mcecasf
Chemical
- Jul 2, 2012
- 20
Hi there,
I'm trying to find out if there is any guidance - regarding when it is would be recommended NOT to use a flowplate / dial-a-pipe type arrangement for routing flow.
I have a flowplate in a food factory that has 4" piping and line pressures of >8 bar during the cleaning cycle (of 80 degC 2% caustic soda). It had been installed (before my time) using RJT unions on the plate and fittings which - after a few near miss incidents of loss of containment with people nearby - we have changed for DIN fittings that can take the higher pressure. In an ideal world we'd install an automated routing valve block, the problem being that the cost of this - and the associated works around automation, creating the space for the routing matrix, etc - is relatively substantial and there is no real financial payback. One assessment would be that the improved fittings, plus regular maintenance / renewal, should be enough - after all, if you already had a bit of kit to withstand pressure X, why would you then spend even more money replacing it with a fancier solution for a much higher cost if there were no additional benefits?
I guess it comes down to our interpretation of the risk involved in the constant (~12-15 operations/day) removing and resiting of the swingbend and the likelhood of it being connected properly, but it would be nice to know if there was any specific guidance or justification from a safe design perspective..... either to give a technical justification for installation of teh mixproof matrix or to soundly bury the idea.
Grateful for any help!
I'm trying to find out if there is any guidance - regarding when it is would be recommended NOT to use a flowplate / dial-a-pipe type arrangement for routing flow.
I have a flowplate in a food factory that has 4" piping and line pressures of >8 bar during the cleaning cycle (of 80 degC 2% caustic soda). It had been installed (before my time) using RJT unions on the plate and fittings which - after a few near miss incidents of loss of containment with people nearby - we have changed for DIN fittings that can take the higher pressure. In an ideal world we'd install an automated routing valve block, the problem being that the cost of this - and the associated works around automation, creating the space for the routing matrix, etc - is relatively substantial and there is no real financial payback. One assessment would be that the improved fittings, plus regular maintenance / renewal, should be enough - after all, if you already had a bit of kit to withstand pressure X, why would you then spend even more money replacing it with a fancier solution for a much higher cost if there were no additional benefits?
I guess it comes down to our interpretation of the risk involved in the constant (~12-15 operations/day) removing and resiting of the swingbend and the likelhood of it being connected properly, but it would be nice to know if there was any specific guidance or justification from a safe design perspective..... either to give a technical justification for installation of teh mixproof matrix or to soundly bury the idea.
Grateful for any help!