mechglitch
Mechanical
- Nov 6, 2008
- 8
Hello,
This is my first post and my question is trivial. I am trying to determine the minimum practical thickness that can be used for a 96" diameter pipe (longitudinal weld seam) with a very low pipe pressure(23 psig) and the fluid is just air.
B31.1 min thickness to meet the low pressure requirements is about .06 wall thickness or so, very thin. Let's assume there is no corrosion allowance required for now. Furthermore, even if bending stresses are to be kept to a maximum of 2.3ksi between supports and deflection limited to .1 inches, only a very thin wall is required to support its own weight at spans above 40 feet.
How is the pipe likely fail if a .06 wall is chosen? Would such a thin wall pipe be impractical? Would it be too likely to be damaged or to sag to an out of round shape under its own weight?
It seems the code leads me to a wall that is probably too thin when only burst pressure and self weight are considered. Is there a minimum practical thickness that must be used even if pressure and bending stresses only indicate the need for a 1/16" thick wall?
Do certain other loadings (wind, impact strength) make a very thin wall thickness impractical for the real world?
This is my first post and my question is trivial. I am trying to determine the minimum practical thickness that can be used for a 96" diameter pipe (longitudinal weld seam) with a very low pipe pressure(23 psig) and the fluid is just air.
B31.1 min thickness to meet the low pressure requirements is about .06 wall thickness or so, very thin. Let's assume there is no corrosion allowance required for now. Furthermore, even if bending stresses are to be kept to a maximum of 2.3ksi between supports and deflection limited to .1 inches, only a very thin wall is required to support its own weight at spans above 40 feet.
How is the pipe likely fail if a .06 wall is chosen? Would such a thin wall pipe be impractical? Would it be too likely to be damaged or to sag to an out of round shape under its own weight?
It seems the code leads me to a wall that is probably too thin when only burst pressure and self weight are considered. Is there a minimum practical thickness that must be used even if pressure and bending stresses only indicate the need for a 1/16" thick wall?
Do certain other loadings (wind, impact strength) make a very thin wall thickness impractical for the real world?