Fidens
Mechanical
- Dec 9, 2013
- 6
Hi,
ASME B31.1 says that "The allowable stress values tabulated for temperatures over 1,000°F apply only if the carbon content of the material is 0.04% or higher" under note 10 for Table A-3, for A312 TP304
My question(s) is: Can I use the pipe being supplied if its carbon content is at or below 0.035%? I'm pretty sure the answer is a simple "no" since ASME B31.1 says you can only use those tabulated values for 0.04 and higher. And if the answer is "yes" then which allowable stress values should be used for lines above 1,000 F? (I have a 2" hot air exhaust line (A312 TP304) at 1202 F/low pressure--this will be the service conditions) The vendor has submitted their material test report sheets and all the reports state that the A312 TP304 being supplied is below 0.035 % for the carbon content. And they state that this is the carbon content required in accordance to ASME B31.1. Bottom line is that they should have noticed it on the drawings provided and supplied a higher carbon content for this specific line, right? (and yes we should have probably done a better job in specifying the difference in our specs or highlighted the "issue" better)
Also, the vendor says that the stainless steel being supplied is "dual stamped 304/304L" How can a material be dual certified to be "low" carbon (in the case of 304L) and "regular" (in the case of 304) at the same time? I know the "dual stamped" thing is common but this still confuses me a great deal.
I feel that these are such basic questions so thank you all for any help you can provide on my first questions ever to Eng-tips.
ASME B31.1 says that "The allowable stress values tabulated for temperatures over 1,000°F apply only if the carbon content of the material is 0.04% or higher" under note 10 for Table A-3, for A312 TP304
My question(s) is: Can I use the pipe being supplied if its carbon content is at or below 0.035%? I'm pretty sure the answer is a simple "no" since ASME B31.1 says you can only use those tabulated values for 0.04 and higher. And if the answer is "yes" then which allowable stress values should be used for lines above 1,000 F? (I have a 2" hot air exhaust line (A312 TP304) at 1202 F/low pressure--this will be the service conditions) The vendor has submitted their material test report sheets and all the reports state that the A312 TP304 being supplied is below 0.035 % for the carbon content. And they state that this is the carbon content required in accordance to ASME B31.1. Bottom line is that they should have noticed it on the drawings provided and supplied a higher carbon content for this specific line, right? (and yes we should have probably done a better job in specifying the difference in our specs or highlighted the "issue" better)
Also, the vendor says that the stainless steel being supplied is "dual stamped 304/304L" How can a material be dual certified to be "low" carbon (in the case of 304L) and "regular" (in the case of 304) at the same time? I know the "dual stamped" thing is common but this still confuses me a great deal.
I feel that these are such basic questions so thank you all for any help you can provide on my first questions ever to Eng-tips.