yyulius77
Mechanical
- Jan 22, 2009
- 3
Hi All,
We're working on a project where there is a diesel line feeding into gas turbines, carbon steel A106B piping system. The diesel vendor supplied us with pipe & fittings with black internal coating, which people call Japanese Black, or Black Lacquer, or whatever it is. The pipe was rejected by our client. We have since aquamill it to clean it, and we want the vendor to pay for it.
To be honest, we have never heard of this black thing before, and we didn't specify anything in our Spec about having to remove this.
Talking to some older guys, they said this used to be common in the old days, but they never thought they still exist today as they create of problem. So they think it is an industry standard to remove it prior to using. The vendor should've known, in their opinion.
And we are trying to argue the case against the vendor, why did they supply pipe & fittings with this internal coating? Why didn't they remove it before shipping to site? They argued, "You guys didn't specify removal of it in your spec. You only specified pickling, and we did pickle." We argue, "We don't have to specify, you should have known, as this is an industry standard."
In your views, ladies and gentlemen, who is at fault? Should have we specified it? Or should have they known to remove without us having to tell them?
Any standard or code that you can reference about having to remove this thing prior to use? Is it okay to leave it in for GT diesel?
Cheers,
YY
We're working on a project where there is a diesel line feeding into gas turbines, carbon steel A106B piping system. The diesel vendor supplied us with pipe & fittings with black internal coating, which people call Japanese Black, or Black Lacquer, or whatever it is. The pipe was rejected by our client. We have since aquamill it to clean it, and we want the vendor to pay for it.
To be honest, we have never heard of this black thing before, and we didn't specify anything in our Spec about having to remove this.
Talking to some older guys, they said this used to be common in the old days, but they never thought they still exist today as they create of problem. So they think it is an industry standard to remove it prior to using. The vendor should've known, in their opinion.
And we are trying to argue the case against the vendor, why did they supply pipe & fittings with this internal coating? Why didn't they remove it before shipping to site? They argued, "You guys didn't specify removal of it in your spec. You only specified pickling, and we did pickle." We argue, "We don't have to specify, you should have known, as this is an industry standard."
In your views, ladies and gentlemen, who is at fault? Should have we specified it? Or should have they known to remove without us having to tell them?
Any standard or code that you can reference about having to remove this thing prior to use? Is it okay to leave it in for GT diesel?
Cheers,
YY