mrev23
Mechanical
- Mar 20, 2014
- 26
Manufacturers of drip pan elbows seem quick to "highly recommend" their use, but they may not be practical when a vent line must run through several stories from a basement mechanical room to a roof.
The following may be optimistic maximum lengths for vent lines from drip pan elbows for saturated steam:
[pre]
Vent size Max length
(inches) (equivalent feet)
2 12
4 25
6 38
8 51[/pre]
The table above results from the observation that Chart II-1, Compressible Flow Analysis, in Appendix II of ASME B31.1 doesn’t plot values of f(L_max/D) greater than 1.0.
To clarify one of the values above:
[ul]
[li]B31.1 recommends f = 0.013 for saturated steam.[/li]
[li]Ignoring the difference between nominal and actual pipe size, the maximum vent length for a 6” pipe and f(L_max/D) = 1 is:[/li]
[/ul]
This suggests that if a 6” vent is longer than 38 feet, then we can’t use Chart II-1 to even begin a check for blowback from a drip pan elbow into a mechanical room -- because f(L_max/D) would be greater than 1.0 and off the chart.
If we can’t even check for blowback, then we might expect it to occur -- because the vent line is already "too long" based on the maximum length anticipated in Chart II-1.
If blowback is not tolerable, then we can’t use a drip pan elbow with a 6" vent line longer than 38 feet.
The simple calculation above might be an initial check to see whether a proposed vent length is close to workable -- before spending more effort on calculations in Appendix II.
There may be exceptions, but is this a reasonable first look when considering whether to use a drip pan elbow?
The following may be optimistic maximum lengths for vent lines from drip pan elbows for saturated steam:
[pre]
Vent size Max length
(inches) (equivalent feet)
2 12
4 25
6 38
8 51[/pre]
The table above results from the observation that Chart II-1, Compressible Flow Analysis, in Appendix II of ASME B31.1 doesn’t plot values of f(L_max/D) greater than 1.0.
To clarify one of the values above:
[ul]
[li]B31.1 recommends f = 0.013 for saturated steam.[/li]
[li]Ignoring the difference between nominal and actual pipe size, the maximum vent length for a 6” pipe and f(L_max/D) = 1 is:[/li]
[/ul]
L_max = 1 / f * D = 1 / 0.013 * (6 / 12) = 38 feet.
This suggests that if a 6” vent is longer than 38 feet, then we can’t use Chart II-1 to even begin a check for blowback from a drip pan elbow into a mechanical room -- because f(L_max/D) would be greater than 1.0 and off the chart.
If we can’t even check for blowback, then we might expect it to occur -- because the vent line is already "too long" based on the maximum length anticipated in Chart II-1.
If blowback is not tolerable, then we can’t use a drip pan elbow with a 6" vent line longer than 38 feet.
The simple calculation above might be an initial check to see whether a proposed vent length is close to workable -- before spending more effort on calculations in Appendix II.
There may be exceptions, but is this a reasonable first look when considering whether to use a drip pan elbow?