Tmoose
Mechanical
- Apr 12, 2003
- 5,633
Preliminary information is the fan is located near the cooling towers, so it has experienced 30 years of corrosion. Recently efforts have been made to sand blast the fan housing for painting, but the customer is finding the metal is extensively perforated. It is a Forced Draft fan, so handles relatively cool, clean ambient air. I am pursuing details about how the housings are REALLY failing. Outside in, inside out, possible erosion , etc.
I'm thinking 30 years of service is pretty good, and cleaning and painting every 5 years or so might have made a big difference.
It has been suggested that Cor-ten housings should be used. My concern about supplying a fan housing made of Cor-ten is, if the cooling towers are making the humidity high and constant, the Cor-ten may not fully develop the protective layer, so corrode and yet not accept paint very well. Fan literature generally only talks about using Corten for its good mechanical properties at high temperature.
Does Cor-ten really sound like a good option for improved corrosion resistance in this (poorly defined) application ?
thanks,
Dan T
I'm thinking 30 years of service is pretty good, and cleaning and painting every 5 years or so might have made a big difference.
It has been suggested that Cor-ten housings should be used. My concern about supplying a fan housing made of Cor-ten is, if the cooling towers are making the humidity high and constant, the Cor-ten may not fully develop the protective layer, so corrode and yet not accept paint very well. Fan literature generally only talks about using Corten for its good mechanical properties at high temperature.
Does Cor-ten really sound like a good option for improved corrosion resistance in this (poorly defined) application ?
thanks,
Dan T