Different industries us e different definitions. The petrochem industry tends to
use the former as you described and the water wastewater industry the latter.
Other industries are mixture of the two. It is better practice to have separate
flow diagrams to cover process and use P&IDs as piping and instrument diagrams.
"Goh Kenrick" <kenrickgoh@hotmail.com> on 23/05/2001 18:25:55
Please respond to <a href="/group/PipingDesign/post?postID=C2z7KnC-GTvrSJkOoxepHFpymmJtRNZPiXJSJh3TCX0b5N9ezE8NqOFxsnzqcf5cS8h3BhMtTq9jf5a5FnIRY21zUCIDUI0">PipingDesign@yahoogroups.com</a>
To: <a href="/group/PipingDesign/post?postID=C2z7KnC-GTvrSJkOoxepHFpymmJtRNZPiXJSJh3TCX0b5N9ezE8NqOFxsnzqcf5cS8h3BhMtTq9jf5a5FnIRY21zUCIDUI0">PipingDesign@yahoogroups.com</a> cc:
Subject: [PipingDesign] P&ID
What does P&ID stand for? From what I know and after refering to piping handbook, it stand for piping and instrument Diagrams. But a search on the website, says that it stand for process and instrument diagram. Now I am all confused. Can someone out there tell me exactly what P&ID stand for?
Thanks
Kenrick
Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to <a href="http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/">http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/</a>
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed] Received on Wed May 23 21:12:00 2001
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Tue Mar 04 2008 - 11:40:11 EST