roca -
I will be happy to send you what I have, though I fear you will be disappointed as it is just a simple drawing. If you need more details, please ask.
Wouldn't the 1/200 criteria yield
15M = 15,000MM / 200 = 75MM tolerance, not 150MM?
I read that to say that the tank can be +75MM in one place and -75MM in another place but not +75MM and -75MM in the same vertical slice. In that case, most seals should be OK.
API 650 section 5 gives the 1/200 criteria but also says that for tanks with internal floating roofs, apply the criteria of this section or Appendix H, whichever is more stringent.
API 650 appendix H (internal floating roofs) calls for the seal to be able to accommodate a +/- 100MM [4"] of local deviation between the floating roof and the shell. Appendix H also calls for the columns, ladders and other appurtenances to be plumb within a tolerance of +/-75mm (+/-3in.).
API 650 appendix C (external floating roofs) is less specific, calling for seals to provide a reasonably close fit to the shell surfaces, and that an adequate but minimum number of expansion joints shall be provided.
If your tank is worse than a standard seal can deal with, ask your seal vendor for a special seal. Allentech (sales@allentech.com) has designed floating roof seals for tanks that are more than 12" out of plumb.
I'm not surprised that steel floating roofs change shape when they are floated or when their temperature changes rapidly. A stiffer floating roof (pontoon or double deck) would suffer much less than a "frying pan" type.
What was the damage like?
Note that API 650 appendix H has footnotes on pan type floating roofs, one of which I have copied here:
These designs contain no closed buoyancy compartments, and are subject to flooding during sloshing or during application of fire
fighting foam/water solution. Also, without bracing of the rim being provided by the pontoon top plate, design to resist buckling of the rim must be evaluated. These types are considered a fixed roof tank (i.e., having no internal floating roof) for the siting requirements of NFPA 30.
Was this any help?