ashaari
Mechanical
- Dec 17, 2008
- 30
Dear all,
I have a gas-fired water tube D-type package boiler, manufactured by Babcock & Wilcox. My boiler is a B&W FM model boiler. On the rear of the furnace, the tubes are flat-studded tubes, with refractory on the outside with inner hot casing and channel tie bar.
The channel tie bar is welded to the tubes, in a staggered manner (one tube on the top of the channel, the next on the bottom of the channel, etc). I don't know the technical term of this welding pattern. If you refer to the photo I attached to this post, you can see what I mean as welding to the tubes in staggered manner. Just a disclaimer, the photo is not the photo of my furnace arrangement - I just attach it to illustrate my point of the staggered welding.
My question is, why must the welding between the tie channel and the tubes be in staggered manner? Is it to cater for expansion of the tie channel? If it is, I can't imagine how.
Thanks!
I have a gas-fired water tube D-type package boiler, manufactured by Babcock & Wilcox. My boiler is a B&W FM model boiler. On the rear of the furnace, the tubes are flat-studded tubes, with refractory on the outside with inner hot casing and channel tie bar.
The channel tie bar is welded to the tubes, in a staggered manner (one tube on the top of the channel, the next on the bottom of the channel, etc). I don't know the technical term of this welding pattern. If you refer to the photo I attached to this post, you can see what I mean as welding to the tubes in staggered manner. Just a disclaimer, the photo is not the photo of my furnace arrangement - I just attach it to illustrate my point of the staggered welding.
My question is, why must the welding between the tie channel and the tubes be in staggered manner? Is it to cater for expansion of the tie channel? If it is, I can't imagine how.
Thanks!