Jimjoe
Petroleum
- May 1, 2023
- 3
A customer has issued a bolting a torquing handbook for all of the contractors to abide by when making connections
They detail out the stud requirements, gasket and materials, as well as the lubricant for each vessel and piping connection. Of course they specify by flange size but the main concern is over stressing the studs.
Besides that, there was a thought among the contractors that the tanks, drums, and tower's man ways fell under the girth flange torques, the reason being the title for the torque sheet, "pressure vessels and girth flanges". The alternative to this torque sheet is, or course, "raised face flanges", but this only goes to a certain flange size, where as the, "pressure vessel and girth flange", sheet bases it's information off of stud size.
So... To the question, is a man way to a pressure vessel considered a girth flange or.. more over is a man way more like a girth flange than it is a pipe flange?
They detail out the stud requirements, gasket and materials, as well as the lubricant for each vessel and piping connection. Of course they specify by flange size but the main concern is over stressing the studs.
Besides that, there was a thought among the contractors that the tanks, drums, and tower's man ways fell under the girth flange torques, the reason being the title for the torque sheet, "pressure vessels and girth flanges". The alternative to this torque sheet is, or course, "raised face flanges", but this only goes to a certain flange size, where as the, "pressure vessel and girth flange", sheet bases it's information off of stud size.
So... To the question, is a man way to a pressure vessel considered a girth flange or.. more over is a man way more like a girth flange than it is a pipe flange?