The main header of most cooling water system (supply) are monster in
sizes. In some cases a nonslam type valve will be required such as
those made by Mokveld. And in a few cases, the valve cant be operated
(stuck in open position). And when that happen, you cant work on the
cooling water pump (hte main line need to be isolated).
In most instances, cant use TDW to plug the line nor cant freeze the
line such as those done by Bishop (UK).
They're not sexy Steve, more like a pain in the butt.
- In PipingDesign@yahoogroups.com, "Steve McKenzie" <mechproj@x>
wrote:
> Its not the fluid that is sexy; its the pipe diameter. Any length,
of
> course.
> Bigger is always better.
> Cooling water systems rule! oi oi oi.
>
> Cheers
>
> Steve
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Paul Bowers [mailto:pbowers@p...]
> Sent: Tuesday, March 02, 2004 2:57 PM
> To: <a href="/group/PipingDesign/post?postID=qcDS_J5NnYOA3vdclsaiHk1ibhRjylh0SJ5Y0sDrURdcPw6_FfB6dOfCXmKbgwVeEJkvjSLKznExCVuYc1Tf8gsvwJk">PipingDesign@yahoogroups.com</a>
> Subject: [PipingDesign] Current Interesting Link - Cooling Tower
Piping
>
>
> www.pipingdesign.com, see "Current Interesting Link".
>
> <<A well designed piping system is essential for the proper
operation of
> a cooling tower. Two types of systems are examined -- open and
closed.
> In the open cooling tower, system water is open to the atmosphere
as it
> cascades over the wet deck and falls into the cooling tower basin.
The
> closed tower --sometimes called a "closed circuit fluid cooler"--
has
> the system water contained within a coil and segregated from the
water
> that is evaporating. This is covered near the end of this
chapter.>>
>
> I've wondered - is there a perceived "sexiness" (to borrow a
phrase)
> associated with working with the more exotic products when we think
> about piping design? I.E., the more esoteric the fluid, the more
> interesting the engineering and design details. If that's true,
then the
> relatively mundane role of the typical cooling water system must
be one
> of the lowest regarded. But then also, the CW lines are often the
> biggest boys on the rack and take priority simply due to the cost
of
> installation, and I've seen entire buildings moved to accomodate
them.
>
>
>
>
>
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Received on Tue Sep 13 02:13:00 2005