mOHMo
Mechanical
- Oct 9, 2008
- 6
Hi all,
I'm checking last rvision of B16.34 and I'm a little bit confused about Multipiece valve wall thickness.
In Paragraph 6.1.2 - c) it is stated:
“(c) For multipiece valve construction, where the body consists of a central core to which are affixed two end pieces, the inside diameter, d, is determined by only one of the following methods:
(1) in accordance with (a).
(2) for the end pieces, the value of d shall be in accordance with (a), and for the central core piece the value of d shall be the inside diameter of the core piece. For a core piece with axial holes, whether through- or partial-threaded, the inner and outer ligaments shall also meet the requirements of dimensions f and g in Figure 2. These ligaments shall be based upon the value of d for the core piece”.
This mean that for the core piece you can consider two very different values for d:
-if you apply method (1) you will consider a smaller diameter (based on the flow passage) and you will not take into consideration the ligaments for holes parallel to the body run (meaning at the end that no extra thickness is necessary)
-if you will apply method (2) you will consider a bigger diameter (means bigger value for thickness) and then you have to check that the sum of ligaments is at least equal to the minimum wall thickness (resulting in a thickness of the core part that is equal to the minimum wall thickness + stud size).
In conclusion, if the method (1) is acceptable for stating conformance to the standard, why one should choose method (2), leading to a much higher value for min wt? Am I missing something?
I'm checking last rvision of B16.34 and I'm a little bit confused about Multipiece valve wall thickness.
In Paragraph 6.1.2 - c) it is stated:
“(c) For multipiece valve construction, where the body consists of a central core to which are affixed two end pieces, the inside diameter, d, is determined by only one of the following methods:
(1) in accordance with (a).
(2) for the end pieces, the value of d shall be in accordance with (a), and for the central core piece the value of d shall be the inside diameter of the core piece. For a core piece with axial holes, whether through- or partial-threaded, the inner and outer ligaments shall also meet the requirements of dimensions f and g in Figure 2. These ligaments shall be based upon the value of d for the core piece”.
This mean that for the core piece you can consider two very different values for d:
-if you apply method (1) you will consider a smaller diameter (based on the flow passage) and you will not take into consideration the ligaments for holes parallel to the body run (meaning at the end that no extra thickness is necessary)
-if you will apply method (2) you will consider a bigger diameter (means bigger value for thickness) and then you have to check that the sum of ligaments is at least equal to the minimum wall thickness (resulting in a thickness of the core part that is equal to the minimum wall thickness + stud size).
In conclusion, if the method (1) is acceptable for stating conformance to the standard, why one should choose method (2), leading to a much higher value for min wt? Am I missing something?