Sean999
Specifier/Regulator
- Aug 4, 2015
- 7
Hello:
The current US hazardous materials reg's require that transport tanks for many commodities (such as non-pressure liquid tanks for gasoline built to MC-306/DOT-406, and high-pressure tanks for propane built to MC-331) use the 1998 Edition of ASME BPVC Section VIII, which calls for a design margin on ultimate tensile strength of 4.0 .
In BPVC editions from 2001 on, Section VIII allows a lower design margin of 3.5, but transport tank designs for hazardous material service are not supposed to be designed to these later BPV codes.
On the other hand, ASME says that each new BPVC becomes "mandatory" 6 months after it's issued.
Is there a conflict here? What do transport tank designers actually do, in practice? Are you still digging up the old 1998 BPVC for current work, and also complying with ASME's requirement to use the newest code? If so, is that difficult to do?
I'm trying to understand how designers deal with this apparent conflict, and any thoughts or observations would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Sean Streiff
The current US hazardous materials reg's require that transport tanks for many commodities (such as non-pressure liquid tanks for gasoline built to MC-306/DOT-406, and high-pressure tanks for propane built to MC-331) use the 1998 Edition of ASME BPVC Section VIII, which calls for a design margin on ultimate tensile strength of 4.0 .
In BPVC editions from 2001 on, Section VIII allows a lower design margin of 3.5, but transport tank designs for hazardous material service are not supposed to be designed to these later BPV codes.
On the other hand, ASME says that each new BPVC becomes "mandatory" 6 months after it's issued.
Is there a conflict here? What do transport tank designers actually do, in practice? Are you still digging up the old 1998 BPVC for current work, and also complying with ASME's requirement to use the newest code? If so, is that difficult to do?
I'm trying to understand how designers deal with this apparent conflict, and any thoughts or observations would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Sean Streiff