Hani_
Mechanical
- Nov 24, 2019
- 2
Hello,
Typically in piping specification we see A193 B7 / B7M studs matched with A194 2H / 2HM nuts. However in one particular project client has used A193 B7/B7M along with A194 L7 / L7M nuts.
I have dug into project specifications and documents but could not find a reasoning for this combination of bolts and nuts. I did check the ASTM standard to see the difference in material compositions and noticed that B7 is a closer match to L7 than 2H.
So my question, Is there a particular reason we see B7 studs matched with 2H nuts when L7 composition seems to be more compatible with B7? and if B7 is better matched with 2H would there be an application where we would prefer using B7 with L7 (Like temp conditions maybe?)
Appreciate any insight I can get on this, thanks.
Typically in piping specification we see A193 B7 / B7M studs matched with A194 2H / 2HM nuts. However in one particular project client has used A193 B7/B7M along with A194 L7 / L7M nuts.
I have dug into project specifications and documents but could not find a reasoning for this combination of bolts and nuts. I did check the ASTM standard to see the difference in material compositions and noticed that B7 is a closer match to L7 than 2H.
So my question, Is there a particular reason we see B7 studs matched with 2H nuts when L7 composition seems to be more compatible with B7? and if B7 is better matched with 2H would there be an application where we would prefer using B7 with L7 (Like temp conditions maybe?)
Appreciate any insight I can get on this, thanks.