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  • #6437

    eliutbb
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    Hello there, I would appreciate your thoughts on this one. There is a rule of thumb that says that you should not make a straight pipe run smaller than 1 diameter, in fact that is one of the first things you learn, no one tells you that you do that to avoid HAZ and SCC. Now most people knows that with bigger diameters you don’t have to follow that, some says that you can use half the diameter from 14″ and above. In my experience that is something that everybody knows but cant support with codes, when I was working in Fluor some guy said to me that there was a British code that states that the smallest possible pipe run between two welds is 5 times the wall thickness, I personally think that is too little.
    What I thought was to check in ASME B31.3 for miter bends, I did, please check figure 304.2.3 in page 21, there you get the formula to obtain “m” dimension for the small radius, therefore you get a dimension backed up by B31.3. Now I’m not sure if that applies for sour service (guess I’ll have to check NACE) someone told me that it doesn’t matter because you can solve such problems with PWHT, I don’t think so, specially on site.
    Why all the fuss? There are some old guys in Pemex (my current client) that object to some design I made, they say that you should follow that rule of thumb of one diameter “no matter what”. The thing I like most about this job is that the phrase: “no matter what” haves little value” (as long as you can back up what you do with codes).

    Any thoughts please?

    TIA

    Cheers!
    Eliut

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