Orange ADBV
You're welcome of course.Thank you for the cut and posts. So did you freeze test them, they all look like silicone. Black nitrile looks a bit different than that.
Doing good work there @DuckRyder
Where in the world did that blue adbv come from? First time I've ever seen that. What a trip!
Sexy, isn't it?????????Where in the world did that blue adbv come from? First time I've ever seen that. What a trip!
Get on that Zee, and get back with us.I would think with some slickness one call to Parker with the stamped numbers would
get you the material used or even a net search on those numbers.
Trust me I grew up and went to the Rockford school....Get on that Zee, and get back with us.
Come on now, swallow your pride and take one for the bitog OF subforum.....Very easy to do but I don't like Parker anymore....
I deal with these materials daily (seals)Come on now, swallow your pride and take one for the bitog OF subforum.
Posters here will be forever indebted for you sleuth work.
Black and orange both made by Parker, but different number markings.
Parker seems to make silicone hose, but also some nitrile hose. So not sure that is useful.
The media looks the same in all three.
All three appear otherwise identical... save for perhaps slightly sloppier media in the black one...Are the baseplates the same between the orange and the blue? They look different but that might be camera angle. Was the black baseplate the same?
Already done several times and reported on other Ph7317 thread. After several "new stock vs old stock", "it's still orange" type answers from Fram reps, claimed black to be silicone. On controlled adbv freezer test comparison, orange vs black, concluded black more/most likely nitrile.Nice work, but you destroyed three filters where a call to FRAM may have solved the "whats that ADBV?"