Our
Composites Vacuum Pump can be left running for long periods and certainly for long enough to complete the cure of an infusion process or vacuum bagging process as room temperature.
You must ensure the pump does not run out of oil, and you also must ensure the pump is pulling against a sealed bag. Running the pump for prolonged periods against a poorly sealed bag or against virtually no vacuum, will eventually damage the pump.
Many people still leave the pump on throughout the infusion cure and our pump is perfectly capable of doing this subject to oil and a good seal. We regularly leave the pumps in our workshop running for 24 hours plus when we are doing pre-preg and leaving it to cure in our ovens overnight.
You will find that with a good bag seal, the pump will also use very little oil as it is under little load.
However, generally with resin infusion, we recommend aiming for a perfectly sealed bag so you can shut off the pump on completion of the infusion. Even with a physical barrier to stop the resin reaching the vacuum port, it only takes a small amount to find a path to the vacuum line and then you will loose a lot of resin up the vac line into the catchpot. If this happens post infusion, then you may well dry out the part too much leaving a cosmetically flawed finish at the vacuum line end of the part where it will begin to get pinholes and, in severe cases, patches of dry fabric.
That is why we recommend getting a perfect bag everytime. With the bag sealed under vacuum and the infusion complete, the resin has no where to go and the laminate will remain stable throughout the cure and hopefully give you repeatable cosmetically perfect parts. However, key is getting a good seal in the first place.
Warren PenalverEasy Composites / Carbon Mods - Technical Support Assistant