Bangrod
Mechanical
- Oct 7, 2005
- 13
Our company designs and manufactures relatively small ASME VIII vessels. We currently have a project for a 36" OD vessel that was designed for the main shell section to be made from 1/2" thick SA-516 Gr. 70 normalized material so that we could achieve an MDMT of -49 F. The material was ordered incorrectly and was not normalized. This was not caught until the vessel was completely welded, pressure tested etc. including heads, 8 flanged nozzles from 1" NPS up to 8" NPS.
We have identified the following options that I would appreciate any feedback / input to the questions below.
1) Locate a piece of the plate material from the same heat number and have it impact tested at -49 F
Q: What are the odds of 1/2" thick non-normalized material passing at -49 F???
2) Normalize the entire vessel.
Q: Is this acceptable and what type of distortion should be expected at the shell, heads, nozzles?
3) Rework the vessel with a shell section made from normalized material, or just start over new with the correct material.
Thanks for your input.
We have identified the following options that I would appreciate any feedback / input to the questions below.
1) Locate a piece of the plate material from the same heat number and have it impact tested at -49 F
Q: What are the odds of 1/2" thick non-normalized material passing at -49 F???
2) Normalize the entire vessel.
Q: Is this acceptable and what type of distortion should be expected at the shell, heads, nozzles?
3) Rework the vessel with a shell section made from normalized material, or just start over new with the correct material.
Thanks for your input.