jproj
Chemical
- Oct 9, 2001
- 324
Recently while trying to finalize a nameplate issue, I had an interesting discussion with one of our fab shops. They kept showing the vessel design pressure (50 psig) as the MAWP on their code nameplate drawings. The code calculations showed an actual vessel MAWP to be much higher (~140 psig). After several discussions, our fabricator said their A.I. refused to stamp anything other than the design pressure on the nameplate "MAWP" section. Vessel was designed to ASME Section VIII Div. 1 (current ed.).
While this isn't the first time I've heard of this practice, I'm curious about the reasoning behind it. As I understand it, the MAWP is a product of actual materials / thickness used for fabrication and really has very little (if anything at all) to do with the design pressure (unless of course components are designed to have a MAWP equal to the design pressure).
Any insight?
Best Regards,
Jproj
While this isn't the first time I've heard of this practice, I'm curious about the reasoning behind it. As I understand it, the MAWP is a product of actual materials / thickness used for fabrication and really has very little (if anything at all) to do with the design pressure (unless of course components are designed to have a MAWP equal to the design pressure).
Any insight?
Best Regards,
Jproj