KernOily
Petroleum
- Jan 29, 2002
- 711
Hi guys. I need a QUICK, IMMEDIATELY USEABLE reference on compressible flow in a long pipe for the PRACTICING engineer.
I don't have time to draw Fanno lines.
I don't have time to do integration, solve differential equations, and deal with equations that have differential elements.
I don't have time to fiddle around with real vs. ideal gases.
I am fed up with trying to use my college compressible flow texts as useful references for the practicing plant engineer. They are useless. Great for drawing oblique shock lines across a supersonic airfoil, and that's about it.
Can you tell I'm frustrated?
Here is the issue. I am a practicing engineer. Therefore, I have meetings to attend, work plans to generate, clients to meet, bills to pay, junior engineers to mentor, mud to stomp through, PHAs to attend, operators to whom I am obligated to listen to their gripes, managers to assuage, leaks to fix, and busted equipment to troubleshoot. On top of this, I have exactly one hour to determine the flowrate, exit velocity, and noise SPL from a 300' long, 12" std pipeline flowing 80% saturated steam. Line is a steam generator blowdown header that is charged by several blowdown valves with 850 psig downstream pressure. Line exits to atmosphere. Yes I know my pressure ratio is over the 0.545 critical pressure drop. Beyond that I am stuck and my compressible flow text is 100% useless.
Somebody needs to create a Crane TP410 for compressible flow...
Thanks for letting me vent (ok, bad pun). Pete
I don't have time to draw Fanno lines.
I don't have time to do integration, solve differential equations, and deal with equations that have differential elements.
I don't have time to fiddle around with real vs. ideal gases.
I am fed up with trying to use my college compressible flow texts as useful references for the practicing plant engineer. They are useless. Great for drawing oblique shock lines across a supersonic airfoil, and that's about it.
Can you tell I'm frustrated?
Here is the issue. I am a practicing engineer. Therefore, I have meetings to attend, work plans to generate, clients to meet, bills to pay, junior engineers to mentor, mud to stomp through, PHAs to attend, operators to whom I am obligated to listen to their gripes, managers to assuage, leaks to fix, and busted equipment to troubleshoot. On top of this, I have exactly one hour to determine the flowrate, exit velocity, and noise SPL from a 300' long, 12" std pipeline flowing 80% saturated steam. Line is a steam generator blowdown header that is charged by several blowdown valves with 850 psig downstream pressure. Line exits to atmosphere. Yes I know my pressure ratio is over the 0.545 critical pressure drop. Beyond that I am stuck and my compressible flow text is 100% useless.
Somebody needs to create a Crane TP410 for compressible flow...
Thanks for letting me vent (ok, bad pun). Pete