StressGuy
Mechanical
- Apr 4, 2002
- 484
In piping systems it is often the case that an elbow near grade in the vertical orientation is supported directly from the ground by a base support/dummy leg welded directly to the elbow. A control valve station is a typical example. The attachment is usually another piece of pipe, but for the masochists out there, can also be a structural shape.
Many times, the local stresses at the attatchment are such that reinforcement of the elbow is required. This can be done via adding an external pad or by increasing the wall thickness of the fitting.
I understand that when a pad is called for, it is usually cut out of another elbow, which essentially means you have to pay for two fittings.
It would seem that, for commonly available wall thicknesses, that calling for a heavier elbow would be the more economical solution.
The main disadvantage to an increased elbow wall thickness is that it is typically a variation from the pipe spec, so has to be specially noted on the piping drawing and, once it's in place, it would be difficult to check during a field walkdown to make sure the heavier elbow is in place. It would also make it more difficult for a future stress engineer to analyze a change to the system, such as a new tie in, as, in my experience, documents such as fabrication ISO's are typcially lost by the owner after the job is complete and the engineer has to rely on the spec to "rebuild" a new model. Not knowing about the heavier wall would lead to a lot of head scratching by a future engineer who is trying to figure out why the piping system hasn't collapsed.
Anyone have any thought's or guidelines on this one that they find useful?
Many times, the local stresses at the attatchment are such that reinforcement of the elbow is required. This can be done via adding an external pad or by increasing the wall thickness of the fitting.
I understand that when a pad is called for, it is usually cut out of another elbow, which essentially means you have to pay for two fittings.
It would seem that, for commonly available wall thicknesses, that calling for a heavier elbow would be the more economical solution.
The main disadvantage to an increased elbow wall thickness is that it is typically a variation from the pipe spec, so has to be specially noted on the piping drawing and, once it's in place, it would be difficult to check during a field walkdown to make sure the heavier elbow is in place. It would also make it more difficult for a future stress engineer to analyze a change to the system, such as a new tie in, as, in my experience, documents such as fabrication ISO's are typcially lost by the owner after the job is complete and the engineer has to rely on the spec to "rebuild" a new model. Not knowing about the heavier wall would lead to a lot of head scratching by a future engineer who is trying to figure out why the piping system hasn't collapsed.
Anyone have any thought's or guidelines on this one that they find useful?