robsalv
Mechanical
- Aug 8, 2002
- 311
A balanced bellows stops superimposed and developed back pressures having an additive effect on set pressure by virtue of a vented bonnet and a sound bellows.
What happens when the bellows is cracked??
I've always assumed that this takes the bellows out of the picture and the additive effects are now in play... but thinking about it further, since the bonnet is vented, I'm wondering whether my long held assumption has been too hasty.
Most bellows fail via a fatigue crack in a convolution, which is usually a small crack.
Now say that the BB PRV is discharging into a flare header with some nominal header pressure, there'd be a pressure drop across this crack, i.e., superimposed header pressure one side, atmospheric the other since the bonnet is vented.
The pressure drop and vented bonnet means that the set pressure isn't really going to be impacted is it?
Similarly during a relieving event, the amount of pressure that could build up in the bonnet would be related to the back pressure caused by the pressure drop through the bonnet vent and the cracked bellows. The PRV is still likely to chatter, but the full developed discharge pressure wont be fully additive.
Am I on the right thinking path here?
Happy to take discussion on this topic!
Cheers
Rob
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
"Life! No one get's out of it alive."
"The trick is to grow up without growing old..."
What happens when the bellows is cracked??
I've always assumed that this takes the bellows out of the picture and the additive effects are now in play... but thinking about it further, since the bonnet is vented, I'm wondering whether my long held assumption has been too hasty.
Most bellows fail via a fatigue crack in a convolution, which is usually a small crack.
Now say that the BB PRV is discharging into a flare header with some nominal header pressure, there'd be a pressure drop across this crack, i.e., superimposed header pressure one side, atmospheric the other since the bonnet is vented.
The pressure drop and vented bonnet means that the set pressure isn't really going to be impacted is it?
Similarly during a relieving event, the amount of pressure that could build up in the bonnet would be related to the back pressure caused by the pressure drop through the bonnet vent and the cracked bellows. The PRV is still likely to chatter, but the full developed discharge pressure wont be fully additive.
Am I on the right thinking path here?
Happy to take discussion on this topic!
Cheers
Rob
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
"Life! No one get's out of it alive."
"The trick is to grow up without growing old..."