jxr
Mechanical
- May 13, 2008
- 1
There is some discussion going on in our organisation regarding the field pneumatic pressure/leak-tightness testing requirements post assembly of shop hydrotested piping spools. In this instance, the service is fuel-gas, on an offshore gas production platform.
I have read through ASME B31.3 (the applicable code in this instance) and others (ASME PCC-1 & PCC-2 etc).
I hold a belief, from first-principles origin, that the assembled piping system should be leak tested to design pressure. I hold this conviction for several reasons:
1. The gross structural integrity of the piping spools has already been proved during the shop hydrotest, hence risk of explosive failure is negligible or zero.
2. I think it would be quite possible for a flange joint assembly to be field-assembled sufficiently tight to withstand a low pressure leak test (say 35% design pressure, per PCC-2), but not tight enough to necessarily be leak-tight at full design pressure. At design pressure, internal pressure could load insufficiently preloaded flange bolts and unload the gasket, leading to leakage.
3. If design pressure is intended to be a credible pressure-temperature combination with the process fluid, then there should not be any fear of taking the system to this operating point with an inert test gas.
As mentioned, I have searched reasonably extensively, but cannot find any code or standard to support this view. Furthermore, the ASME codes seem to hold to the view that low-pressure sensitive leak tests are adequate proof of joint leak-tightness.
What is the general consensus and practical experience of field installation of prefabricated piping spools?
I have read through ASME B31.3 (the applicable code in this instance) and others (ASME PCC-1 & PCC-2 etc).
I hold a belief, from first-principles origin, that the assembled piping system should be leak tested to design pressure. I hold this conviction for several reasons:
1. The gross structural integrity of the piping spools has already been proved during the shop hydrotest, hence risk of explosive failure is negligible or zero.
2. I think it would be quite possible for a flange joint assembly to be field-assembled sufficiently tight to withstand a low pressure leak test (say 35% design pressure, per PCC-2), but not tight enough to necessarily be leak-tight at full design pressure. At design pressure, internal pressure could load insufficiently preloaded flange bolts and unload the gasket, leading to leakage.
3. If design pressure is intended to be a credible pressure-temperature combination with the process fluid, then there should not be any fear of taking the system to this operating point with an inert test gas.
As mentioned, I have searched reasonably extensively, but cannot find any code or standard to support this view. Furthermore, the ASME codes seem to hold to the view that low-pressure sensitive leak tests are adequate proof of joint leak-tightness.
What is the general consensus and practical experience of field installation of prefabricated piping spools?