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Pictures of Piping/Pressure System Failures?

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kacarrol

Mechanical
Apr 14, 2010
206
Good afternoon,

I am preparing a general overview presentation on how the pressure boundary department fits into the organization of the company I work for and what the department does. This presentation will be presented to a range of people, some of whom will not be very technical.

Since a picture is worth a thousand words I was hoping to put a couple of pictures into the presentation of systems that have failed (ie piping, pressure vessels etc.) but have had a difficult time finding some. It is fairly easy to find pictures of the big blow ups on the internet but the more mundane ones don't seem to be as prevalent. At some of the other companies I’ve worked for they had pictures where a patch was welded onto an air compressor receiver tank (not to code) and then the tank failed etc, this is the kind of stuff I’m interested in.

If anyone has a spare moment and a picture they wouldn't mind sharing (maybe even a bit of a story to go with it if you feel it needs one) I would really appreciate the help.

Thank you,
K
 
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Recommended for you

You can always look on Chemical Safety Board.
They've got nice video's too.
 
I'm not the expert here, but I think BP might have a few photos you could use.

Mike McCann
MMC Engineering
Motto: KISS
Motivation: Don't ask
 
Please explain more about what is meant by your "pressure boundary department"

I have never heard of such a department or group designation.

What are the responsibilities ?

 
MJCronin,

I thought for a second there you may have been one of my former professors (his last name was Cronin), but he's here in Canada. He was one of my favourites.

Anyway, onto your question. Before starting work here I had not heard of a “pressure boundary department” either. And since I've only been here a couple of weeks I probably can't give the most thorough answer on what exactly the pressure boundary department does. But I will take a stab at it.

Pretty much anything piping and pressure vessel related falls under the pressure boundary department’s umbrella. We deal with a lot of code and licensing compliance, the codes we follow are CSA N285 (Pressure Retaining Systems and Components in CANDU Nuclear Power Plants) which points to ASME Section III, and CSA B51 (which points to B31.3 etc.).

Hope that helps explain it a bit.
K
 
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