RWF7437,
That is a quite interesting specification at the link you provided. I was just curious if you knew if on pg 9 of 9 of this apparent polyethylene pipeline testing etc. specification you provided, does say the make-up water allowance per "AWWA C600" (I believe incidentally the ductile iron pipeline installation/testing standard) referred to in passage "G." only kick in in the event that the line initially tested per "F." does not pass what I believe is a quite different "Allowable amount of makeup water for expansion during the pressure test shall conform to Chart 6, Allowance for Expansion Under Test Pressure, Technical Report TR 31/9-79 published by the Plastic Pipe Institute (PPI)" in the “F” passage?
I mention/ask this in that I believe the AWWA C600 ductile iron pipeline field testing standard referenced in "G." is (perhaps contrary to some perception promulgated by the hdpe pipe and hdpe welding folks?) considerably more restrictive in this regard than the specifically polyethylene pipe testing publications. Additionally, I believe the “AWWA C600” standard also requires that the test pressure be kept generally within 5 psi of the prescribed test pressure value, and a comparable requirement appears sort of missing in plastic piping testing standards. Getting back to the drastic differences in make-up water allowances I referred to, see the examples as follows, for hypothetical, comparative pipelines only 1,000 feet (305 m) long:
Total “Make-Up” Water Allowed (U.S. gal. /1,000' pipeline in a 2 hr test period@150 psi)*
Nom. Pipe Size hdpe pipe Ductile Iron Pipe**
4 2.5 .8
6 6 1.2
8 10 1.4
10 13 1.8
12 23 2.2
14 28 2.6
16 33 3.0
18 43 3.4
20 55 3.6
24 89 4.4
30 127 5.6
36 180 6.6
42 231 7.8
48 270 8.8
54 314 10
Notes: *The values for hdpe testing are determined with use of the aforementioned chart, that I believe is the same as appears now on pages 23-24 of the document at the Plastic Pipe Institute site at
) , and I think was once also in the Chevron or Performance Pipe “Table 2 Test Phase - Alternate 2 - Make-Up Water Allowance” on page 4 of 5 for hydrostatic testing of polyethylene pipe site
.
With regard to the original inquiry, a low pressure air test may not hurt anything if safely applied (as others have noted air testing can be more dangerous than water testing with all air removed) and may be a very good test of say general pipe, fitting, or joint leak-tightness at least at that pressure, if e.g. all parts are fully immersed in a tank of water while the pressure is applied, or alternatively the full surface of the part(s) and all joints are effectively “soaped”, while observed for leaking air “bubbles” by a diligent operator. Low pressure air testing may also be helpful in finding gross problems with even underground piping. However, an air gauge needle holding even pretty steady at any test pressure for some time may not mean there is not leakage in an underground system (as air is of course very compressible, and quite a bit more of air must escape over a period of time than water to effect a gauge reading). Many references and other posters have indicated that the proposed “logic” that “…the contractors test should be sufficient because if the pipe holds the pressure with no loss then it has no leaks/bad welds”, may thus not be sound.
If we are talking about an effective test for a buried polyethylene pipeline (with some practical variability of pipe material moduli and field encasement stiffness depending on specific manufacture and application??), in looking at the table above I am also not exactly sure how sound the reasoning is either that if one must pump a 55 gal drum of water back into only a few blocks of buried 20” pipeline to get the pressure back up after just a couple hours test one can be assured that all of the water is “expanding” the pipe and some is not going out small defects or damages in joints or elsewhere? All aspects of quality of fusion welds is perhaps another matter, and I understand really separate technology to address these issues (preferably I would assume before the pipeline is buried!) is still developing in this area as well.