Views: 0 Author: Site Editor Publish Time: 2026-03-31 Origin: Site
If you are in the chemical, oil and gas, or water treatment industries, you’ve likely faced these "nightmare" scenarios:
Premature Failure: A brand-new mechanical seal leaks within a week, leading to an emergency shutdown and thousands of dollars in lost production.
Procurement Confusion: You receive a cryptic string of alphanumeric codes from a supplier and realize you’re essentially "buying blind."
Bidding Errors: A single character error in a technical bid leads to a disqualification, wasting months of preparation.
The problem usually isn't the quality of the seal—it’s a mismatch between the application and the API 682 standard code. Decoding this string is the single most effective way to ensure 25,000+ hours of continuous operation.
The API 682 standard uses a rigid 8-segment code. Once you understand the framework, you can "read" any seal’s capabilities instantly.
Position | Category | What it Defines |
1st | Seal Category | Design complexity and service level (1, 2, or 3). |
2nd | Arrangement | Number of seals and pressure configuration (1, 2, or 3). |
3rd | Seal Type | The physical design: Pusher (A/B) or Bellows (C). |
4th | Containment | The safety device on the atmospheric side. |
5th | Gasket Material | Secondary seal temperature and chemical limits. |
6th | Face Materials | The "heart" of the seal; defines wear resistance. |
7th | Shaft Size | Nominal diameter in mm (3-digit format). |
8th | Flush Plan | The auxiliary piping system (e.g., Plan 11, 53A). |
Category 1: Basic chemical/utility service. Cost-effective but has the lowest safety margin.
Category 3: The "Gold Standard" for critical service. Essential for high-pressure, high-temperature, or toxic media.
Pro Tip: Never swap a Category 3 requirement for a Category 1 seal to save costs; the risk of a catastrophic safety breach is too high.
Arrangement 1 (Single): Best for clean, non-hazardous fluids.
Arrangement 2 (Unpressurized Dual): Features a buffer fluid. If the main seal leaks, the second seal catches it.
Arrangement 3 (Pressurized Dual): Uses a barrier fluid at higher pressure than the media. Zero-leakage to the atmosphere.
Type A/B: Pusher seals. Type B is "Balanced," allowing it to handle significantly higher pressures without face damage.
Type C: Metal Bellows. The go-to for extreme temperatures or high-viscosity fluids where O-rings might fail.
Carbon vs. Silicon Carbide (SiC): Standard for 90% of applications.
SiC vs. SiC (Q/P): Mandatory for abrasive or crystallizing fluids.
Tungsten Carbide (M): Preferred for high-vibration or high-torque "start-stop" environments.
Remember, the 7th segment (e.g., 055) refers to the shaft/sleeve diameter, not the outer housing. The 8th segment defines your Flush Plan. Without the right plan (like Plan 11 for cooling or Plan 53A for barrier pressure), even the best seal will burn out prematurely.
At FBU, our APOG Series mechanical seals are built strictly to API 682 specifications to take the guesswork out of your operations.
Total Compliance: From Category 1 to Category 3, we provide fully cartridge-mounted designs that eliminate installation errors.
Standardized Labeling: We use the 8-segment API code exclusively. No confusing internal part numbers—just clear, industry-standard transparency.
Precision Engineering: We match the face materials and flush plans to your specific fluid properties, ensuring you hit the 3-year continuous run-time goal.
Q1: Can I use a Category 1 mechanical seal in a refinery?
Generally, no. Refineries typically require Category 2 or 3 seals due to the volatile nature of hydrocarbons and the need for higher safety margins and more rigorous testing.
Q2: What is the difference between a "Buffer" fluid and a "Barrier" fluid?
A Buffer fluid (Arrangement 2) is at a lower pressure than the process fluid, while a Barrier fluid (Arrangement 3) is at a higher pressure. Use a barrier fluid when you need to ensure zero process leakage into the environment.
Q3: How do I read the 3-digit shaft size code?
The code is in millimeters. For a 25mm shaft, the code is 025. For a 100mm shaft, it is 100. This ensures there is no confusion between metric and imperial measurements.
Q4: Which API Flush Plan is best for clean, room-temperature water?
Plan 11 is the most common and cost-effective choice for clean fluids, as it recirculates fluid from the pump discharge to the seal chamber for cooling and lubrication.
Seal Water Flow Meters
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