KernOily
Petroleum
- Jan 29, 2002
- 711
Here's yet another nozzle load question for you fellers. I am Mr. Piping Reactions this week...
I am involved with LOTS of smaller storage tanks, mostly for water, crude oil, and oil-water mixtures. Most are API 650 welded but some are API 12J bolted and ALL of them are 100,000 bbl or less, the vast majority being 5,000 to 20,000 bbl cone-roof. I frequently have occasion to hook up hot lines to existing tanks, so I am constantly in need of nozzle allowables. As you know, API 650 only gives allowable nozzle load calculation methods for tanks MUCH larger than these. So how to calculate the allowable reactions for smaller tanks?
What I've done in the past is: (1)use FEA (expensive) (2) use some 'judgment allowables' (3) calculate the allowable using API 650 and then reduce it based on judgment (hard to defend that one...) (4) calculate the allowables using API 650 and then increase(!) them because a smaller Ø tank is supposedly stiffer, all other parameters being equal.
The tankies are usually of no help, believe it or not. And that doesn't help anyway if you're re-using an existing tank or changing its service.
So, short of applying an expansion joint at the nozzle every time, which is hardly aaceptable, what do you guys do/what have you done? Any thoughts/ideas/miscellaneous ramblings are welcome... Thanks!
Pete
P. J. (Pete) Chandler, PE
Principal Engineer
Mechanical, Piping, Thermal, Hydraulics
Processes Unlimited International, Inc.
Bakersfield, California USA
pjchandl@prou.com
I am involved with LOTS of smaller storage tanks, mostly for water, crude oil, and oil-water mixtures. Most are API 650 welded but some are API 12J bolted and ALL of them are 100,000 bbl or less, the vast majority being 5,000 to 20,000 bbl cone-roof. I frequently have occasion to hook up hot lines to existing tanks, so I am constantly in need of nozzle allowables. As you know, API 650 only gives allowable nozzle load calculation methods for tanks MUCH larger than these. So how to calculate the allowable reactions for smaller tanks?
What I've done in the past is: (1)use FEA (expensive) (2) use some 'judgment allowables' (3) calculate the allowable using API 650 and then reduce it based on judgment (hard to defend that one...) (4) calculate the allowables using API 650 and then increase(!) them because a smaller Ø tank is supposedly stiffer, all other parameters being equal.
The tankies are usually of no help, believe it or not. And that doesn't help anyway if you're re-using an existing tank or changing its service.
So, short of applying an expansion joint at the nozzle every time, which is hardly aaceptable, what do you guys do/what have you done? Any thoughts/ideas/miscellaneous ramblings are welcome... Thanks!
Pete
P. J. (Pete) Chandler, PE
Principal Engineer
Mechanical, Piping, Thermal, Hydraulics
Processes Unlimited International, Inc.
Bakersfield, California USA
pjchandl@prou.com