Feltonn
Mechanical
- Aug 29, 2013
- 3
Hello all,
I have a set of temperature measuring instruments that are bolted into a pressure vessel using welding neck flanges, with a raised face. Specs: ASME B16.5 300 Pound 1.5" Carbon Steel.
I have a variety of these temperature probes, in order to avoid inserting the wrong one in the wrong vessel I want to add some guiding pins in the flanges. The idea is to have two small holes in every flange and add pins in one of the flanges, every instrument will have its distinct angle between the two pins. Therefore each is keyed in a unique way, making it impossible to make a wrong connection.
The new holes will be in parallel to the existing bolt holes, at the same distance from the centre of the flange. New hole diameter will be 8mm.
Drilling these holes will compromise the integrity of the flange. I therefore compared the moment of inertia according to the following formulas:
I' = (Pi D^4)/64 + (Pi D^2 R^2)/4
I = I'flange - I'centre_hole - 4x I'bolt_holes - 2x I'pin_holes
D = Diameter
R = Distance centre flange to centre of the hole
I found that adding the two holes will in this case decrease the moment of inertia by 1.4%, which is acceptable for me. I am wondering what your opinion is on this, is this result to be expected?
Furthermore:
1. Will it suffice to calculate the moment of inertia, or am I missing another important phenomenon besides bending resistance?
2. What does ASME B16.5 recommend, do they approve of drilling holes in the flange up to a certain diametre?
As a reference, I've attached my calculations in an Excel sheet.
I have a set of temperature measuring instruments that are bolted into a pressure vessel using welding neck flanges, with a raised face. Specs: ASME B16.5 300 Pound 1.5" Carbon Steel.
I have a variety of these temperature probes, in order to avoid inserting the wrong one in the wrong vessel I want to add some guiding pins in the flanges. The idea is to have two small holes in every flange and add pins in one of the flanges, every instrument will have its distinct angle between the two pins. Therefore each is keyed in a unique way, making it impossible to make a wrong connection.
The new holes will be in parallel to the existing bolt holes, at the same distance from the centre of the flange. New hole diameter will be 8mm.
Drilling these holes will compromise the integrity of the flange. I therefore compared the moment of inertia according to the following formulas:
I' = (Pi D^4)/64 + (Pi D^2 R^2)/4
I = I'flange - I'centre_hole - 4x I'bolt_holes - 2x I'pin_holes
D = Diameter
R = Distance centre flange to centre of the hole
I found that adding the two holes will in this case decrease the moment of inertia by 1.4%, which is acceptable for me. I am wondering what your opinion is on this, is this result to be expected?
Furthermore:
1. Will it suffice to calculate the moment of inertia, or am I missing another important phenomenon besides bending resistance?
2. What does ASME B16.5 recommend, do they approve of drilling holes in the flange up to a certain diametre?
As a reference, I've attached my calculations in an Excel sheet.