m_ridzon
Mechanical
- Sep 18, 2020
- 80
I'm quoting a job for a pressure vessel. The head has 6 large nozzles on it. It will be analyzed in ANSYS FEA. The prospect gave me a table of shear loads (i.e., across the nozzle flange) and axial loads (i.e., into the nozzle flange). They specified the shear loads as SRSS (i.e., the resultant of the two shear components). In a similar way, they shared another table with bending and torsional loads. They never gave me a Cartesian coordinate system to align these with, and if I asked, my gut tells me they do not have that information. In the past when I've encountered this, I take one of these approaches:
[ul]
[li]Use deductive reasoning to determine which loads are additive with loads on the neighboring nozzle and analyze that scenario. This works for very simple vessel designs with only a couple nozzles.[/li]
[li]If the above option is not practical or possible, I will analyze all the permutations of the nozzle loading conditions; i.e., I will analyze various orientations on Nozzle A while also varying the orientations on Nozzle B.[/li]
[/ul]
Because of this convoluted design and nozzle pattern, only the second option seems possible. But because there are 6 nozzles, that seems like a ton of analysis as I vary the orientation of each nozzle load set and the neighbors. Therefore the quote for the job is going to skyrocket. I'm really trying to avoid overpricing this, but don't know how to address these nozzle loads. Has anyone run into this before and can share their experience?
[ul]
[li]Use deductive reasoning to determine which loads are additive with loads on the neighboring nozzle and analyze that scenario. This works for very simple vessel designs with only a couple nozzles.[/li]
[li]If the above option is not practical or possible, I will analyze all the permutations of the nozzle loading conditions; i.e., I will analyze various orientations on Nozzle A while also varying the orientations on Nozzle B.[/li]
[/ul]
Because of this convoluted design and nozzle pattern, only the second option seems possible. But because there are 6 nozzles, that seems like a ton of analysis as I vary the orientation of each nozzle load set and the neighbors. Therefore the quote for the job is going to skyrocket. I'm really trying to avoid overpricing this, but don't know how to address these nozzle loads. Has anyone run into this before and can share their experience?