'll make mini-trays for it.
jschumaker says: Jul 25, 2011. 5:12 PM
Where'd you find a 24" piece of 6" pvc at Lowe's? All I could find were 10' lengths. Also, any particular reason you used the green pvc?

jlin is in reply to jschumakerOct 17, 2011. 12:58 PM
if you go to homedepot or lowes, they will cut what ever length you need and sell per foot
jschumaker in reply to jlin isOct 17, 2011. 1:12 PM
That is great to know.
heathbar64 says: Jul 15, 2011. 3:50 AM
So, still thinking about this project. I'm a little confused again. You mention your use for it as de gassing silicone for moldmaking. I am familiar with the idea of using a pressure tank to squeeze the bubbles out of a molded item, but seems to me like a vacuum would create bubbles. Am I wrong about this? Can you give more info on that use of it?
bassman76jazz (author) in reply to heathbar64Jul 17, 2011. 9:38 AM
you just pull air out of the silicone before you pour it into your mold. less bubbles means better finish on a part. the silicone looks to boil as the vacuum reaches 25" and then falls back as most of the air in the solutions is extracted.
heathbar64 in reply to bassman76jazzJul 30, 2011. 7:30 PM
Ok, thanks for the education. I'm into molding stuff so I'm definitely gonna play with this.
stringstretcher in reply to bassman76jazzJul 21, 2011. 8:09 AM
Then, if you are pressed for perfection,after degassing and pouring you let the silicone harden/cure under pressure, which serves to compress any remaining small air bubbles. The result is smooth and faultless.
The Ideanator in reply to heathbar64Jul 16, 2011. 11:31 AM
Vacuums tend to remove all gases and things with low enough (or was it high?) vapor points from the chamber which means that all the gas in said mold *should* come out, however if you have trapped gases, they will expand (they went in compressed at nearly 15 psi from the vacuum's point of view)

I imagine that if you put a carbonated drink inside there, it would de-carbonate (I'd like to see a video of that, I can't find any)
Pazzerz in reply to The IdeanatorOct 23, 2011. 7:51 AM
I know this is OLD, but a carbonated drink is dissolved CO2, like dissolved oxygen in the water that fish breathe. It would probably 'de-carbonate' like you said, but would take a lot longer to do than with just air or CO2 bubbles. FYI
rimar2000 says: Jul 9, 2011. 7:02 PM
This is very interesting. I need one of these for permeate wood with liquids.

Can you put a layout (schema) of the inner of the vacuum aspirator of step 2?
DaveB13 in reply to rimar2000Jul 14, 2011. 2:28 PM
I'm off topic for this article. Regarding "permeate wood" is this material I'd stumbled across just yesterday when looking for info regarding a stunning wooden bridge constructed recently ->

Acetylated wood
http://www.accoya.com/technology/
http://www.accoya.com/
Titan Wood Inc.
modified wood by Accsys Technologies
http://www.ufpi.com/product/accoya/index.htm

Brug = Bridge Akkerwinde = name of a road
Sneek = name of a city in the Neatherlands
Brug Akkerwinde
Akkerwinde Sneek
http://www.bsbstaalbouw.nl/bruggen
http://www.achterboscharchitectuur.nl/page.php?id=97
http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Houten_bruggen_bij_Sneek
(for me Google Toolbar can translate Dutch to English)
rimar2000 in reply to DaveB13Jul 19, 2011. 5:16 AM
Thanks for this abundant info!
bassman76jazz (author) in reply to rimar2000Jul 9, 2011. 10:24 PM
i bought it at
http://csrscience.ecrater.com/p/11338240/aspirator-with-garden-hose-adapter
you can get it with or without the hose adapter.
there is a detailed description there.
2011-07-08 15.11.53.jpg2011-07-08 15.17.30.jpg
rimar2000 in reply to bassman76jazzJul 10, 2011. 5:12 AM
Thanks, but I live in Argentina. Maybe it is simply a Venturi tube, very easy to do.
johnny3h in reply to rimar2000Jul 14, 2011. 12:03 PM

I'm no expert, but I've had/used one of these hose end vacuum aspirators since high school chemistry some 53 years ago, and it works exceptionally well.

And to answer your question, YES, it does work on the venturi principle.

In studying mine, it is fabricated to very small and tight tolarances which with 30 to 50 psi water pressure allows me to get a vacuum in the 25 to 28 inch range on my cheap vacuum guage.

If you build it well, one of your own making should also work well.

I noticer in the parts section, that bassman bought some of his components from an outfit called Harbor Freight and Tool, which also has a website and sells online.  Check them out and maybe you can get one without having to build it yourself.

Harbor Freight has been a mailorder cataloge sales outfit for YEARS, but now has many stores across the USA, and now has added a website.

Much of their product is made in China, thus the relatively lower prices, but I take good care of all my tools and instruments, and get good service life for the price I pay.  Every once in a while I do get "stung" by a defective product, but it's not often, and they usually "make it right."

And NO, I am NOT an employee of Harbor Freight, and my only connection with them is as a retail customer.

rimar2000 in reply to johnny3hJul 15, 2011. 5:07 AM
Thanks for the info.
askjerry in reply to rimar2000Jul 14, 2011. 10:16 AM
I did a bit of searching and found this... it may help you.

http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=437&page=2

Jerry
stringstretcher in reply to askjerryJun 3, 2012. 11:22 AM
Wow, I have some old french horn mouthpieces that would make a perfect venturi tube like this! That is what they are, in fact, since they are most often a small bore opening up into a larger bore, increasing the airspeed through the venturi principle.
rimar2000 in reply to askjerryJul 15, 2011. 5:04 AM
Thanks, but I get "Error. The item you requested could not be found."
askjerry in reply to rimar2000Jul 15, 2011. 7:00 AM
I don't know why... I just tried it again and it worked perfectly. Perhaps the server was down when you tried.

I'll try making a link... CLICK HERE

Good Luck,
Jerry
rimar2000 in reply to askjerryJul 16, 2011. 5:00 AM
Thanks, now works.
bassman76jazz (author) in reply to rimar2000Jul 10, 2011. 11:54 AM
it is similar, and works on the same concept. the one i use has a back flow valve that prevents water from being sucked in when the water pressure is turned off. It also keeps the vacuum in the chamber when the water is shut off. I'm sure you could make on if you wanted to. it just has two small veins that rotate the water form the inlet and a hole behind one of them that draws the air in.
bassman76jazz (author) says: Jul 9, 2011. 11:59 AM
I got it up to 42cm today while degassing some silicone.
bassman76jazz (author) in reply to bassman76jazzJul 17, 2011. 9:39 AM
the max i have been able to reach is 25" or just over 60 cm Hg
codongolev says: Jul 15, 2011. 11:27 AM
my chemistry teacher had a smaller version of this that attached to the sink. he said he used it to draw liquids out of precipitates when filtering.
Skipper333333 says: Jul 9, 2011. 4:18 PM
Great Instructible!
I wonder where you came up with the vacuume asparater?
It's a venturi that creates the vacuum, the same as a car carburetor, that's how the fuel gets from the bowl into the throat of the carburetor. They sell vacuum generators but the only way I've seen them is compressed air to vacuum.
If you came with on your own your a genius!

Alan Hale
Fluidpower Specialist
bassman76jazz (author) in reply to Skipper333333Jul 9, 2011. 4:41 PM
its a common lab tool used for as an easy source of vacuum. I just wanted a cheap vacuum chamber an thought it was worth a shot. it has its limits but its great for hobby use. I'm still testing to see how far it will go. i got to 45cm Hg today.
heathbar64 in reply to bassman76jazzJul 14, 2011. 4:55 PM
You all confused me for a bit there. I'm used to working in inches Hg, and Y'all are talking cm. 45 cm is only about 18" which aint very good. I did better than that with my rigged air compressor mentioned earlier.
bassman76jazz (author) in reply to heathbar64Jul 14, 2011. 9:54 PM
but i built it with a chamber for less than the price of an air compressor.
heathbar64 in reply to bassman76jazzJul 15, 2011. 3:43 AM
Sorry, didn't mean for my comment to be critical. I had the old compressor for other purposes. It is a cool project. I think I'll build a smaller one.
I did a little google search for the aspirators and found many of them claimed 28" or 73cm draw with 60 psig.water pressure.
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