Brough
Mining
- May 17, 2006
- 2
Brough (Mining) 18 May 06 8:59
Can someone help me to understand the relationship of pipe schedule designations and respective pressure ratings. I think I understand that the formula for calculating bursting pressure for a given pipe schedule wall thickness is Barlow's formula...P= t * 2S/OD....and to determine working pressure, the bursting pressure is divided by a selected safety factor. Is this correct?....but doesn't temperature of the fluid in the pipe have a bearing on bursting pressure value?
Is it correct that to determine the selection of a particular pipe schedule you calculate the schedule required with the formula: Schedule = 1000 * P/Sh...where P = pipe system pressure and Sh is ultimate tensile strength at a given temperatutre?
Also can someone explain to me what a pipe fitting with, let's say a 150 class rating actually means with regard to pressure rating? Sometimes I see fittings designations as 150 lb and sometimes as 150 class...do both designations mean the same thing? Does 150 lb fitting mean that the working pressure of the fitting is 150 PSI at 150 degrees C?
Thank you for any information on this. Tim Brough
Can someone help me to understand the relationship of pipe schedule designations and respective pressure ratings. I think I understand that the formula for calculating bursting pressure for a given pipe schedule wall thickness is Barlow's formula...P= t * 2S/OD....and to determine working pressure, the bursting pressure is divided by a selected safety factor. Is this correct?....but doesn't temperature of the fluid in the pipe have a bearing on bursting pressure value?
Is it correct that to determine the selection of a particular pipe schedule you calculate the schedule required with the formula: Schedule = 1000 * P/Sh...where P = pipe system pressure and Sh is ultimate tensile strength at a given temperatutre?
Also can someone explain to me what a pipe fitting with, let's say a 150 class rating actually means with regard to pressure rating? Sometimes I see fittings designations as 150 lb and sometimes as 150 class...do both designations mean the same thing? Does 150 lb fitting mean that the working pressure of the fitting is 150 PSI at 150 degrees C?
Thank you for any information on this. Tim Brough