Hi Piper,
I agree with TugboatEng, segmental ring indeed is not supposed to be in direct contact with process fluid, so no need to make it from similar trim material.
Just saw your drawing, we also had some of this installed (not the 30 years old Ring-O valve of my earlier snip). Mainly used in my refinery for steam and/or hydrogen services.
Please do not simplify my below comments, as I don't know your product, how many cycles and lifetime expectancy
AISI 410 in a valve with SS347 body and trim won't have bad consequences? Risk is ALARP
Is there any general practice to use the same material for segmental retainer as the valve trim? Not that I'm aware of. Again segmental ring is not supposed to be in contact with product.
Further disclaimer:
- it does in contact with your outside environment e.g. rain, corrosive sea environment, etc. So this is a factor to be considered.
- As mentioned earlier, bigger sizes with membrane, smaller sizes (<2") with this ring. However failure modes are mainly the same: corrosion and fatigue lifetime. Why fatigue? it follows ups and downs of pressure fluctuation inside the valve. Which one will goes first? In my refinery fatigue hits first after 20,000 cycles (approximately 10-15 years). Imagine this as our respiratory membrane. Corrosion take effect several years after that (we do have some valves exposed to corrosive environment).
This is not a maintenance-free valve, we need to inspect the ring/membrane every other 2-3 shutdown or TurnAround.
Regards,
MR
All valves will last for years, except the ones that were poorly manufactured; are still wrongly operated and or were wrongly selected