TiCl4
Chemical
- May 1, 2019
- 631
I work at a plant that using polyethylene tubing everywhere for tie-in between the air header and the final instrument (mainly valve actuators). Personally, I hate this design choice. It seems to fail quite often - all I have to do is take a stroll through the plant to hear the "pssssst" of leaking air left and right. It is susceptible to heat/physical impact (i.e. steam jacket blowdowns have put pinholes in nearby cooling valve air lines). When I asked the maintenance manager about the basis for the choice -there is no documented reason in the piping codes for instrument air lines- he said that they use it instead of something like stainless tubing because stainless would be a pain to replace when it failed. I countered that the stainless tubing wouldn't be failing at nearly the rate of the poly tubing, but he wasn't buying it.
Having worked at a plant prior that using nothing but stainless tubing, I just much prefer the (perceived) longer life of stainless tubing.
Can anyone chime in on what your experience is with connection tubing? Pros/cons of stainless tubing for instrument connections and actuator connections?
P.S. I know poly tubing has its place. The reasons would be:
[ul]
[li]In high-vibration lines, where ferrule fittings typically will crack due to fatigue[/li]
[li]In pool-fire scenarios where certain valves need to fail. A melting poly tube guarantees an additional means to ensure the valve goes to fail state.[/li]
[/ul]
Having worked at a plant prior that using nothing but stainless tubing, I just much prefer the (perceived) longer life of stainless tubing.
Can anyone chime in on what your experience is with connection tubing? Pros/cons of stainless tubing for instrument connections and actuator connections?
P.S. I know poly tubing has its place. The reasons would be:
[ul]
[li]In high-vibration lines, where ferrule fittings typically will crack due to fatigue[/li]
[li]In pool-fire scenarios where certain valves need to fail. A melting poly tube guarantees an additional means to ensure the valve goes to fail state.[/li]
[/ul]