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Scott
If the tape wrapping is any good it will be made from ceramic or aluminium oxide fibre with a foil on the outer surface to reduce erosion of the fibre in service. The fibres are usually held together with a binder, so that you can work with it without the stuff falling apart. After some service, the binder either burns away or sets in the shape it is in, meaning that you would normally irreparably damage the wrap by removing it after service. How well it insulates depends on the thickness and the diameter, as well as the so called "shot content" with ceramic fibre. Anything over 5 micron diameter causes skin irritations (like everyone knows from fiberglass). Under 5 microns this is reduced, but the risk of inhaling the stuff increases. An exhaust system can be perfectly reliable with insulation, provided it is made from a high grade steel and has been designed with either slip joints or bellows to compensate for the thermal expansion. I think that slip joints are more common in aircraft designs, since the system does not have to be absolutely airtight. In most cases, working with a known cracked exhaust system can be a waste of time, unless you are willing to do dye penetrant tests to locate all the other cracks that there are bound to be, but are too small to see with the naked eye. Ceramics do not melt at the temperatures that cause steel to flow, hence weld contamination is a major problem. Regards Keith "Scott" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... Thanks everybody for the replies. . It sounds like the wrap does work but would require extra attention for inspection of cracks. Does it stick to the pipes? Can I remove it every annual or every other annual to inspect the exhaust pipes? I have heard about ceramic coating the pipes. Can this be done after they have been used for a few hundred hours? Also once they are coated, does the ceramic interfere when repairing them, ie..welding a crack? thanks, Scott |
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