Bambie
Electrical
- Mar 31, 2012
- 242
thread238-153684
A 50 ft dia x 34 ft high aluminum demineralized water storage tank located outdoors began leaking from the floor at a single location on the perimeter in March.
After draining, internal inspection revealed a 1/2"dia hole in the floor plate approximately 6 inches inboard from the shell/floor corner weld.
The tank shell sits on a 6 foot deep cylindrical concrete slab that has a 6 inch wide and 4 inch high curb around the perimeter that was coated with tar.
The floor plates are supported by a 4 inch deep layer of sand that is retained by the curb.
The tank has a single 17AWG copper ground cable bolted to a welded lug on the exterior shell surface and lag bolted to the concrete curb.
The tank is heated in winter by a steam coil and is connected to the Turbine Building via a 20"dia buried pipe.
The hole is located diametrically across from the ground cable.
My question is whether the ground continuity was lost and that resulted in a single hole from either galvanic corrosion or a lightning strike.
Will measuring ground resistance then disassembling, cleaning and re-assembling the ground cable connections followed by ground resistance measurement point to the cause?
A 50 ft dia x 34 ft high aluminum demineralized water storage tank located outdoors began leaking from the floor at a single location on the perimeter in March.
After draining, internal inspection revealed a 1/2"dia hole in the floor plate approximately 6 inches inboard from the shell/floor corner weld.
The tank shell sits on a 6 foot deep cylindrical concrete slab that has a 6 inch wide and 4 inch high curb around the perimeter that was coated with tar.
The floor plates are supported by a 4 inch deep layer of sand that is retained by the curb.
The tank has a single 17AWG copper ground cable bolted to a welded lug on the exterior shell surface and lag bolted to the concrete curb.
The tank is heated in winter by a steam coil and is connected to the Turbine Building via a 20"dia buried pipe.
The hole is located diametrically across from the ground cable.
My question is whether the ground continuity was lost and that resulted in a single hole from either galvanic corrosion or a lightning strike.
Will measuring ground resistance then disassembling, cleaning and re-assembling the ground cable connections followed by ground resistance measurement point to the cause?