jdog1
Mechanical
- Aug 7, 2007
- 9
First off, I'm new to the forum and pressure vessel design.
I'm helping out on a vessel that has several nozzles on a cylindrical shell that are at compound angles to the vessel, i.e., they are not perpendicular to the vessel as is typically shown in WRC-107 sketches.
The customer supplied nozzle loads in global coordinates(Fx, Fy, Fz, Mx, My and Mz) and asked that we translate these loads to local nozzle loads( WRC-107 convention). After an embarassingly difficult review of statics, I was able to perform the nozzle load translation, but I'm not sure that this is the correct approach.
I haven't seen anything in WRC-107 that addresses how you treat a nozzle with such an orientation. Specifically, how do I apply P, Vc, Vl, Mt, Mc and Ml?
I'm leaning towards treating the nozzle as if it were perpendicular to the vessel, use the supplied global nozzle loads and use the developed opening on the vessel as the nozzle diameter.
Any guidance, advice, other places to look, things to try?
Thanks!
I'm helping out on a vessel that has several nozzles on a cylindrical shell that are at compound angles to the vessel, i.e., they are not perpendicular to the vessel as is typically shown in WRC-107 sketches.
The customer supplied nozzle loads in global coordinates(Fx, Fy, Fz, Mx, My and Mz) and asked that we translate these loads to local nozzle loads( WRC-107 convention). After an embarassingly difficult review of statics, I was able to perform the nozzle load translation, but I'm not sure that this is the correct approach.
I haven't seen anything in WRC-107 that addresses how you treat a nozzle with such an orientation. Specifically, how do I apply P, Vc, Vl, Mt, Mc and Ml?
I'm leaning towards treating the nozzle as if it were perpendicular to the vessel, use the supplied global nozzle loads and use the developed opening on the vessel as the nozzle diameter.
Any guidance, advice, other places to look, things to try?
Thanks!