stoerw
Mechanical
- Jul 24, 2024
- 4
System Parameters: Design Press:651 PSI Design Temp: 656F
Piping Material: On Flange 1: A106 Gr.C 24" OD w/ 1.806 wall thickness
On Flange 2: A106 Gr.C 24" OD w/ 0.556 wall thickness
Background Information: We have to of these RTJ Flanges on different lines with the same setup. Pipe hanger inspection history has all hangers functioning properly on both lines. The East side line has been operating without issues. The west side line 50 feet or so from the other has a history of leaking at low loads on our power plant but stops leaking at higher loads. A couple years ago a new ring was installed, and a clamp was seal welded around the flanges to help prevent future leaks. The flange is now leaking again at low loads.
I'm reaching out to ask of possible failure modes for these conditions and possible recommendations for correcting them. I've read some standard failure modes on other threads, but to me most of them would lead to a constant steam leak and not just situational leaking. Due to the seal welded clamp the costs are high without much return to disassemble and inspect. The current option we are looking into is cutting out the flange completely and installing a tapered wall thickness, solid pipe in its place. So, please if you have the experience please reach out with the cause of the situational failure of our RTJ Flange.
Piping Material: On Flange 1: A106 Gr.C 24" OD w/ 1.806 wall thickness
On Flange 2: A106 Gr.C 24" OD w/ 0.556 wall thickness
Background Information: We have to of these RTJ Flanges on different lines with the same setup. Pipe hanger inspection history has all hangers functioning properly on both lines. The East side line has been operating without issues. The west side line 50 feet or so from the other has a history of leaking at low loads on our power plant but stops leaking at higher loads. A couple years ago a new ring was installed, and a clamp was seal welded around the flanges to help prevent future leaks. The flange is now leaking again at low loads.
I'm reaching out to ask of possible failure modes for these conditions and possible recommendations for correcting them. I've read some standard failure modes on other threads, but to me most of them would lead to a constant steam leak and not just situational leaking. Due to the seal welded clamp the costs are high without much return to disassemble and inspect. The current option we are looking into is cutting out the flange completely and installing a tapered wall thickness, solid pipe in its place. So, please if you have the experience please reach out with the cause of the situational failure of our RTJ Flange.