John Jones
Mechanical
- Jan 10, 2023
- 13
Hi Guys,
I'm wondering if someone could help me through a hypothetical situation....
A piping material is ordered, and on the material cert it states that it has been impact tested at -20 Degrees Celsius.
The client specification requires material to be impacted tested at a minimum temperature of -40 Degrees Celsius.
I know that requesting that the manufacturer tests at the required temperature would solve the issue, but often lead times and deadlines would mean this is just unsuitable.
This is just something that I have been thinking about, I'm not in this situation.
Has anyone experienced this?
Is there an international standard that deals with Transition curves of materials, besides API FFS-1?
With a lack of international standard, is there a sound scientific methodology that the client could be willing to accept?
I'm wondering if someone could help me through a hypothetical situation....
A piping material is ordered, and on the material cert it states that it has been impact tested at -20 Degrees Celsius.
The client specification requires material to be impacted tested at a minimum temperature of -40 Degrees Celsius.
I know that requesting that the manufacturer tests at the required temperature would solve the issue, but often lead times and deadlines would mean this is just unsuitable.
This is just something that I have been thinking about, I'm not in this situation.
Has anyone experienced this?
Is there an international standard that deals with Transition curves of materials, besides API FFS-1?
With a lack of international standard, is there a sound scientific methodology that the client could be willing to accept?