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ASME Table Electronic Format

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tiz99

Mechanical
Joined
Mar 9, 2020
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9
Location
AU
Hi all,

Does anyone know of any way to get Tables from ASME Codes in electronic format, like a spreadsheet or database?
I am currently trying to make a spreadsheet for flange calculations, but I cannot find an efficient way to extract dimensional data from B16.5.

Thanks in advance,

Tiz
 
manual entry is likely best.

another technique is to copy the text from the pdf and paste in table or text editor, but there will be a lot of editing.
 
Such tables are non existent afaik.
I once created a digital B16.5 table using the pdf->word conversion tool in Nitro PDF. Takes some time to reformat certain data/pages as the conversion isn’t 100% OK, but the numbers are at least correct, so in the end the effort was small and the overall gain was very good.

Huub
- You never get what you expect, you only get what you inspect.
 
Thanks guys, I was afraid that might be the answer.

Is there some way to suggest to the committee to provide such tables in future revisions? Or am I dreaming...
 
I’m on one of the B31 committees. It’s been a long term request to provide committee members, for their help/assistance in their committee work, with an electronic (Excel-like) version of e.g. ASME IID. So far that hasn’t succeeded.
B16.5 is a different story, let alone for the public. so one can imagine changed are poor. If you have good arguments, it might work to convince someone, but I doubt you are in any luck.

Depending on what you need, its something you can do yourself quite easily.

Huub
- You never get what you expect, you only get what you inspect.
 
My only argument would be that it would likely take a similar amount of work to publish the standards as both PDF and tables, and that it provides much greater value to ASME Standards Subscribers. I can't think of a good reason to keep this data locked down, but maybe there are forces at play that I am unaware of.
 
Most of the stress tables of II-D are available (or were available) in excel. Committee members do get access to 'relevant' standards, I don't see why the II-D tables wouldn't be available. For others the conversion to excel can be problematic in terms of formatting, I have used VBA scripts to clean it up in the past. Some of the API 579 Part 9 tables were particularly challenging.
 
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