MuShoe
Mechanical
- Feb 11, 2008
- 14
Hello,
We have been engaged in a raging debate about interpretation on the calculation of Ag defined in ASME B16.34 sections 6.4.1 and 6.4.2 as it pertains to ball valves. Specifically, we are discussing section 6.4.2 and the bolts between the adapters and body. As the spec reads "Ag = area bounded by the effective outside periphery of a gasket or O-ring or other seal effective periphery".
The question is simple: Does this definition suggest that we take the full diameter (including the flow are) to the sealing face or do we use this diameter less the flow area?
The verbiage "area bounded" seems very clear that it's the full area, but thinking practically, only the area of diametral difference between the OD of the sealing face and the ID of the bore is seeing pressure loads going into axially stretching the bolts.
If we use the full area, some valve designs need to have a ridiculous number and/or size of bolts, whereas using the later approach, the numbers seem more "realistic".
Any thoughts / comments / best practices would be much appreciated.
Jeff
We have been engaged in a raging debate about interpretation on the calculation of Ag defined in ASME B16.34 sections 6.4.1 and 6.4.2 as it pertains to ball valves. Specifically, we are discussing section 6.4.2 and the bolts between the adapters and body. As the spec reads "Ag = area bounded by the effective outside periphery of a gasket or O-ring or other seal effective periphery".
The question is simple: Does this definition suggest that we take the full diameter (including the flow are) to the sealing face or do we use this diameter less the flow area?
The verbiage "area bounded" seems very clear that it's the full area, but thinking practically, only the area of diametral difference between the OD of the sealing face and the ID of the bore is seeing pressure loads going into axially stretching the bolts.
If we use the full area, some valve designs need to have a ridiculous number and/or size of bolts, whereas using the later approach, the numbers seem more "realistic".
Any thoughts / comments / best practices would be much appreciated.
Jeff