BronYrAur
Mechanical
- Nov 2, 2005
- 799
I have been asked to replace some boiler blowdown tanks in an old hospital. The existing tanks are unique as far as blowdown tanks go. They are 42" diameter vessels with flanged covers.
Blowdown enters the first tank witch then "spills" into the second tank. Discharge from the second tank is hard-piped into the sewer. Each tank has a vent line that go to a common header. One final thing with these tanks is that the joints where the pipes connect are lead joints!!!
I can't imagine that these tanks are ASME rated, especially with the lead joints. Now, I know that these days, cold water is introduced to temper the blowdown, and I'm sure that the discharges are dumped into an open site drain as opposed to hard-piped to the sewer. Since this is a direct replacement, do I need to be concerned with that?
Back to my original question, do I need ASME? I could easily make these tanks out of 42" pipe and weld all the connections, but it would not be ASME. Since the tanks are vented, is ASME required?
Blowdown enters the first tank witch then "spills" into the second tank. Discharge from the second tank is hard-piped into the sewer. Each tank has a vent line that go to a common header. One final thing with these tanks is that the joints where the pipes connect are lead joints!!!
I can't imagine that these tanks are ASME rated, especially with the lead joints. Now, I know that these days, cold water is introduced to temper the blowdown, and I'm sure that the discharges are dumped into an open site drain as opposed to hard-piped to the sewer. Since this is a direct replacement, do I need to be concerned with that?
Back to my original question, do I need ASME? I could easily make these tanks out of 42" pipe and weld all the connections, but it would not be ASME. Since the tanks are vented, is ASME required?