Feedyourhead
Mechanical
- Feb 16, 2023
- 14
Thought this thread discussing gate station bypasses was interesting.
thread378-465800
So let me ask:
Should natural gas gate stations have a manual or semi-automatic bypass? What sorts of designs would constitute a sound bypass run? A bypass with OPP, no OPP? A manual or automatic throttling valve? What kind of valve?
What are you going to do when the transmission pressure drops to or below the MAOP of your system? Should sound gate station design include some sort of fail-safe mechanism for when the transmission inlet pressure drops too low? What other fail-safe devices could be used except for a bypass? Is on the spot tampering with regulators to reduce the pressure loss across them justified in emergencies? What obligations do engineers have to the public to continue service under such circumstances? Consider that now people are going to freeze if you lose service, which could lead to deaths -- but people also might die if you overpressure the system. Though, downstream district regulator stations are likely to catch any overpressure in the system. Frostbite or hypothermia could become a risk after 12 or 24 hours without heat. Should peakshaving facilities be utilized before attempting to use a bypass run, or should a bypass run be utilized before peakshaving facilities?
What sorts of operational procedures should be written for the safe use of a bypass run?
thread378-465800
So let me ask:
Should natural gas gate stations have a manual or semi-automatic bypass? What sorts of designs would constitute a sound bypass run? A bypass with OPP, no OPP? A manual or automatic throttling valve? What kind of valve?
What are you going to do when the transmission pressure drops to or below the MAOP of your system? Should sound gate station design include some sort of fail-safe mechanism for when the transmission inlet pressure drops too low? What other fail-safe devices could be used except for a bypass? Is on the spot tampering with regulators to reduce the pressure loss across them justified in emergencies? What obligations do engineers have to the public to continue service under such circumstances? Consider that now people are going to freeze if you lose service, which could lead to deaths -- but people also might die if you overpressure the system. Though, downstream district regulator stations are likely to catch any overpressure in the system. Frostbite or hypothermia could become a risk after 12 or 24 hours without heat. Should peakshaving facilities be utilized before attempting to use a bypass run, or should a bypass run be utilized before peakshaving facilities?
What sorts of operational procedures should be written for the safe use of a bypass run?