RE: Piping Material for Seawater Cooling Duty

From: <Samuel>
Date: Wed May 01 2002 - 17:11:00 EDT

Cement Lining Steel Pipe recommended, and my previous company had an experience for a 44" Sea Water line in South Sulawesi, Indonesia. The expansion joints were made in Sulabaya, one manufacturer standard product which is made of rubber (sorry I have no name around my hand). In addition, the piping and pump are equipped with Cathodic Protection System, and a gas Cl2 injection system applied to the pump suction. One of the most notable bad experiences was the suction filter often blocked by seasonal sea-life, lasting almost two months each year, so that a forced turndown happened many times at the first year.

Regards,

Samuel

-----Original Message-----

From: Glenn Dillon [mailto:glenn.dillon@task-consultancy.co.nz] Sent: Wednesday, May 01, 2002 7:44 PM
To: PipingDesign@yahoogroups.com
Subject: RE: [PipingDesign] Piping Material for Seawater Cooling Duty

Steve, suggest you consider concrete lined steel pipe, available ex Steelpipe NZ. As used on the infamous Waikato pipeline (1260 OD)with 25 mm lining. As for expansion, can you anchor at mid point and accommodate expansion at either end?

Have used PVC for piping underwater sea world project, most of this piping was internal and worked out very expensive in the larger sizes.

Best regards, Glenn

-----Original Message-----

From: smckennz [mailto:Mechproj@xtra.co.nz] Sent: Wednesday, May 01, 2002 4:36 PM
To: PipingDesign@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [PipingDesign] Piping Material for Seawater Cooling Duty

Hi there

As part of a plant upgrade, I need to install a new cooling water supply line to replace an existing worn out and undersized concrete lined supply line.
The flow will be around 1200 - 1300 m^3/h and head about 50m. Max seawater temperature is 25C, normal around 12C. On a hot day, the ambient temperature can get to 35C briefly. Line length, guessing,will be about 500m. The pipe will run above ground. To date there has been no problem with marine growth fouling the existing line. I am quite keen on ABS pipe for this duty and the owners seem to like impact resistant PVC. The pipe runs are fairly straight, with no room for doglegs or expansion loops. So I need to think carefully about expansion. I was thinking of something like the rubber O - rings used on sewer piping.

  Are there any systems available for absorbing expansion at the pipe joints?

What pipe material selections would others recommend for this service? Any bad experiences?

Cheers

Steve McKenzie



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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed] Received on Wed May 01 17:11:00 2002

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