ivarfar
Petroleum
- Jan 12, 2006
- 6
We have a case where the system piping was determined to be class 600 and later the PSVs were found to be class 900.
The stainless steel PSVs have been dimensioned to size "L". Set pressure is 7100 kPa abs and relief temp. is 38°C. This results in a class 900 (inlet) PSV according to API 526.
Is there a gap/mismatch between ASME code and API 526 definitions of pressure class? Is this intentional?
The suggested solution is to introduce a spec. break upstream of the PSV because the set pressure cannot be changed for various reasons. Is this good engineering practice?![[ponder] [ponder] [ponder]](/data/assets/smilies/ponder.gif)
The stainless steel PSVs have been dimensioned to size "L". Set pressure is 7100 kPa abs and relief temp. is 38°C. This results in a class 900 (inlet) PSV according to API 526.
Is there a gap/mismatch between ASME code and API 526 definitions of pressure class? Is this intentional?
The suggested solution is to introduce a spec. break upstream of the PSV because the set pressure cannot be changed for various reasons. Is this good engineering practice?
![[ponder] [ponder] [ponder]](/data/assets/smilies/ponder.gif)