jrfroe
Structural
- May 30, 2002
- 50
In our office here, some of our mechanical engineers are looking at purchasing software for analyzing mechanical pipe runs for thermal expansion (along with all the other hydraulic and gravity forces on the pipe). They are looking at purchasing Caesar II by Intergraph mostly, but they are all fairly expensive and they supposedly require several days of training. As one of the structural engineers in the office, I'm being asked what I know about these types of programs, and I mentioned that we already have a finite elements program, Visual Analysis, that could analyze most pipe runs with just a little more time spent inputting the correct layout, materials, cross sections, etc. The only qualification I brought up was that I wasn't sure if I could handle analyzing the stresses in the elbows. I said I could give them the forces that the elbows need to safely resist and if the elbow manufacturer has some guidelines or if there are some industry guidelines for the strength of that fitting, we could get by with the FEA program we already have. But I'm being told that this type of analysis is extremely complicated and it needs a dedicated program to design these piping runs properly, but the way I see it, it doesn't seem too difficult to accurately model a pipe run in an FEA program like Visual Analysis with all the hydraulic and thermal loads and check the pipe for yielding, buckling, etc.
Has anyone here ever used an FEA program intended for conventional structural engineering for analyzing mechanical pipe stresses? Is there anything I may be overlooking about the analysis of mechanical piping runs?
Has anyone here ever used an FEA program intended for conventional structural engineering for analyzing mechanical pipe stresses? Is there anything I may be overlooking about the analysis of mechanical piping runs?