SciWriter
Petroleum
- May 19, 2001
- 3
I'm a science writer interested in the design of petroleum pipelines.
I'm curious why older (circa 1960) buried high-pressure jet fuel pipelines have regularly spaced "shephards' crook"-like vent pipes on the surface while newer pipelines do not.
Were these vents a safety mechanism for in-pipe pressure emergencies? Are their valve mechanisms pressure-triggered? (And if so, what pressure is necessary to cause them to vent?)
Any comments or thoughts would be mightily appreciated. Thank you.
Bryant
I'm curious why older (circa 1960) buried high-pressure jet fuel pipelines have regularly spaced "shephards' crook"-like vent pipes on the surface while newer pipelines do not.
Were these vents a safety mechanism for in-pipe pressure emergencies? Are their valve mechanisms pressure-triggered? (And if so, what pressure is necessary to cause them to vent?)
Any comments or thoughts would be mightily appreciated. Thank you.
Bryant