Does anyone have additions and/or corrections to this quick list?
-Some thick-walled, large bore piping buttwelds can take multiple
shifts of welders to complete
-Connecting a raised-face carbon steel flange to a cast iron pump
connection can crack the nozzle due to bolt tourquing
-Many cast valves have pre-determined tap points for drainage
-Pipe nipples are typically 4" long
-Many CAD people have no clue as to what DDIM and DDUNITS means in
AutoCAD
-Piping through a heat exchanger should encourage natural
convection. The process flow to be heated should always be piped
"up"
-"Top of Concrete" and "Underside of Baseplate" are not
necessarily the same thing
-Drilled holes in checkvalve discs are commonplace
-Steam traps collect condensate, not steam
-A trycock lets you know when a vessel is full
-Purging is not the same thing as draining
-Sewer-based alligators won't bite you on the butt, even if you
use the toilets in New York City
-Pneumatic testing of a piping system is more dangerous than
hydrostatic testing
-H2S can kill you if inhaled in large volumes. Dihydrogen monoxide
is also dangerous
-Typical field fit weld allowance is 3"
-The proper angle of the bevel for a buttweld is 37 1/2 degrees
-Piping is to be designed to the nearest 1/16th of an inch,
constructed to the nearest 1/8"
-Weep holes are there to let rainwater drain out
Received on Mon Jun 25 09:44:00 2001
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