I must confess that I am concerned by this thread. After having followed this discussion:
thread765-14405 I feel that I at least need to ask some questions.
Is this going to be your first stress analysis? A pump system is not usually a good way to start out, particularly if it has much temperature to it, and stainless steel presents an added challenge as it has a much higher expansion rate than carbon steel.
I would agree that expansion joints are something you'll likely want to avoid. Almost every client I've worked for seems to require approval from the CEO, board of directors, and a majority of the shareholders to put an expansion joint on a pump nozzle.
I would recommend, at the very least, that you have your analysis reviewed by an experienced engineer before implementing the design. There are a lot of tips and tricks that come from working under the supervision of those who've been doing this for a while. After 6 years myself, I'm still finding plenty of new things to learn.
So, while I'm not necessarily trying to scare you away from stress engineering, I do want to caution you that plugging numbers into a program is niether analysis nor engineering - that part comes when you see the numbers and have to decide, first, are the results real numbers or some kind of computer enhanced hallucination, and second, what can be done to refine the system to perform as it needs to.
If this is something that your company is pushing you into becuase they don't want to go to an outside company for the stress work, you should give it a lot of thought before you decide to take responsibility for this.
If all of this is off base, I apologize, but the nature of your question made me nervous, so I feel the need to at least raise the questions. Edward L. Klein
Pipe Stress Engineer
Houston, Texas
All opinions expressed here are my own and not my company's.