Geoff Stone,
Do u mean that elbow with trunion and without trunion will show same behaviour in the thermal case?? I mean will they absorb the same displacement??
Tushar
<a href="/group/PipingDesign/post?postID=OjEkO8ETduZeAcFo16zMKiEAPiLKOAV-JGuBmN-t_JhL7Mv3si3nvR-R3phfbRxbckOGk5uAI5mwwOMfhZg1Ba8hHQ">PipingDesign@yahoogroups.com</a> AT SMTP Sent by: Geoff Stone DD&D Australia <blenrayaust@yahoo.co.uk> AT SMTP 11/15/02 01:00 PM
To: PipingDesign@yahoogroups.com AT SMTP@ccMTA-sgsinmx001
cc: (bcc: Zope Tushar/fwsg)
Subject: Re: [PipingDesign] Re: Trunnion on an Elbow
The trunnion detail that you are referring to is usually a thin
plate welded to
the back of the elbow over a relatively small section of the outside
radius.
Thinking about it, when the elbow is strained in plane or out
of plane the SIF
wouldnt be changed drammatically. In-plane the elbow will be
changed from
circular to elliptical and out of plane the elbow will rotate
because the
trunnion plate is relatively thin and will deflect. Any comments?
--- mechengr1977 <mechengr1977@yahoo.com> wrote:
<HR>
<html><body>
<tt>
the use of trunnion welded to the elbow is a common practice in
refinery, power plant and petrochem. Charts has been develop by
engineering/contruction firms such as Flour Daniel and Bechtel
to
aid in its sizing/selection. This SIF business is getting out
of
hands.
flexibility of the bend.
>
> Regards,
> Kaustubh
</tt>
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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed] Received on Fri Nov 15 00:58:00 2002
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