workermonkey
Mechanical
- Dec 31, 2003
- 12
I'm a young engineer who's been thrown into the shell and tube heat exchanger world. I work for a small fabricator designing simple HX's. I'm trying to design a tubebundle to heat water in a large tank.
I've been given Kern's Process Heat Transfer book as a great reference but i don't posess a copy (yet!). Right now i use B-Jac to design everything but it's less than helpful with this kind of design since the water isn't flowing.
Is there an easy way to do this? i'd rather not spend my time looking up coeffcients and a hundred different numbers. Working in surface area is the easiest but the hardest to determine. I'm always getting info from customers that i can't do much with because i don't want to spend three days trying to design a simple tubebundle.
am i just generally screwed or do i need to hunker down and just punch it out? I'd love to hear from other people who have had some sort of similar experience.
I've been given Kern's Process Heat Transfer book as a great reference but i don't posess a copy (yet!). Right now i use B-Jac to design everything but it's less than helpful with this kind of design since the water isn't flowing.
Is there an easy way to do this? i'd rather not spend my time looking up coeffcients and a hundred different numbers. Working in surface area is the easiest but the hardest to determine. I'm always getting info from customers that i can't do much with because i don't want to spend three days trying to design a simple tubebundle.
am i just generally screwed or do i need to hunker down and just punch it out? I'd love to hear from other people who have had some sort of similar experience.