Quad Ring Composed of 4 Lobes, Great Resistance of Abrasion, Lower Coefficient Of Friction, Keeps the Pressure Even, More Efficient


The Quad-Ring has four definitive sealing advantages over an O-Ring:

Hidden parting lines, or flash lines. The flash lines (a line of excess material where the compression mold tool comes together) on an O-ring is always on the outer most diameter, which consequently is a sealing surface. On a Quad-Ring, that flash line is on the inside of the two outer lobes; therefore, it does not effect the sealing lips.
The Quad-Ring is more stable in dynamic applications. It is also more resistant to rolling as it has a wider footprint and takes up the corners of the hardware groove. Spiral failure is common in dynamic O-ring applications in which torsion occurs and the ring can extrude or over-yield.
The Quad-Ring has great lubrication retention. The grooves on the inside and outside diameter of the ring retain lubricant, thereby lowering friction and extending packing/seal life.
Less compression force to seal. The multi-lobed design provides more sealing surfaces than an O-ring, all while using the same hardware (Quad-Rings are intended to be used in standard O-ring grooves). With these multiple seal points on one ring, less squeeze is required to provide an effective seal. Less friction and wear will ultimately increase service life and reduce downtime.
To recap, the Quad-Ring is a 100 percent retrofit design option for any current O-ring application. It follows the same standard sizing as O-rings as well. Gallagher Fluid Seals has in stock both Quad-Rings and O-rings in a variety of materials.


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