cvis
Mechanical
- May 22, 2009
- 6
Hi
We have a 3 ton (SWL) single girder lifting beam which is to be installed in a pump station. Upon inspection of the coating of the beam it was noticed that the paint is lifting from area where the flange and web comes together. It seemed as though delamination occured since one could pull small flakes off the beam. We then had the beam shotblasted to clean all paint off and tested the areas of concern with magnetic particle testing and a crack showed up which seemed to run the length of the beam. After grinding a certain area of the beam and performing magnetic particle testing again the crack still showed up.
The supplier of the steel beam says it is part of the rolling process and that the structural integrity of the beam will not be compromised.
Has anyone seen this before and shed some light on the cause? Is it anything to worry about?
I've uploaded a picture of the crack after magnetic particle testing.
The beam size is 457 x 191 x 74 kg/m and has a 8.1m span.
Thanks for the help...
We have a 3 ton (SWL) single girder lifting beam which is to be installed in a pump station. Upon inspection of the coating of the beam it was noticed that the paint is lifting from area where the flange and web comes together. It seemed as though delamination occured since one could pull small flakes off the beam. We then had the beam shotblasted to clean all paint off and tested the areas of concern with magnetic particle testing and a crack showed up which seemed to run the length of the beam. After grinding a certain area of the beam and performing magnetic particle testing again the crack still showed up.
The supplier of the steel beam says it is part of the rolling process and that the structural integrity of the beam will not be compromised.
Has anyone seen this before and shed some light on the cause? Is it anything to worry about?
I've uploaded a picture of the crack after magnetic particle testing.
The beam size is 457 x 191 x 74 kg/m and has a 8.1m span.
Thanks for the help...