athomas236
Mechanical
- Jul 1, 2002
- 607
I am involved in a project where some new piping and valves are being added to an existing system all of which is designed to ASME B31.3.
The new piping takes HP steam reduces its pressure and temperature thro a reducing valve and desuperheater and then connects to a LP steam pipe just downstream of an existing isolating valve.
The contractor has recognised that he needs to provide safety valves on the downstream side of the reducing valve to protect the LP system. The point at issue is the capacity of these new relief valves.
The contractor wants to lock open the existing isolating valve so that there will be a flow path to some existing safety valves installed under an earlier phase. In this way the safety valves that the contractor provides will be about half the code requirement.
Any comments on this would be helpful.
Best regards
athomas236
The new piping takes HP steam reduces its pressure and temperature thro a reducing valve and desuperheater and then connects to a LP steam pipe just downstream of an existing isolating valve.
The contractor has recognised that he needs to provide safety valves on the downstream side of the reducing valve to protect the LP system. The point at issue is the capacity of these new relief valves.
The contractor wants to lock open the existing isolating valve so that there will be a flow path to some existing safety valves installed under an earlier phase. In this way the safety valves that the contractor provides will be about half the code requirement.
Any comments on this would be helpful.
Best regards
athomas236