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<div dir="ltr" data-setdir="false">Minn Kota is very tight lipped about any of the design aspects of their products. I guess they are fending off cheap knockoffs. As such I can find no real data on materials such as make-up of the brushes. I am looking at transformer dielectric oil as a possible replacement like <a href="https://phillips66lubricants.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Transformer-Oil.pdf" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">https://phillips66lubricants.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Transformer-Oil.pdf</a>. As to arcing being the possible cause of the blackened fluid, it is possible, but my guess is a suspension of brush particles given the amount of sludge left on all the parts and the wear pattern on the shaft. What would support arcing hypothesis is that all of these thrusters were filled using a vacuum pump. Yet all the bladders experienced gas pressure build-up. Likewise, Alec filled all his thrusters with WD-40 and saw similar blackened WD-40 in bladders and similar gas built up past what you would expect from thermal expansion of fluid.</div><div dir="ltr" data-setdir="false"><br></div><div dir="ltr" data-setdir="false">Cliff</div><div dir="ltr" data-setdir="false"><br></div><div><br></div>
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On Tuesday, July 25, 2023 at 02:23:16 PM CDT, Sean T. Stevenson via Personal_Submersibles <personal_submersibles@psubs.org> wrote:
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<div><div id="ydp7ef4bf8cyiv7937026312"><div>I have no specific experience with using the WD40 product for pressure compensating thrusters (or any other volumes, for that matter), but I do question its efficacy for that purpose on the basis of its known properties.<br clear="none"><br clear="none">WD40 is a proprietary mixture of lubricants and solvents known to have strong dielectric properties. While the exact formulation is a trade secret, in general terms the product is an emulsion of oil and alcohol. Marketed as a penetrant, it has a low viscosity afforded by the substantial fraction of volatile, lightweight components, which help to allow capillary action to draw the emulsified product into crevices. In unencapsulated service (open to atmosphere), typically the lightweight components will evaporate into the surrounding air, temporarily serving their function as a solvent to dissolve certain solid or high viscosity residues before leaving behind the heavier oils which serve the lubrication function.<br clear="none"><br clear="none">When you encapsulate WD40 in a closed volume, the lightweight components do not evaporate, leaving them to perform their solvent function on any soluble material in contact for as long as the equilibrium concentration gradient supports that. Additionally, you hold these lightweight components with low viscosity / high volatility (remember, this product is marketed as a penetrant) in contact with whatever sealing arrangements are designed to keep it contained, where these seals would otherwise perform much better in contact with a higher viscosity oil or grease which augments the seal performance.<br clear="none"><br clear="none">In short, for any compensation of electronics in static applications, I would consider only the dielectric properties and dimensional stability (bulk modulus) of the compensating fluid. In a dynamic application, such as with a drive shaft seal, I would also pay attention to viscosity and lubricity. Material compatibility, however, is critically important in both cases, and I would be much more comfortable with a product for which the chemical makeup (and thus the material compatibility matrix) is known and available on a technical datasheet, versus a proprietary product that has no such publically available information.<br clear="none"><br clear="none">Similarly, with regard to compensating a Minn Kota motor specifically, I would want to know what all of the internal materials that may be in contact with the compensation fluid are, to make sure I was specifying a compatible fluid. I have no idea what information is available in that respect.<br clear="none"><br clear="none">Finally, I do wonder how much fluid breakdown is occurring not as a result of chemical incompatibility, but rather as a result of the brushes lifting from the armature due to the journal effect of the compensating fluid forming a boundary layer in between the two parts as they rotate, and a consequent electric arc forming which jumps the gap and cooks the fluid in the process. The combination of fluid breakdown and ablation of the brushes from such arcing could possibly be the source of the blackened fluid, as opposed to dissolution of the components due to chemical incompatibility.<br clear="none"><br clear="none">I find myself wondering if there might be a sweet spot with respect to the compensating fluid viscosity where the rotor is actually slowed by the fluid to the extent that the brush contact is actually better than it would be when rotating faster in a lesser viscosity fluid.<br clear="none"><br clear="none">Sean<br clear="none"><br clear="none">-------- Original Message --------<br clear="none">On Jul. 25, 2023, 12:11, Cliff Redus via Personal_Submersibles < personal_submersibles@psubs.org> wrote:<blockquote class="ydp7ef4bf8cyiv7937026312protonmail_quote"><br clear="none"></blockquote></div><div id="ydp7ef4bf8cyiv7937026312yqt80597" class="ydp7ef4bf8cyiv7937026312yqt8617111384"><div><div style="font-family:times new roman, new york, times, serif;font-size:16px;" class="ydp7ef4bf8cyiv7937026312ydp85bf53byahoo-style-wrap"><div></div>
<div dir="ltr"><div><p class="ydp7ef4bf8cyiv7937026312ydp84f85499MsoNormal">The point of the thread is Psubbers like to use the
Minn-Kotta 101 lower units as a starting point for thrusters because they are
cheap, simple to control, quiet and simple to work on.<span> </span>For my boat I have used these with both air
and oil compensation and have now lost a thruster using each of these pressure compensation
strategies.<span> </span>Typical run lives of trolling
motors are on the order of 5-10 years for boaters. <span> </span>This thruster had less than 20 hours of run
time.<span> </span>How can we boost the reliability of
these thrusters?</p>
<p class="ydp7ef4bf8cyiv7937026312ydp84f85499MsoNormal">R300 Thruster Failure, Beaver Island Expedition July 15,
2023</p>
<p class="ydp7ef4bf8cyiv7937026312ydp84f85499MsoNormal">We had a great IS Expedition at Beaver Island on Lake Michigan.<span> </span>Water was blue, visibility was great, support
excellent.<span> </span>Dives were great!<span> </span>That’s the good news.<span> </span>The bad news is that after a submerged two
mile transect when I surface, I lost the port stern horizonal thruster. Alec’s
son Treavor was the safety diver for the expedition.<span> </span>I asked him to swim over and inspect.<span> </span>There were no obvious issues like had occurred
last year at Lake Charlevoix when a limb got lodged between the prop and ducted
nozzle and lockrf up rotation.<span> </span>After recovering
the boat, I disassembled the thruster.<span> </span>These
are Minn-Kotta 101 lower units that have been modified by adding hydraulic
pressure compensation with WD-40 for the fluid and a small bellow style bladder
for thermal expansion.<span> </span>Before
disassembly, I noticed that the bladder for this unit was completely compressed.<span> </span>The bladders on the three remaining thrusters
were expanded almost to the point of rupture and were black in appearance.<span> </span>Also, before I disassembly, I pushed radially
on the prop shaft and was rewarded with a squirt of black 10WD-40.<span> </span>The shaft had a lot more radial play than
normal.<span> </span>From this I could tell the shaft
bushing was worn and that both the thruster lip seals had failed.<span> </span>Upon disassembly, I drained the contents of
the remaining fluid into a plastic pail.<span>
</span>See picture at the Psubs web site.<span>
</span>What came out was black WD-40 fluid and a lot of loose black sludge which
was a portion of the brushes.<span> </span>Trolling
motors are typically made of a blend of carbon and graphite also known as
carbon-graphite.<span> </span>Upon pulling off the
bow cap and brush end of the trolling motor I found that the surfaces were caked
with black sludge.<span> </span>See picture.<span> </span>Inspecting the brushes showed the cause of failure.<span> </span>Both brushes were about half the thickness of
a new brush set.<span> </span>One of the brushes
springs had bottomed out thus no spring force was being applied to the brush
and thus loss of electrical contact.<span> </span>The
WD-40 fluid had been in the thruster since last year’s Psub convention in Lake Charlevoix.<span> </span>According to the manufacturer MSDS sheet, WD-40
consist of 30-60% petroleum distillates, 10-30% petroleum base oils and 5-15%
Naptha.<span> </span>My working hypothesis is that one
or more of the components in the WD-40 reacted with the binding agent in the carbon-graphite
brushes and reduced the mechanical strength of the brush thus leading to accelerate
wear.<span> </span>Over the two years period (17,500
hours), the thrusters had two main dive events with a total of no more than 20
hours on the units.<span> </span>The balance of the
time, the thrusters were sitting on the boat in my shop soaking in this WD-40
at elevated Texas temperatures.<span> </span>BTW,
the driver for using WD-40 is that is a very low kinematic viscosity (2.8 cSt
at 100 F or 38C). Note water is about 1 cSt. </p>
<p class="ydp7ef4bf8cyiv7937026312ydp84f85499MsoNormal">One other observation on the failure was the wear on the armature
shaft.<span> </span>It has a visible wear ring and
the shaft bushing went from a snug fit to a loose fit.<span> </span>Working hypothesis is that the carbon-graphite
particles in suspension were acting like an abrasive polish.<span> </span></p>
<p class="ydp7ef4bf8cyiv7937026312ydp84f85499MsoNormal">The question is how can we improve the reliability? Should we investigate a different seal and
try to get by with 1-ATM operation or investigate a different oil or go back to
air compensation? What Alec and I discussed
at the Expedition was to try a single mechanical carbon seal or a high pressure-rated
lip seal. If we can come up with something
to try, I am willing to put a Minn-Kotta 101 in my test chamber, power it up so
that the seal in a dynamic mode and increase pressure to failure. A control would be to run an off-the-shelf MK
101 with no pressure compensation to failure.<br clear="none"></p>
<p class="ydp7ef4bf8cyiv7937026312ydp84f85499MsoNormal">Any thoughts?<span> </span>I would
like to hear what experience others have had with oil compensation on MK 101’s.</p>
<p class="ydp7ef4bf8cyiv7937026312ydp84f85499MsoNormal">Cliff</p></div><br clear="none"></div></div></div></div></div><div class="ydp7ef4bf8cyqt8617111384" id="ydp7ef4bf8cyqt56201">_______________________________________________<br clear="none">Personal_Submersibles mailing list<br clear="none"><a shape="rect" href="mailto:Personal_Submersibles@psubs.org" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">Personal_Submersibles@psubs.org</a><br clear="none"><a shape="rect" href="http://www.psubs.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/personal_submersibles" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">http://www.psubs.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/personal_submersibles</a><br clear="none"></div></div>
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