jrpower
Mechanical
- Mar 6, 2012
- 8
I don't know valve failure mechanisms all that well, and I'm trying to understand the failure mechanism of Valve Stem-Disc Separation (sometimes called a plugging failure in Probabilistic Risk Analysis (PRA)), in particular for Manual (hand) valves.
Is this failure mechanism plausible for manual valves? Internet searches only seem to show it mostly occurring in MOVs, and if so does this mean this is because of the torque a motor can produce versus that of a hand valve)?
What causes this type of valve failure?
What types of valves are susceptible to this type of failure (gate, ball, needle, etc)?
Does the size of the line affect this mechanism?
Is this a valid failure mode in steam, high pressure water systems, low pressure water systems, clean compressed air/inert gas systems?
Any insights would be great and appreciated! Thank you, Jill
Is this failure mechanism plausible for manual valves? Internet searches only seem to show it mostly occurring in MOVs, and if so does this mean this is because of the torque a motor can produce versus that of a hand valve)?
What causes this type of valve failure?
What types of valves are susceptible to this type of failure (gate, ball, needle, etc)?
Does the size of the line affect this mechanism?
Is this a valid failure mode in steam, high pressure water systems, low pressure water systems, clean compressed air/inert gas systems?
Any insights would be great and appreciated! Thank you, Jill