JacobsTin (and others)
BigInch made the following statement:
"The stress engineer is usually responsible for locating supports, "
This statement is both true and not true. I believe it is true for "BigInch" because that was the way he was trained, the way his company operates and was what (all, most or some) the projects required that he has worked on. It is true and consistant with his experience. There is nothing wrong with this manner of operation. I would furthur recomment that you look at all of his responses, the ones to this question and other question as being very good advice.
However, his statement is not true and consistant with the training, experience, manner of operation and project types for all pipers and all companies. I am not speaking for all pipers but it was not true for me, my experiences and my company. Where I "grew-up" as a piper, I (and hundreds of others like me over the years) recieved training in the fundamentals of proper pipe routing and total system design. This included many classroom hours in the basics of stress, flexibility, forces, weight, support, expansion, etc.. This was classroom instruction conducted by the head of the stress department.
Why was this training done? Very simple! The ratio of piping designers to stress engineers was (and probably still is) 25:1. So this means there was a work load issue to be considered. Also, the head of the stress department and the manager of the total piping department did not want bad or unworkable designs submitted to the stress department. This would only increase the workload because of the recycle. We were required to submit what we considered a workable design. And we needed to be able to defend it. In this enviroment the piping designer located all the support points and the stress engineer checked the total line or system for complience to the codes and other factors as required by the project criteria.