Krausen
Mechanical
- Jan 1, 2013
- 258
I have a 1-1/2 RFLWN nozzle (304L material) on a tower that began leaking at the nozzle to shell weld about 15 years ago. At that time, they decided to weld circular patch plates around the nozzle after confirming a through-wall crack via NDE. Looking at it from outside, most people thought the nozzle just had a repad, but I confirmed from original design there was no repad provided here & dug into the history to find the patch plate repair notes. This nozzle is also exempt by VIII-1 code from reinforcement as a small opening (shell is 1/4” thk 304L material). Recently the leak began again through the patch plate weep holes. We’ll be shutting down soon to do permanent repair. My question is would you go after just replacing the RFLWN nozzle only to the existing shell or would a small shell flush patch with new RFLWN nozzle be a better/more reliable approach for permanent repair?