some 35-miles of 34" diameter gas transmission pipeline was pigged. at the receiving end, the mainline 34" valve (wedge gate valve) was partially closed to retrieve the pig in pig trap. the pig came in and the signal to open the 34" valve was sent. however, the valve operator indicator did not indicate the valve was opened. the operators were concerned as this impact pipeline capacity. instrument techs were sent and they made several attempts to get the valve opened, which included placing the full pressure from a nitrogen bottle to the actuator get the valve opened. no luck. the actuator was a piston-cylinder type designed for pipeline operations and had a 1/2-inch rod attached to the piston and it penetrated the top of the cylinder to indicate valve position. only about 6-inches of the indicator rod was visible which caused much concern. a spare 34" valve, pipe, and fittings were readily available, so the following weekend, plans were made to replace the valve. drove to the site on Saturday to observe the work. the pipeline was isolated and excavated. the pipeline was cut and lifted out with the 34" valve. several of us stood by to look through the pipeline to see how much the valve was closed. turns out the valve was always open. the indicator rod was bound at the cylinder seal in such a way that the rod wrapped itself around the inside of the cylinder when the valve was opened. there was fine sand, dirt, and grit that penetrated the seal when the valve was partially closed that it "froze" the rod in place. needless to say, that was about 300k spent in a 34" valve, pipe, fittings, and gas loss to account for. not a good day for some folks.