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ASME 2017 or ASME 2019?

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Resegone

Mechanical
Nov 9, 2019
17
Good morning everyone.

I'am in a border line situation.

In july 2019 ,as you know, it was released the new edition of the ASME.

In august 2019 we recevide a new order with the customer that asks to design a pressure vessel with the latest edition of the ASME, and from that date we begin the engineering.

So that's my problem which ASME i have to consider to design the pressure vessel?

It's a strange situation i think that design with ASME ed. 2017 is good but i' am not sure, considering that customer asks also the code stamp.
 
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Does August 2019 come after July 2019 ?
 
The 2019 Edition is mandatory with any PO taken on/after January 1, 2020. The 2019 Edition is optional after issue July 1 2019 -December 31 2019
 

Good Morning everyone,
The 2019 is not mandatory until January 1, 2020,until then you can use either one.
 
Im with what A_clark said.

oknow; I wouldnt go for that route. Bear in mind that the time between quotations and PO's can be very large (in our business, sometimes up to 4-5 years). We put applicable code editions in our quotes, so quote date determines code edition. Vice versa wouldnt work, becuase with 1 or 2 new editions of a code, a quotation may become technically different (sure, no single quotation is valid for 4-5 years, but with tehcnical complex projects the technical basis is more determinant than the cost aspect).
 
Tried to remove my previous post but too late.
My apologies to the OP for my unprofessional (and incorrect) response.
 
Resegone, best confirm with your customer what the expectations are.

Regards,

Mike

The problem with sloppy work is that the supply FAR EXCEEDS the demand
 
The code says 2017 or 2019 is acceptable.
Your customer is requesting 2019.
Discuss your quandry with the customer.
 
XL83NL...my position is based on what an AIA's opinion, ASME Team Leader and ASME Staff have indicated. See Section VIII Div.1 Appendix-43-2(a)(1). We all know what ASME stands for.
 
You may use Ed. 2017 for now, But if your MDR does not get signed before January 1, 2020, As per CL. 43-1 (b), critical changes in Ed. 2019 shall be considered by Manufacturer, and such changes shall be a matter of agreement between user and manufacturer.

Since there are Critical changes in Ed. 2019 (i.e. Flange De-rating calculation as per UG-44), You shall think of such situations at present Day!!!

In my opinion, one shall go with Ed. 2019

Thanks,

Rajput
 
oknow]XL83NL...my position is based on what an AIA's opinion, ASME Team Leader and ASME Staff have indicated. See Section VIII Div.1 Appendix-43-2(a)(1). We all know what ASME stands for.
You're right, I guess. In Europe, ASME isnt mandated by law. Hence, looking at code editions is done from a different perspective. The perspective I posted is the one we most often see.
 
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