NamiTS
Mechanical
- Jun 27, 2023
- 13
Hi All,
In the new 2022 edition of PCC-2 when calculating the safe distance for pneumatic testing PCC-2 states that for a the stored energy calculation "the total volume of the vessel shall be considered. When calculating the stored energy of a piping system the maximum volume based on a length of 8 pipe diameters may be considered for any single failure analyzed." I understand why the differentiation exists due to the different types of rupture mechanics between piping and vessels, and have read the associated paper from what this is based on.
My question stems from the wording "for any single failure analyzed" and if this volume limitation would apply when completing calculations for a system. For example a small vessel with multiple piping systems. For the spreadsheet I made to do the stored energy calcs I have included the entire volume of the pressure vessel + the volume of largest line connected in the test using a maximum length of 8*d of pipe.
In my opinion this would be conservative but I wanted to see if this wording was disallowing this calculation and if other people are including all of the piping volume for their system calculations.
In the new 2022 edition of PCC-2 when calculating the safe distance for pneumatic testing PCC-2 states that for a the stored energy calculation "the total volume of the vessel shall be considered. When calculating the stored energy of a piping system the maximum volume based on a length of 8 pipe diameters may be considered for any single failure analyzed." I understand why the differentiation exists due to the different types of rupture mechanics between piping and vessels, and have read the associated paper from what this is based on.
My question stems from the wording "for any single failure analyzed" and if this volume limitation would apply when completing calculations for a system. For example a small vessel with multiple piping systems. For the spreadsheet I made to do the stored energy calcs I have included the entire volume of the pressure vessel + the volume of largest line connected in the test using a maximum length of 8*d of pipe.
In my opinion this would be conservative but I wanted to see if this wording was disallowing this calculation and if other people are including all of the piping volume for their system calculations.