mbelly84
Mechanical
- Mar 23, 2010
- 22
We have a number of cryogenic TMBV's, 3x2 class 150, lip seals, PCTFE seats.
Seat configuration is SPE-DPE.
Valves have been tested 100% at ambient temperature according to API 6D (leaks detected through body cavity, DPE seat tested in both directions) with no leaks.
The problem is that BS6364 (cryo valve spec) does not specify the leakage detection point.
My proposal is keeping the API6D procedure and checking the leakages through the body cavity.
Manufacturer does not agree and during the cryogenic leak test at -196 deg is detecting the leakages downstream.
Which is a nonsense especially for a SPE-DPE design (any SPE leakage would be hidden by the DPE seat).
What is your opinion on this, would you accept a cryogenic seat test for such a valve with leak detected downstream?
Is there any cryo test specification specifically written for ball valves that can help us proving our point?
Unfortunately BS6364 is a general spec, so it's not really detailed when it comes to special design ball valves like SPE-DPE.
Thanks
Seat configuration is SPE-DPE.
Valves have been tested 100% at ambient temperature according to API 6D (leaks detected through body cavity, DPE seat tested in both directions) with no leaks.
The problem is that BS6364 (cryo valve spec) does not specify the leakage detection point.
My proposal is keeping the API6D procedure and checking the leakages through the body cavity.
Manufacturer does not agree and during the cryogenic leak test at -196 deg is detecting the leakages downstream.
Which is a nonsense especially for a SPE-DPE design (any SPE leakage would be hidden by the DPE seat).
What is your opinion on this, would you accept a cryogenic seat test for such a valve with leak detected downstream?
Is there any cryo test specification specifically written for ball valves that can help us proving our point?
Unfortunately BS6364 is a general spec, so it's not really detailed when it comes to special design ball valves like SPE-DPE.
Thanks