eski1
Mechanical
- Jun 15, 2004
- 90
hi
we have just put in a stainless steel bsp threaded 2" ring main into a factory and after pressurizing the system with 2 bar of cold water i walked round and spotted 25 out of the 150 joints leaking , most were small leaks but this was far from exceptable i need to get to the bottom of this quickly .
the process we used was to cut thread as usual with pipe threader ( new jaws ) then cleaned thread with cloth, put on loctite 55 about 20- 25 wraps then put on loctite 5331 smeared over thread tape and done up the fitting as per normal . this joint would then be left for at least 24 hours before pressurizing .
The 2 sealing products were given to us by the factory engineer at we were told we had to use these as pipeline products had ensured these would be fine.
now i have heard that the problem could be that the threads on stainless are so smooth that when you do them up the thread tape will just wind out unless you roughen up the thread with a special tool ?
is this true or is there another reason
also how do other people seal stainless pipe ?
we have just put in a stainless steel bsp threaded 2" ring main into a factory and after pressurizing the system with 2 bar of cold water i walked round and spotted 25 out of the 150 joints leaking , most were small leaks but this was far from exceptable i need to get to the bottom of this quickly .
the process we used was to cut thread as usual with pipe threader ( new jaws ) then cleaned thread with cloth, put on loctite 55 about 20- 25 wraps then put on loctite 5331 smeared over thread tape and done up the fitting as per normal . this joint would then be left for at least 24 hours before pressurizing .
The 2 sealing products were given to us by the factory engineer at we were told we had to use these as pipeline products had ensured these would be fine.
now i have heard that the problem could be that the threads on stainless are so smooth that when you do them up the thread tape will just wind out unless you roughen up the thread with a special tool ?
is this true or is there another reason
also how do other people seal stainless pipe ?