jistre
Mechanical
- Oct 1, 2003
- 1,147
Okay, let's pick those brains out there.
I have an application where I need a spectacle blind in a plastic FRP piping line. The pipe spec calls for flanges made out of the FRP material that are flat faced and built to the dimensions of B16.5. I have a copy of B16.48 for spectacle blinds and see that this spec deals with blinds designed to fit concentrically with the pipe bore with their ODs just smaller than the ID of the bolt circle of a standard B16.5 flange so they can kind of "float" and rely on clamping forces to hold it in place once the joint is made up.
Here's my problem: The FRP flanges I have are extremely brittle and weak compared to CS and the insertion of the B16.48 blind effectively adds a raised face to the flanges. The brittle flanges would then lose the support benefits of the full flat face and would have a stress riser where they press against the blind. If the bolts are overtorqued, the flanges can easily be cracked, and then we've got a whole world of new problems.
I know that there are spacer rings that will allow a flat faced flange to be mated with a raised face flange to prevent cracking the FF flange, but I've never seen anything to handle the same problem when using a B16.48 blind with FF flanges. In any case, I would like to avoid the use of an additional spacer ring.
What I really need is a spectacle blind where both sides are dimensioned the same as the blinds of B16.5 to provide the full support through the bolt circle to keep the FRP from cracking. Then, the open side of the spectacle blind would have the bore cut to the inner diameter of B16.48. I really don't care how large the web would be or what standard it would be designed to. Then, I could get a flat faced spectacle blind that would be large enough to support the brittle flanges it goes between.
Has anyone come across a standard, code, interpretation, anything that provides for this, or am I looking at jumping off the cliff on my own here with a custom job?
I have an application where I need a spectacle blind in a plastic FRP piping line. The pipe spec calls for flanges made out of the FRP material that are flat faced and built to the dimensions of B16.5. I have a copy of B16.48 for spectacle blinds and see that this spec deals with blinds designed to fit concentrically with the pipe bore with their ODs just smaller than the ID of the bolt circle of a standard B16.5 flange so they can kind of "float" and rely on clamping forces to hold it in place once the joint is made up.
Here's my problem: The FRP flanges I have are extremely brittle and weak compared to CS and the insertion of the B16.48 blind effectively adds a raised face to the flanges. The brittle flanges would then lose the support benefits of the full flat face and would have a stress riser where they press against the blind. If the bolts are overtorqued, the flanges can easily be cracked, and then we've got a whole world of new problems.
I know that there are spacer rings that will allow a flat faced flange to be mated with a raised face flange to prevent cracking the FF flange, but I've never seen anything to handle the same problem when using a B16.48 blind with FF flanges. In any case, I would like to avoid the use of an additional spacer ring.
What I really need is a spectacle blind where both sides are dimensioned the same as the blinds of B16.5 to provide the full support through the bolt circle to keep the FRP from cracking. Then, the open side of the spectacle blind would have the bore cut to the inner diameter of B16.48. I really don't care how large the web would be or what standard it would be designed to. Then, I could get a flat faced spectacle blind that would be large enough to support the brittle flanges it goes between.
Has anyone come across a standard, code, interpretation, anything that provides for this, or am I looking at jumping off the cliff on my own here with a custom job?