Thinking out loud ...
curiouskk said:
If you put a sealed device on a scale
okay,, the scale will indicate the weight of the device
and place in an air tight box
The scale AND the sealed device being weighed are both inside the airtight box , you say,
okay,,scale will still indicate the weight of the sealed device
then fill with air pressure
Pressurize the airtight box that surrounds both the scale and sealed device , i assume
would the weight change of the device if there was a leak?
Of course the mass of the sealed device will increase as matter moves into it. But what will the scale report?
Hmm. A couple of things are going on at once.
First - is this a spring scale that actually reports force , or is it a balance scale that actually reports mass ?
As you pressurize your sealed box you are surrounding the device with increasingly dense fluid. The bouyancy of that fluid, presumably air, will exert more force upward on whatever it surrounds as increasing pressure raises its density.
So a spring scale will initially indicate less weight because the more buoyant air pushes up on your sealed device , and indeed on the platform of your scale too. Then if there's air inleakage it'll creep back toward heavier as air leaks into your sealed device.
A balance scale will be similarly affected by bouyant forces of air this time acting on both the volume of your sealed device and on the scale's balance weights and moving parts.
Think outside the box ?
Might be more straightforward to just evacuate the sealed device by itself and see of it gets heavier
I am trying to do a test to check watertight seal without water. Thanks in advance.
Ever played with an ultrasonic leak detector? They're really interesting. . I had one that subtracted 20 khz from whatever sound it "heard" and sent it to headphones. It effectively 'translated' ultrasound into normal audio. Made it apparent why a dog can recognize the sound of his master's car engine from a block away. It was great fun at a party...
http://superiorsignal.com/resources/useful-articles/104-successful-leak-detection-using-ultrasonics