I presume you are at least talking about a vessel whose design temperature is ambient (No)
If your design temperature is not ambient - which is the temperature at which either the MTR (see above post by Stan) is obtained or the SMUTS (specified minimum ultimate tensile stress) or SMYS (… yield stress) is specified - then how do you plan to develop allowable stresses which correspond to your design temperature?
and that the "or 2/3 yield" part of the allowable stress basis doesn't apply (We are not performing test at known condition so as to compare information with similar materials)
Ummm… see above comments… You better be confident here. Allowable stresses of commonly used ASME SA carbon steels are governed by the "or 2/3 yield" criteria at temperatures as low as 600 deg F.
and that compressive stresses do not govern ( I cant understand the meaning of the term "compressive stresses").
I really hope this is a language / translation issue and not an engineering knowledge issue. By compressive stress I mean a stress which tends to force the material together. If a tensile (pulling apart) stress has a positive sign then a compressive stress is negative.
Further, you have no intention to code stamp this vessel (No) - you are only using ASME VIII as a guideline (Correct).
Good.
If so, then using the specified minimum UTS divided by 3.5 is not an unreasonable approach to developing a tensile (no tensile-max allowable) design stress.
If you don't recognise that there are several "max allowable" stresses in any ASME VIII vessel then I'd question your ability to safely design one. See second quote above for one example.
I'd stay away from using MTR (Sorry I dont know what MTR stands for)
See Stan's explaination in the above post.
Second, how do you deal with it when the time comes to repair the vessel and the original material isn't available (It is a circumstance, unlikely to happen).
By original material, I mean the exact twin of the material from which the vessel was fabricated - same mill run / heat. Unless this vessel will be thrown out when it wears out it will need some repair someday. That repair may use another API 5L pipe or weld build up which has lower MTR values thus invalidating your design if you based your design on your current MTR values instead of specified minimum values. Only by then the paperwork will be lost and nobody will know that the repair does not meet the original design. (I'm such a pessimist! Can't claim to be "born in the trenches" but I've been in 'em.)
As for Very Picky I believe that the ASME VIII vessel is not intended for o regulated juristiction.Even though I dont seem to understand the term "local variance" I believe that I can proceed with my estimation. If local variance has to do with the third party inspector sanction of my approch then I assume that everything is ok. I'm I right?
What Mr. (or Ms.?) Picky is referring to is that you need to check with the local authorities to see what they require for pressure vessel design and construction. In the USA some states require that vessels be built to ASME VIII or another "equivalent" code (to allow for foreign code use) while some states have no requirements and leave it to the individual owner/user/designer/fabricator to decide how to design and build a vessel. Basically, Mr. Picky is pointing out that you'd better check your approach with the folks who can put you out of business or in jail before you proceed.
jt