bmoorthy
Mechanical
- May 29, 2003
- 457
The material that are usually encountered in Oil, Gas and refinery industry, considering only the corrosion aspect, it is my view that casting is a superior product form as compared to forging, I do not know how i arrived at this conclusion, but i hold this idea for very long.
I just looked up some of the standards, code and specifications, while one can infer this from certain indicators like the limits of % S given for Forging could be more stringent in comparison with casting etc, but i could not get an explicit statements in any of these.
My questions are::
1) Is Cast superior product form as compared to forged purely from corrosion point of view (Assuming that casting is NDE tested and meets the requirement) and the shape and application of casting and forging are the same.
2) If in a highly corrosive line a one installs one cast valve and one forged valve and allow the line to operate, assuming that both the cast valve and forged valve are from same valve manufacturer and the valve manufacturer has foundry to make casting and also has forging shop to make forging and all the components other than the body and bonnet and covers are identical and only the change in product form are in the body, bonnet and cover (one is cast and another is forged) and casting in the cast valve has under gone additional NDE (RT / UT) and has passed the NDE, if a failure were to occur in the valve due to corrosion, it is my view the fist item to fail in corrosion is forged valve and not cast valve. Am i right?
I just looked up some of the standards, code and specifications, while one can infer this from certain indicators like the limits of % S given for Forging could be more stringent in comparison with casting etc, but i could not get an explicit statements in any of these.
My questions are::
1) Is Cast superior product form as compared to forged purely from corrosion point of view (Assuming that casting is NDE tested and meets the requirement) and the shape and application of casting and forging are the same.
2) If in a highly corrosive line a one installs one cast valve and one forged valve and allow the line to operate, assuming that both the cast valve and forged valve are from same valve manufacturer and the valve manufacturer has foundry to make casting and also has forging shop to make forging and all the components other than the body and bonnet and covers are identical and only the change in product form are in the body, bonnet and cover (one is cast and another is forged) and casting in the cast valve has under gone additional NDE (RT / UT) and has passed the NDE, if a failure were to occur in the valve due to corrosion, it is my view the fist item to fail in corrosion is forged valve and not cast valve. Am i right?