the end of the exchnager that must have the slotted holes is the end that
you wish to be free to grow.
The other end (the fixed end)is the end that should be bolted down.
Otherwise your thermal growths will be "ass da face". It usually has very
little to do with where the bundle is removed other than by good coincidence
the end that gets unbolted and removed is often the same as the fixed head
end (but not necessarily).
I beleive i saw one thread that mentioned HX. This is a good question. The
answer is it depends on where the higher LMTD is to and from. For all
practicality its not going to matter much (with Split andDouble flows). Few
exchangers have great delta t"s and the differential is even smaller in
Cross divided and split flows.
trolls that bite???
-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Bowers [mailto:pbowers@pipingdesign.com]
Sent: Saturday, March 20, 2004 2:34 AM
To: PipingDesign@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [PipingDesign]
M.Mohamed Bharuk, I am going to suggest to you that you spend a few days looking at articles linked at www.pipingdesign.com.
I am the main moderator for this discussion list although there are others.
The site was started in 1998 as a tech info place for piping designers. It has grown since then. There are a lot of informative articles there that I have personally approved (this doesn't necessarily mean that I am knower of all things piping design, you'll meet those guys later). Just a bunch of stuff that should be known by pipers.
There is a pretty good search engine for the site ( www.pipingdesign.com ), so just type in what you are looking for. If you don't find it, ask here on this list. Some of us have 30+ years of experience and can be crotchety though.
Try to stay away from Al if you can, he's part of the NZ conspiracy.
Paul
> Dear all
> can i know about , for what are the services, the particular valve(
for eg gate or globe )is chosed.
> , available sizes for each valves
> This is truely not a clever testing
>
> M.Mohamed Bharuk
Yahoo! Groups Links Received on Mon Mar 22 14:56:00 2004
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Mon Oct 27 2008 - 20:24:03 EDT