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Home > Forums > Mechanical Engineers > Activities > Valve engineering Forum
thread408-65161
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erdemm (Petroleum) 25
Jul
03
5:31
Hello,
My question is:
1) What is the "main" cause of chattering? (pressure loss within the valve?)
2) What are the other important causes?
3) How do those causes make the system to chatter?
Thanks in advance
Erdem Ogut
BobPE (Civil/Environmental) 25
Jul
03
6:35
erdemm:
BobPE
TBP (Mechanical) 25
Jul
03
8:32
erdemm - Do you mean pressure reducing valves, or safety/relief valves?
erdemm (Petroleum) 25
Jul
03
8:37
Both are acceptable TBP :)
I would be glad if you could explain the questions for both.
One of the main reasons I have found for chattering of a safety valve is improper line sizing. Specifically, the inlet line to the safety valve. What's
happening is if the system sees an overpressure the safety valve opens (fully, assumes a true safety valve with huddling chamber). The valve will
remain open as long as it is at app. 90% full capacity. If the line sizing restricts this flow the valve closes. Pressure builds, it opens fully. The
process is cyclic and the rapid opening/closing prematurely wears down the valve nozzle and seat.
Don Coffman
hacksaw (Mechanical) 25
Jul
03
14:37
The valve pops on static pressure increase, the flow losses cause it to reseat before the system pressure (at the source has cleared) and the cycle
repeats...
look for reducers, excessive bends and elbows, and valving in the inlet line. also look for long piping runs beteen the relief valve and the vessel or
the pipe being protected.
usually once the piping loos during full lift are identified, the reason for chatter is obvious.
good luck,
TBP (Mechanical) 25
Jul
03
14:53
I also encounter a lot of general industry plants that try to operate at or very near to the safety valve settings. It's very common for the unknowing
to select a safety valve that's set for their operating pressure, and have it "feather".
BobPE (Civil/Environmental) 25
Jul
03
15:31
you can take into account line and minor losses in system where PRV's are installed, it would not be practicle to minimize line and minor losses only
to cut the pressure loss you saved with the PRV valve.....
To take these into account you have to properly size the valve(S). I hinted to a big blunder I see often. A PRV may consist of more than one valve
depending on what you are trying to accomplish....
BobPE
jay165 (Mechanical) 25
Jul
03
16:10
Why not use a pilot operated PSV with the sensor located on the vessel (or whatever it is you're trying to protect)? That should help with pressure
drop on the inlet side. This may stop the chattering, but you may still have a problem if the line is too small, ie, the pipe and valve won't pass
enough fluid to bring the pressure down fast enough.
steam4 (Mechanical) 25
Jul
03
16:30
If this is referring to a safety valve on a steam system, the culprit may just be a grossly oversized valve.
Or......if this is a steam pressure reducing valve, check out the catalog information for the Watts Model 152A which has an anti-chatter adjusting
screw on the side.
TBP (Mechanical) 25
Jul
03
17:54
steam4 - I always thought "steam system" and "grossly oversized" were pretty much synonymous :)
steam4 (Mechanical) 25
Jul
03
18:06
J. Alton Cox
President
DeLuca Test Equipment
www.delucatest.com
JAlton (Mechanical) 26
Jul
03
0:14
I made a mistake in reformatting for this forum
please see items 3 & 4 below:
The word "outlet" should have begun Item 4 rather than ending Item 3. Sorry for the mistake.
J. Alton Cox
President
DeLuca Test Equipment
www.delucatest.com
BobPE (Civil/Environmental) 26
Jul
03
11:46
JAlton:
Pipe size has nothing to do with PRV size, this is the biggest mistake you can make...And it may be a source of the problem here....
I am not sure what you mean by back up pressure, but chattering PRV's cause downstream pressures to equalize above the PRV downstream
pressure setting, this has nothing to do with downstream losses.
A big problem I always see is that PRV's are added onto a system after the system has been in service for a long time.. People try to get too much
flow from the PRV by oversizing it. You comments are valid if that is the case and you need large flows, this is usually measured by available
pressures in the system, not with flows though...
I am not riding you, this is a great thread and the subject is a very common problem out thre which usually means there is a lack of information and
understanding about the process....
BobPE
JAlton (Mechanical) 26
Jul
03
16:41
In addition to My experience over the past 30 years, it is the opinion of the ASME that Pipe size has something to do with PRV size. ASME Sec I,
Power Boilers, requires the inlet and outlet piping be at least the the size of the PRV Connection.
This is a quote from a proposed new ASME Sec XI for Transport Tanks, "TR-130 INSTALLATION REQUIREMENTS
(b) All piping, between the pressure relief device and the vapor space of the tank, shall not be less than the size of the pressure relief device inlet
to ensure that flow capacity is not compromised. When two or more required pressure relief devices are connected to a single opening, the internal
cross sectional area of the opening shall not be less than the combined inlet areas of the pressure relief devices connected to it.
Both Farris Engineering and Dresser Consolidated Troubleshooting Charts refer to Undersized Inlet Piping as a major cause of Chatter. A quote from
Crosby, "A valve should never be installed on a fitting having a smaller inside diameter than the inlet connection of the valve."
According to API RP576, 5.2.c., "Improper or lengthy piping to the PRV inlet…can cause a PRV to chatter. The pressure under the seat may become
great enough to open the PRV. However, as soon as the flow is established, the built-up pressure drop in the connecting piping may be so great
that the pressure under the seat falls and allows the valve to close. A cycle of opening and closing may develop, become rapid, and subject the PRV
Seating Surfaces to severe hammering, which damages the seating surfaces, sometimes beyond repair."
J. Alton Cox
President
DeLuca Test Equipment
www.delucatest.com
BobPE (Civil/Environmental) 26
Jul
03
21:19
Jalton:
I know of the ASME code, its one of the main culprits of a lot of the problems I find, no engineer and a cope of ASME. Dont get me wrong, its good
they are there, but they are guidelines which do not do a very good h=job for PRV's in my opinion....
The PRV is designed for a flow range, if the system cannot deliver that flow then the valve is oversized, no matter what the diameter and if you
design only on daimeter without understanding the system, it is bound to fail...Volume of flow through the valve has nothing to do with its operation,
its only the pressure that performs the work to modulate the valve.
It s a common problem and 9 of 10 that I fix were "code" designs....The way I always look at is the codes are guidelines for engineering, not
replacements for it and I regularly superceed code when situations warrent....and engineering trumps code...
just my 2 cents
BobPE
JAlton (Mechanical) 26
Jul
03
21:58
I understand that Site Specific Engineering Solutions are preferable to a CODE which seeks consensus. However,I have been Setting & Testing
Pressure Relief Valves for ASME Sec. I, Steam and for ASME Sec. VIII Steam, Air/Gas and Liquid Service for 30 years. I have tested on a range of
Test Benches from small Test Rigs with no volume to Test Benches with 100 cu ft Test Vessels as well as on Power Boilers upto 2970 psi with Live
Steam. My experience with the Performance of PRVs tested on Low Volume and then placed in High Flow Service Applications proves to me that Flow
is as important to PRV Performance as Pressure.
There are Code requirements for Capacity Certification which subject sample PRVs to actual flow testing. Prior to such test the PRV must
demonstrate Set Pressure and Blowdown as well as Consistent Operation (No Chatter). My experience is that PRVs which fail to demonstrate Proper
Performance also fail to deliver the required capacity.
In my case, Experience trumps Engineering.
I have known many of the members of ASME Sub-Committee Safety Valve Requirements for years, many are employees of PRV Manufacturers and
all are very knowledgable. They take their Committee Work seriously and have written the requirements to reflect their collective experience.
PRV Manufacturers consistently advise users NOT to attempt setting Blowdown on PRVs with Low Volume Equipment because they know that
without sufficient volume the PRV will not perform properly.
J. Alton Cox
President
JAlton (Mechanical) 27
Jul
03
9:11
BobPE,
All my comments are directed toward Pressure Relief Valves. I have no practical experience in Pressure Reducing applications and I began to
wonder if that is why we seem to be in disagreement over some very basic issues.
For years the ASME Code referred to Safety-Relief Valves (SRV), but recently the National Board Inspection Code has attempted to change the term
to Pressure Relief Valve (PRV).
J. Alton Cox
President
DeLuca Test Equipment
www.delucatest.com
BobPE (Civil/Environmental) 27
Jul
03
9:27
JAlton:
sorry for the confusion, I reread your posts too....I was DEFINATELY not talking steam!!!! Nor relief valves.... LOL it is confusing and I wish we
engineers would settle on terminology....I was talking pressure reducing service for fluids.....I was wrong not to quantify my response.....my
comments only go for fluids for whoever is reading.....
The great thing about these forums is we can figure out what to do and where the confusion is in our industry...I am for ever trying to talk to other
engineers in our small world to agree upon terms so as not to confuse people....LOL....and I may have just fallen victim to the confusion....
BobPE
JAlton (Mechanical) 27
Jul
03
20:24
Regarding Terminology, Appendix G was already a part of the
National Board Inspection Code when Appendix J was added by the Sub-Committee on Overpressure Protection:
J. Alton Cox
President
DeLuca Test Equipment
www.delucatest.com
erdemm (Petroleum) 29
Jul
03
9:55
Dear All,
Kind regards,
Erdem