PEDARRIN2
Mechanical
- Oct 1, 2003
- 1,287
I am writing/editing a specification for an ultrahigh purity nitrogen system for a series of adjoining class 100 clean rooms.
The project is a design build so there is an installing contractor on board.
I was given a standard specification (15481) to serve as the basis of my specification. I found a similar specification for a Sandia Labs project.
In the specification, there is a section that requires field flushing the piping whenever a cut is made to the pipe.
The pipe is to be flushed with an alcohol/DI water mix and blown dry with 0.01 micron nitrogen from a cryogenic source. The contractor is balking at this section since he feels, due to the nature of the installation, which has a main routing through the facility with branches to the individual rooms (all of which are in a clean room environment), requiring many field cuts - that it would not be possible to get the piping completely dry with the nitrogen.
Since there was the specification from Sandia, I am thinking that it might be possible to do this but I have no way of knowing if the Sandia contractor was held to this requirement in the specification. There is a section where the inspector/QC representative can make modifications.
I need to know if somebody has any experience with this type of work that could help me to determine if the requirement is valid and the contractor is just being lazy.
I have also posted this question on a clean room forum - but wanted to see if anybody here could help.
The project is a design build so there is an installing contractor on board.
I was given a standard specification (15481) to serve as the basis of my specification. I found a similar specification for a Sandia Labs project.
In the specification, there is a section that requires field flushing the piping whenever a cut is made to the pipe.
The pipe is to be flushed with an alcohol/DI water mix and blown dry with 0.01 micron nitrogen from a cryogenic source. The contractor is balking at this section since he feels, due to the nature of the installation, which has a main routing through the facility with branches to the individual rooms (all of which are in a clean room environment), requiring many field cuts - that it would not be possible to get the piping completely dry with the nitrogen.
Since there was the specification from Sandia, I am thinking that it might be possible to do this but I have no way of knowing if the Sandia contractor was held to this requirement in the specification. There is a section where the inspector/QC representative can make modifications.
I need to know if somebody has any experience with this type of work that could help me to determine if the requirement is valid and the contractor is just being lazy.
I have also posted this question on a clean room forum - but wanted to see if anybody here could help.