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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#1
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Now that I'm familiar with how to remove a propane tank valve, what if
I filled the tank about halfway with water, plumbed in regular black pipe plumbing with a sturdy tee with blowoff valve set for like 200 psi and a beefy gate valve, and set it on my outdoor propane burner (for deepfat turkey frying) to generate steam for steam cleaning? The tank's supposed to be good to 250 psi. Could this generate enough steam to do anything useful? Steam whistle at a logging show? Anything? GWE on a propane tank binge |
#2
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Grant Erwin wrote:
Now that I'm familiar with how to remove a propane tank valve, what if I filled the tank about halfway with water, plumbed in regular black pipe plumbing with a sturdy tee with blowoff valve set for like 200 psi and a beefy gate valve, and set it on my outdoor propane burner (for deepfat turkey frying) to generate steam for steam cleaning? The tank's supposed to be good to 250 psi. Could this generate enough steam to do anything useful? Steam whistle at a logging show? Anything? GWE on a propane tank binge That would make good steamer for steam bending wood. I've use an empty paint can for the boiler, but in my mind's eye I envisioned something more like what you describe. -- Gary Brady Austin, TX www.powdercoatoven.4t.com |
#3
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On Fri, 21 Jan 2005 16:57:47 -0800, Grant Erwin
wrote: Now that I'm familiar with how to remove a propane tank valve, what if I filled the tank about halfway with water, plumbed in regular black pipe plumbing with a sturdy tee with blowoff valve set for like 200 psi and a beefy gate valve, and set it on my outdoor propane burner (for deepfat turkey frying) to generate steam for steam cleaning? The tank's supposed to be good to 250 psi. Could this generate enough steam to do anything useful? Steam whistle at a logging show? Anything? I figure 25,000 BTU/hr would make about 6 CFM of steam at 2 bar (29.4 PSI). That's neglecting losses; I just used heat of vaporization and density of steam. |
#4
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Don Foreman wrote:
On Fri, 21 Jan 2005 16:57:47 -0800, Grant Erwin wrote: Now that I'm familiar with how to remove a propane tank valve, what if I filled the tank about halfway with water, plumbed in regular black pipe plumbing with a sturdy tee with blowoff valve set for like 200 psi and a beefy gate valve, and set it on my outdoor propane burner (for deepfat turkey frying) to generate steam for steam cleaning? The tank's supposed to be good to 250 psi. Could this generate enough steam to do anything useful? Steam whistle at a logging show? Anything? I figure 25,000 BTU/hr would make about 6 CFM of steam at 2 bar (29.4 PSI). That's neglecting losses; I just used heat of vaporization and density of steam. Are regular hardware store pipe fittings able to take the pressure? What was that old saying about a chain and a link? Ken Grunke -- take da "ma" offa dot com fer eemayl |
#5
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Grant Erwin wrote:
Now that I'm familiar with how to remove a propane tank valve, what if I filled the tank about halfway with water, plumbed in regular black pipe plumbing with a sturdy tee with blowoff valve set for like 200 psi and a beefy gate valve, and set it on my outdoor propane burner (for deepfat turkey frying) to generate steam for steam cleaning? The tank's supposed to be good to 250 psi. Could this generate enough steam to do anything useful? Steam whistle at a logging show? Anything? GWE on a propane tank binge Use caution, pressure capabilities change with temperature. I guess I'd want to know at what temperature is it rated 250 psi , and how hot is 200 pound steam? Paul -- ----------------------------------------- It's a Linux world....well, it oughta be. ----------------------------------------- |
#6
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One of the model engineering magazines, HSM I think, had an letter from a
boiler inspector about this very subject. He went on about pressure vessels and heated pressure vessels being very different. In the end it was no way in hell should anyone do this. I'm sorry I can't quote the article as I have been going through a lot of the old magazines that I have just acquired. lg no neat sig line "Grant Erwin" wrote in message ... Now that I'm familiar with how to remove a propane tank valve, what if I filled the tank about halfway with water, plumbed in regular black pipe plumbing with a sturdy tee with blowoff valve set for like 200 psi and a beefy gate valve, and set it on my outdoor propane burner (for deepfat turkey frying) to generate steam for steam cleaning? The tank's supposed to be good to 250 psi. Could this generate enough steam to do anything useful? Steam whistle at a logging show? Anything? GWE on a propane tank binge |
#7
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larry g wrote:
One of the model engineering magazines, HSM I think, had an letter from a boiler inspector about this very subject. He went on about pressure vessels and heated pressure vessels being very different. In the end it was no way in hell should anyone do this. I'm sorry I can't quote the article as I have been going through a lot of the old magazines that I have just acquired. Hmm. Often when someone from an industry whose revenue source depends on scarcity says "oh no you surely cannot do that" what it really means is "oh my if everyone did that I'd be out of work". I vaguely remember the letter, probably was HSM. I'd welcome it if anyone knows which -- since 1982 there have been over 135 issues, that's a LOT of reading. I'll keep it in mind anyway. I thought of yet another use, this one no one would complain about. Leave the ring on the bottom, cut the top off so the walls are still vertical but as tall as possible, clean it out. Then use it with lye, TSP or dishwashing detergent and small-medium parts over outdoor burner for homemade "hot tank" cleaning. This will remove paint from many difficult-to-clean items. The toughest one I did was the carburetor from an outboard motor. I took the carburetor in, cleaned, to buy some parts for it and the parts guy called his buds over and they all said they'd never ever seen a Tecumseh carb that clean. GWE |
#8
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![]() "Grant Erwin" wrote in message ... Now that I'm familiar with how to remove a propane tank valve, what if I filled the tank about halfway with water, plumbed in regular black pipe plumbing with a sturdy tee with blowoff valve set for like 200 psi and a beefy gate valve, and set it on my outdoor propane burner (for deepfat turkey frying) to generate steam for steam cleaning? The tank's supposed to be good to 250 psi. Could this generate enough steam to do anything useful? Steam whistle at a logging show? Anything? GWE on a propane tank binge Sounds like a possible Darwin winner to me! Greg |
#9
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Greg O wrote:
"Grant Erwin" wrote in message ... Now that I'm familiar with how to remove a propane tank valve, what if I filled the tank about halfway with water, plumbed in regular black pipe plumbing with a sturdy tee with blowoff valve set for like 200 psi and a beefy gate valve, and set it on my outdoor propane burner (for deepfat turkey frying) to generate steam for steam cleaning? The tank's supposed to be good to 250 psi. Could this generate enough steam to do anything useful? Steam whistle at a logging show? Anything? GWE on a propane tank binge Sounds like a possible Darwin winner to me! Greg Far too late for that. My genes are already distributed. It might keep the propane tank from reproducing, though! :-) GWE |
#10
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Grant Erwin wrote:
larry g wrote: One of the model engineering magazines, HSM I think, had an letter from a boiler inspector about this very subject. He went on about pressure vessels and heated pressure vessels being very different. In the end it was no way in hell should anyone do this. I'm sorry I can't quote the article as I have been going through a lot of the old magazines that I have just acquired. Hmm. Often when someone from an industry whose revenue source depends on scarcity says "oh no you surely cannot do that" what it really means is "oh my if everyone did that I'd be out of work". I vaguely remember the letter, probably was HSM. I'd welcome it if anyone knows which -- since 1982 there have been over 135 issues, that's a LOT of reading. Practically all the heated boiler/steam legislation is there because people have regularly killed themselves with things they thought would be fine. |
#11
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I hesitate to jump in here as my knowledge of the subject is limited to
reading, but IIRC the problem lies in the superheated water in the container. The pressure allows the water to be heated to well above boiling point at atmospheric pressure. When you release the pressure as in opening the steamcleaner valve, all the water can now turn to steam very rapidly. If your popoff valve does not have sufficient capacity to dump the excess pressure fast enough the vessel can become overpressured and turn into a bomb. Seems there was also a greater problem as the water level gets down, the flash over can occure more rapidly. Other than that I am all ready to go fire up the crab cooker and stick a propane tank full of water on it to see how well it works ![]() Glenn "Ian Stirling" wrote in message ... Grant Erwin wrote: larry g wrote: One of the model engineering magazines, HSM I think, had an letter from a boiler inspector about this very subject. He went on about pressure vessels and heated pressure vessels being very different. In the end it was no way in hell should anyone do this. I'm sorry I can't quote the article as I have been going through a lot of the old magazines that I have just acquired. Hmm. Often when someone from an industry whose revenue source depends on scarcity says "oh no you surely cannot do that" what it really means is "oh my if everyone did that I'd be out of work". I vaguely remember the letter, probably was HSM. I'd welcome it if anyone knows which -- since 1982 there have been over 135 issues, that's a LOT of reading. Practically all the heated boiler/steam legislation is there because people have regularly killed themselves with things they thought would be fine. |
#12
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In article , Grant Erwin says...
Hmm. Often when someone from an industry whose revenue source depends on scarcity says "oh no you surely cannot do that" what it really means is "oh my if everyone did that I'd be out of work". I vaguely remember the letter, probably was HSM. I'd welcome it if anyone knows which -- since 1982 there have been over 135 issues, that's a LOT of reading. If you do what you are proposing, you are making a boiler. The requirements for boiler blow-offs are different than ordinary pressure vessels, and you should understand the differences before you put it to work, and see that you have followed the requirements. I seem to recall a boiler explosion in a vintage tractor at a farm fair recently that killed a number of people. It was a crown sheet explosion. Apparently when a boiler breaks open, the pressure lowers rapidly which causes the liquid remaining in teh boiler to flash to steam. Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
#13
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jim rozen wrote:
In article , Grant Erwin says... Hmm. Often when someone from an industry whose revenue source depends on scarcity says "oh no you surely cannot do that" what it really means is "oh my if everyone did that I'd be out of work". I vaguely remember the letter, probably was HSM. I'd welcome it if anyone knows which -- since 1982 there have been over 135 issues, that's a LOT of reading. If you do what you are proposing, you are making a boiler. The requirements for boiler blow-offs are different than ordinary pressure vessels, and you should understand the differences before you put it to work, and see that you have followed the requirements. I seem to recall a boiler explosion in a vintage tractor at a farm fair recently that killed a number of people. AIUI, the guy had also failed to maintain it to such a degree that 3 independant safety systems failed. |
#14
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On Sat, 22 Jan 2005 12:00:58 -0800, Grant Erwin
vaguely proposed a theory .......and in reply I say!: remove ns from my header address to reply via email But are you _progeny_ going to be far enough away? G Far too late for that. My genes are already distributed. It might keep the propane tank from reproducing, though! :-) GWE |
#15
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I hesitate to jump in here as my knowledge of the subject is limited to
reading, but IIRC the problem lies in the superheated water in the container. The pressure allows the water to be heated to well above boiling point at atmospheric pressure. When you release the pressure as in opening the steamcleaner valve, all the water can now turn to steam very rapidly. If your popoff valve does not have sufficient capacity to dump the excess pressure fast enough the vessel can become overpressured and turn into a bomb. Seems there was also a greater problem as the water level gets down, the flash over can occure more rapidly. Other than that I am all ready to go fire up the crab cooker and stick a propane tank full of water on it to see how well it works ![]() Glenn "Ian Stirling" wrote in message ... Grant Erwin wrote: larry g wrote: One of the model engineering magazines, HSM I think, had an letter from a boiler inspector about this very subject. He went on about pressure vessels and heated pressure vessels being very different. In the end it was no way in hell should anyone do this. I'm sorry I can't quote the article as I have been going through a lot of the old magazines that I have just acquired. Hmm. Often when someone from an industry whose revenue source depends on scarcity says "oh no you surely cannot do that" what it really means is "oh my if everyone did that I'd be out of work". I vaguely remember the letter, probably was HSM. I'd welcome it if anyone knows which -- since 1982 there have been over 135 issues, that's a LOT of reading. Practically all the heated boiler/steam legislation is there because people have regularly killed themselves with things they thought would be fine. you all do realize that a simple garden hose and nozzle attached to the drain valve on your water heater is all the steam cleaning you will ever need to use. When I hear the term superheated steam I wonder if you all are familiar with boiler technology and uses/ makeing of dry steam. you aint gonna accomplish that with a lil cooker and an old propane tank. you would be missing the internal firebox featuring muliple steam generation tubes. The presureized and regulated fuel oil header system with throttles and burner barrels. The forced draft blowers required to move enough combustion air to the fire box to generate a signifigant volume of steam top be more than slighjtly useful. and last byt not least., in making superheated dry steam you need cyclone separetors to rapidly change direction of the water vapor leaving your firesides, thus droping any moisture out and back down to the generation tubes to be flashed again to vapor. Complicated mess really. sperheated and dry steam refer to the product of a 1200 lb psig dry steam d type boiler plant , like on ship board. of course you could just generate 150 lbs aux steam , for a degreasing wand, with out much more danger than using a pressure cooker. Still, the garden hose is easier, imho MLM |
#16
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jim rozen wrote:
In article , Grant Erwin says... Hmm. Often when someone from an industry whose revenue source depends on scarcity says "oh no you surely cannot do that" what it really means is "oh my if everyone did that I'd be out of work". I vaguely remember the letter, probably was HSM. I'd welcome it if anyone knows which -- since 1982 there have been over 135 issues, that's a LOT of reading. If you do what you are proposing, you are making a boiler. The requirements for boiler blow-offs are different than ordinary pressure vessels, and you should understand the differences before you put it to work, and see that you have followed the requirements. I seem to recall a boiler explosion in a vintage tractor at a farm fair recently that killed a number of people. It was a crown sheet explosion. Apparently when a boiler breaks open, the pressure lowers rapidly which causes the liquid remaining in teh boiler to flash to steam. A little more detail - if you let the water drop very low and the tractor is standing still, it's possible for the crown sheet to get red hot even though there's still some water in the boiler. As soon as the engine lurches forward, the the water splashes on the crown sheet and flashes to steam. No safety valve can vent the pressure surge in time, not to mention the stresses on the crown sheet from the temperature changes. The engine in Ohio did have a very erroded crown sheet that contributed to the explosion, but I also suspect there was operator error. The first rule of operating those old engines is to always keep plenty of water in the boiler. Jim |
#17
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I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show "Glenn"
wrote back on Sat, 22 Jan 2005 16:15:27 -0800 in rec.crafts.metalworking : I hesitate to jump in here as my knowledge of the subject is limited to reading, but IIRC the problem lies in the superheated water in the container. The pressure allows the water to be heated to well above boiling point at atmospheric pressure. When you release the pressure as in opening the steamcleaner valve, all the water can now turn to steam very rapidly. If your popoff valve does not have sufficient capacity to dump the excess pressure fast enough the vessel can become overpressured and turn into a bomb. Seems there was also a greater problem as the water level gets down, the flash over can occure more rapidly. For the "Rube Goldbergs" among us, it shouldn't be "too difficult" to rig a water quench on the steam tank. That is, when the "Oh ****" pressure valve cuts loose, it trips water reserve, which floods around the boiler, which "should" soak up heat from the boiler, and hopefully lower the temp enough to keep the superheated water from trying to become steam. Or just lower it back to "really hot water". What comes to mind is a kind of jacket around the boiler, with at least an equal capacity to the boiler. Normally it is empty, but to shut things down, you dump water into it and let nature take its course. Hmmm, now I'm going to be up all night pondering this. -- pyotr filipivich. as an explaination for the decline in the US's tech edge, James Niccol wrote "It used to be that the USA was pretty good at producing stuff teenaged boys could lose a finger or two playing with." |
#18
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pyotr filipivich wrote:
I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show "Glenn" wrote back on Sat, 22 Jan 2005 16:15:27 -0800 in rec.crafts.metalworking : I hesitate to jump in here as my knowledge of the subject is limited to reading, but IIRC the problem lies in the superheated water in the container. The pressure allows the water to be heated to well above boiling point at atmospheric pressure. When you release the pressure as in opening the steamcleaner valve, all the water can now turn to steam very rapidly. If your popoff valve does not have sufficient capacity to dump the excess pressure fast enough the vessel can become overpressured and turn into a bomb. Seems there was also a greater problem as the water level gets down, the flash over can occure more rapidly. For the "Rube Goldbergs" among us, it shouldn't be "too difficult" to rig a water quench on the steam tank. That is, when the "Oh ****" pressure valve cuts loose, it trips water reserve, which floods around the boiler, which "should" soak up heat from the boiler, and hopefully lower the temp enough to keep the superheated water from trying to become steam. Or just lower it back to "really hot water". What comes to mind is a kind of jacket around the boiler, with at least an equal capacity to the boiler. Normally it is empty, but to shut things down, you dump water into it and let nature take its course. Hmmm, now I'm going to be up all night pondering this. Even better might be a "pressurizer" tank such is used with nuclear reactors. A large tank of hot water located above the boiler and at a slightly higher pressure. It would supply makeup water at the same rate as is being consumed by steam production. |
#19
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--Coles used to sell a pressurized diaphragm valve for a fuel
system, set up so that if pressure fell in the boiler it automatically shut off the fuel supply. What more does one need? -- "Steamboat Ed" Haas : Heartily sick of Hacking the Trailing Edge! : "oldies" stations! http://www.nmpproducts.com/intro.htm ---Decks a-wash in a sea of words--- |
#20
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pyotr filipivich wrote:
I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show "Glenn" wrote back on Sat, 22 Jan 2005 16:15:27 -0800 in rec.crafts.metalworking : I hesitate to jump in here as my knowledge of the subject is limited to reading, but IIRC the problem lies in the superheated water in the container. The pressure allows the water to be heated to well above boiling point at atmospheric pressure. When you release the pressure as in opening the steamcleaner valve, all the water can now turn to steam very rapidly. If your popoff valve does not have sufficient capacity to dump the excess pressure fast enough the vessel can become overpressured and turn into a bomb. Seems there was also a greater problem as the water level gets down, the flash over can occure more rapidly. For the "Rube Goldbergs" among us, it shouldn't be "too difficult" to rig a water quench on the steam tank. That is, when the "Oh ****" pressure valve cuts loose, it trips water reserve, which floods around the boiler, which "should" soak up heat from the boiler, and hopefully lower the temp enough to keep the superheated water from trying to become steam. Or just lower it back to "really hot water". Me, I'd be tempted to dig a biggish hole, and place boiler inside. |
#21
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In article , pyotr filipivich
says... For the "Rube Goldbergs" among us, it shouldn't be "too difficult" to rig a water quench on the steam tank. Didn't work at Three Mile Island.... :^) Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
#22
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jim rozen wrote:
In article , pyotr filipivich says... For the "Rube Goldbergs" among us, it shouldn't be "too difficult" to rig a water quench on the steam tank. Didn't work at Three Mile Island.... It would have if they had closed the relief valve and took a look at their steam tables... |
#23
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On Wed, 26 Jan 2005 07:41:44 GMT, pyotr filipivich
vaguely proposed a theory .......and in reply I say!: remove ns from my header address to reply via email It all starts sounding as if we could simply stay away form these friggin boilers.... I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show "Glenn" wrote back on Sat, 22 Jan 2005 16:15:27 -0800 in rec.crafts.metalworking : |
#24
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In article , Jim Stewart says...
Didn't work at Three Mile Island.... It would have if they had closed the relief valve and took a look at their steam tables... The pressurizer level indicator was hidden behind a huge bunch of stuff, most of which they didn't need to look at. But your point is well taken - if they had done a bunch of different stuff, the core would not have slumped. But they didn't. And it did. Therefore the secondary cooling system did fail. It failed because it was turned off, granted. Because of the lack of appropriate human engineering it did not work. The same problem could crop up with a steam boiler secondary cooling system. Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
#25
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![]() Jim Stewart wrote: pyotr filipivich wrote: I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show "Glenn" wrote back on Sat, 22 Jan 2005 16:15:27 -0800 in rec.crafts.metalworking : I hesitate to jump in here as my knowledge of the subject is limited to reading, but IIRC the problem lies in the superheated water in the container. The pressure allows the water to be heated to well above boiling point at atmospheric pressure. When you release the pressure as in opening the steamcleaner valve, all the water can now turn to steam very rapidly. If your popoff valve does not have sufficient capacity to dump the excess pressure fast enough the vessel can become overpressured and turn into a bomb. Seems there was also a greater problem as the water level gets down, the flash over can occure more rapidly. For the "Rube Goldbergs" among us, it shouldn't be "too difficult" to rig a water quench on the steam tank. That is, when the "Oh ****" pressure valve cuts loose, it trips water reserve, which floods around the boiler, which "should" soak up heat from the boiler, and hopefully lower the temp enough to keep the superheated water from trying to become steam. Or just lower it back to "really hot water". What comes to mind is a kind of jacket around the boiler, with at least an equal capacity to the boiler. Normally it is empty, but to shut things down, you dump water into it and let nature take its course. Hmmm, now I'm going to be up all night pondering this. Even better might be a "pressurizer" tank such is used with nuclear reactors. A large tank of hot water located above the boiler and at a slightly higher pressure. It would supply makeup water at the same rate as is being consumed by steam production. Then to avoid the pressurizer tank having a problem, you would want an even higher pressure tank plumbed to supply makeup water to your pressurizer tank...I think this needs further consideration. Steve |
#26
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I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show steamer
wrote back on Wed, 26 Jan 2005 17:36:19 GMT in rec.crafts.metalworking : --Coles used to sell a pressurized diaphragm valve for a fuel system, set up so that if pressure fell in the boiler it automatically shut off the fuel supply. What more does one need? Some way to cool the boiler. More importantly, the water in the boiler, similar to putting an ice cube in the soup to keep it from boiling over while you turn the stove down. What I'm thinking about is when you get that run away situation - I may be trying to prepare for the one in a million cases where the pressure relief isn't enough and the boiler would explode anyway. Rapid cooling of the water to below boiling point. Which is also a function of pressure, so... doesn't have to be much. [Of course, as the wizards all know, 1 in a million event tend to happen 9 out of 10 times. HT to Terry Prachert.] -- pyotr filipivich. as an explaination for the decline in the US's tech edge, James Niccol wrote "It used to be that the USA was pretty good at producing stuff teenaged boys could lose a finger or two playing with." |
#27
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I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show jim rozen
wrote back on 26 Jan 2005 11:10:38 -0800 in rec.crafts.metalworking : In article , pyotr filipivich says... For the "Rube Goldbergs" among us, it shouldn't be "too difficult" to rig a water quench on the steam tank. Didn't work at Three Mile Island.... :^) Yeah, but the containment wall held. If there is one thing engineers can do after five thousand years, is build a wall. :-) tschus pyotr -- pyotr filipivich. as an explaination for the decline in the US's tech edge, James Niccol wrote "It used to be that the USA was pretty good at producing stuff teenaged boys could lose a finger or two playing with." |
#28
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I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show Ian Stirling
wrote back on 26 Jan 2005 18:50:11 GMT in rec.crafts.metalworking : pyotr filipivich wrote: I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show "Glenn" wrote back on Sat, 22 Jan 2005 16:15:27 -0800 in rec.crafts.metalworking : I hesitate to jump in here as my knowledge of the subject is limited to reading, but IIRC the problem lies in the superheated water in the container. The pressure allows the water to be heated to well above boiling point at atmospheric pressure. When you release the pressure as in opening the steamcleaner valve, all the water can now turn to steam very rapidly. If your popoff valve does not have sufficient capacity to dump the excess pressure fast enough the vessel can become overpressured and turn into a bomb. Seems there was also a greater problem as the water level gets down, the flash over can occure more rapidly. For the "Rube Goldbergs" among us, it shouldn't be "too difficult" to rig a water quench on the steam tank. That is, when the "Oh ****" pressure valve cuts loose, it trips water reserve, which floods around the boiler, which "should" soak up heat from the boiler, and hopefully lower the temp enough to keep the superheated water from trying to become steam. Or just lower it back to "really hot water". Me, I'd be tempted to dig a biggish hole, and place boiler inside. Good idea too. Tends to channel any explosion "up and away". Or you could take a tip from the gun powder mills or old powder magazines. Three stout walls and a flimsy fourth and roof. That way, if the mill blew up, the blast goes "that way" in stead off "everywhere." -- pyotr filipivich. as an explaination for the decline in the US's tech edge, James Niccol wrote "It used to be that the USA was pretty good at producing stuff teenaged boys could lose a finger or two playing with." |
#29
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The whole boiler idea is a bad one. They store substantial amounts of
energy,and even a small one would destroy the average garage, not to mention anyone standing nearby. There are codes to design boilers.( I think the American on is ASME section VII) You might read that before you go too far with your design. Industrial boilers have two safety valves and a control system to keep the pressure constant as well as a pressure switch which shuts off the gas or oil supply in the event of the boiler going over its safe operating pressure. The "Scram" system would probably CAUSE an explosion as the sudden thermal stresses would cause a fracture somewhere that would propagate at the speed of sound in steel. Tom "pyotr filipivich" wrote in message ... I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show "Glenn" wrote back on Sat, 22 Jan 2005 16:15:27 -0800 in rec.crafts.metalworking : I hesitate to jump in here as my knowledge of the subject is limited to reading, but IIRC the problem lies in the superheated water in the container. The pressure allows the water to be heated to well above boiling point at atmospheric pressure. When you release the pressure as in opening the steamcleaner valve, all the water can now turn to steam very rapidly. If your popoff valve does not have sufficient capacity to dump the excess pressure fast enough the vessel can become overpressured and turn into a bomb. Seems there was also a greater problem as the water level gets down, the flash over can occure more rapidly. For the "Rube Goldbergs" among us, it shouldn't be "too difficult" to rig a water quench on the steam tank. That is, when the "Oh ****" pressure valve cuts loose, it trips water reserve, which floods around the boiler, which "should" soak up heat from the boiler, and hopefully lower the temp enough to keep the superheated water from trying to become steam. Or just lower it back to "really hot water". What comes to mind is a kind of jacket around the boiler, with at least an equal capacity to the boiler. Normally it is empty, but to shut things down, you dump water into it and let nature take its course. Hmmm, now I'm going to be up all night pondering this. -- pyotr filipivich. as an explaination for the decline in the US's tech edge, James Niccol wrote "It used to be that the USA was pretty good at producing stuff teenaged boys could lose a finger or two playing with." |
#30
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On Thu, 27 Jan 2005 10:06:13 +1100, "Tom Miller"
wrote: The whole boiler idea is a bad one. They store substantial amounts of energy,and even a small one would destroy the average garage, not to mention anyone standing nearby. There are codes to design boilers.( I think the American on is ASME section VII) You might read that before you go too far with your design. Industrial boilers have two safety valves and a control system to keep the pressure constant as well as a pressure switch which shuts off the gas or oil supply in the event of the boiler going over its safe operating pressure. The "Scram" system would probably CAUSE an explosion as the sudden thermal stresses would cause a fracture somewhere that would propagate at the speed of sound in steel. Tom "pyotr filipivich" wrote in message .. . snip A BLEVE (Boiling Liquid Expanding Vapor Explosion) is a very fast event, probably no more than a few milliseconds. In that time frame, anything the size of a propane tank could be considered adiabatic. You're not going to move a useful amount of heat other than through the rip in the shell as the water flashes to steam instantly. If it were cooled starting while it was still far enough below its rupture pressure/temp, it might work, but there's no way to know for sure at what pressure rupture will occur. At a plant that was purchased by the corporation I work for, for years a ruptured vessel was kept on display. An engineer in the previous outfit had been in the habit of venting runaway reactions by running to the reactor and loosening bolts on the manway to vent the reactor. After a few times where he got lucky, the inevitable happened, and he was sprayed across the landscape when the manway blew just as he got there. The only rational response would have been running away. Pete Keillor |
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On Thu, 27 Jan 2005 10:06:13 +1100, "Tom Miller"
wrote: The whole boiler idea is a bad one. They store substantial amounts of energy,and even a small one would destroy the average garage, not to mention anyone standing nearby. There are codes to design boilers.( I think the American on is ASME section VII) You might read that before you go too far with your design. Industrial boilers have two safety valves and a control system to keep the pressure constant as well as a pressure switch which shuts off the gas or oil supply in the event of the boiler going over its safe operating pressure. The "Scram" system would probably CAUSE an explosion as the sudden thermal stresses would cause a fracture somewhere that would propagate at the speed of sound in steel. Tom "pyotr filipivich" wrote in message .. . I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show "Glenn" wrote back on Sat, 22 Jan 2005 16:15:27 -0800 in rec.crafts.metalworking : I hesitate to jump in here as my knowledge of the subject is limited to reading, but IIRC the problem lies in the superheated water in the container. The pressure allows the water to be heated to well above boiling point at atmospheric pressure. When you release the pressure as in opening the steamcleaner valve, all the water can now turn to steam very rapidly. If your popoff valve does not have sufficient capacity to dump the excess pressure fast enough the vessel can become overpressured and turn into a bomb. Seems there was also a greater problem as the water level gets down, the flash over can occure more rapidly. For the "Rube Goldbergs" among us, it shouldn't be "too difficult" to rig a water quench on the steam tank. That is, when the "Oh ****" pressure valve cuts loose, it trips water reserve, which floods around the boiler, which "should" soak up heat from the boiler, and hopefully lower the temp enough to keep the superheated water from trying to become steam. Or just lower it back to "really hot water". What comes to mind is a kind of jacket around the boiler, with at least an equal capacity to the boiler. Normally it is empty, but to shut things down, you dump water into it and let nature take its course. Hmmm, now I'm going to be up all night pondering this. -- pyotr filipivich. as an explaination for the decline in the US's tech edge, James Niccol wrote "It used to be that the USA was pretty good at producing stuff teenaged boys could lose a finger or two playing with." All this talk about boilers is why I decided not to make a steam engine. The boilers just require too much vigilance. Which I'm not prepared to be. Vigilant, that is. ERS |
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On 26 Jan 2005 14:21:16 -0800, jim rozen
vaguely proposed a theory .......and in reply I say!: remove ns from my header address to reply via email Somebody here has as sig line about foolproof and bigger fools.... G The same problem could crop up with a steam boiler secondary cooling system. Jim |
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In article , pyotr filipivich
says... Didn't work at Three Mile Island.... :^) Yeah, but the containment wall held. No, the *secondary* containment held. The fuel cladding melted and failed, the core slumped to the bottom of the pressure vessel. And during the event, the pressurizer relief valve was dumping primary loop coolant into the reactor building sump, which overflowed, which then was then automatically pumped into another building, where *that* tank overflowed. In that sense the primary containment of the reactor was breeched badly. Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show jim rozen
wrote back on 26 Jan 2005 14:21:16 -0800 in rec.crafts.metalworking : In article , Jim Stewart says... Didn't work at Three Mile Island.... It would have if they had closed the relief valve and took a look at their steam tables... The pressurizer level indicator was hidden behind a huge bunch of stuff, most of which they didn't need to look at. If I recall correctly, the control levers had been replaced with beer tap levers. Seems that the issued levers were all alike, and you had to look to be sure you had the correct one. But your point is well taken - if they had done a bunch of different stuff, the core would not have slumped. But they didn't. And it did. Therefore the secondary cooling system did fail. It failed because it was turned off, granted. Because of the lack of appropriate human engineering it did not work. Ranging from using the same warning horn for everything. How can you tell the difference between "oh my god it's gonna blow" from "somebody let the coffee pot run dry" if you use the same klaxon for both? Etc, etc. It wasn't as if we didn't have experience with using all the human senses to prevent accidents. The USAAF made the "wheels down" knob feel like a wheel, while the "flaps down" knob feel like a little wing. Having the gauges pointed the same direction when things were good, makes isolating a problem a lot easier. Especially in multi engine aircraft. Etc. The same problem could crop up with a steam boiler secondary cooling system. Well, yeah. But you can think it through and figure out where the problems are. ALSO, and just as important, you can see what has gone before, to discover what sort of failures had occurred and their causes. E.g. the top sheet flashing problem. tschus pyotr -- pyotr filipivich. as an explaination for the decline in the US's tech edge, James Niccol wrote "It used to be that the USA was pretty good at producing stuff teenaged boys could lose a finger or two playing with." |
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Eric R Snow wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005 10:06:13 +1100, "Tom Miller" The whole boiler idea is a bad one. They store substantial amounts of energy,and even a small one would destroy the average garage, not to mention anyone standing nearby. All this talk about boilers is why I decided not to make a steam engine. The boilers just require too much vigilance. Which I'm not prepared to be. Vigilant, that is. Just have to respect what can happen. Afterall, folks are killed by water heaters when safeties fail. Why not look into flash boilers. The tubes don't store as much energy to be converted into a bomb should things go badly. If you are stuck on using that old propane tank, just cut it and line it with brick for the combustion chamber. Just don't use it for a pressure vessel. How much steam did your planned engine require? ** mike ** |
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How much steam did your planned engine require?
** mike ** I was the original poster. I have never planned to build a steam engine. I merely noticed that once you removed the tank valve and cleaned out the methyl mercaptan that an old propane tank looked like you could just put water into the tank and a steam valve at the top (it's just 3/4" NPT) and put it on a big propane outdoor burner. So I wondered publicly if it would work and from the response it sure looks like it wouldn't!! GWE |
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--OK for this you need to talk to the SACA West gang. Speicfically
the guy (name escapes me at the moment) who modified a VW engine and put on his own variation of a spinning cup burner. IIRC the way he's got it set up is full fire actually heats the coil boiler more than it needs, so he's got a controlled cold water intake to keep pressure at a set level. Neat car; got to ride in it maybe 10-15 yrs back. He turned the key to start it (needs an electric starter because the valves only admit steam for something like 7 percent of a rotation), waited maybe 10 seconds while I watched the pressure gauge climb and climb and we were off. --Last guy in that group for whom I had email is Ken Kowal; last address: --Also try Allen Frisbie who lurks here; IIRC he's in touch with that group. -- "Steamboat Ed" Haas : Heartily sick of Hacking the Trailing Edge! : "oldies" stations! http://www.nmpproducts.com/intro.htm ---Decks a-wash in a sea of words--- |
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--Remembered the guy's name: Pete Barrett. Email me and I'll give
you his phone number. -- "Steamboat Ed" Haas : Heartily sick of Hacking the Trailing Edge! : "oldies" stations! http://www.nmpproducts.com/intro.htm ---Decks a-wash in a sea of words--- |
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OK, let's go in a slightly different direction. To summarize, I proposed
putting a water tank over a burner, said water tank having a steam valve on top. As I understood it, this is dangerous because a) when the valve is opened and pressure is lowered a catastrophic amount of water will instantly convert to steam b) if the tank gets real hot somewhere and is sloshed such that water hits the hot spot, a catastrophic amount of water will instantly convert to steam Did I get those right? So how *do* you build a boiler so that neither of these terrible things happen? In plain simple words, please, no math allowed. Imagine I'm a bright 10th grade physics student, for example. I've looked at boiler designs and they have a firebox which is in thermal contact with boiler tubes which contain water which is converted to steam. How does this differ from a water tank over a burner flame? GWE |
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I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show Grant Erwin
wrote back on Fri, 28 Jan 2005 14:02:18 -0800 in rec.crafts.metalworking : OK, let's go in a slightly different direction. To summarize, I proposed putting a water tank over a burner, said water tank having a steam valve on top. As I understood it, this is dangerous because a) when the valve is opened and pressure is lowered a catastrophic amount of water will instantly convert to steam b) if the tank gets real hot somewhere and is sloshed such that water hits the hot spot, a catastrophic amount of water will instantly convert to steam Did I get those right? Sounds right. All though in a), it is if the pressure drop is too great, such that the temperature of the water is above the boiling point _at that pressure_. Not having a steam table handy, I will make it up as I go: Water normally boils at 100 petrograds, and one lungfull of pressure, However if you raise the pressure to 2 lungs, then water boils at 150 petrograds. So now you have a pot of water at 150 petrograds, and everything is happy. Steam floats around, "choo-choo" and da kine. The pressure cycles between 1.95 and 2.0 lungfulls and everything is "cool". Then some fool (not you, some other fool) pops the valve and the pressure drops to 1.8 lungfulls, and the water, which formerly was below the boiling point is now above the boiling point, and wants to join in the steam biz, expanding 400 fold in the process. Big spike in the pressure. If the boiler can hold the 3 lung transitory pressure while things settle down, well and good. If not, and say the safety vale pops off - bad things happen. Pressure equalizes inside and out at 1 lungfull. Well, it would, if the water temperature was 100 petrograds, but all that water is fifty petrograds above the boiling point of water at 1 lung pressure. Weeee! Water flashing into steam all over the place, rushing for that little hole. IF the hole isn't big enough, impatient steam molecules start to back up, pressure rises and a new hole is made. Catastrophically. And then all that 150 petrograd steam starts to cool and transfer heat as it drops to 100 petrograds, condenses (transferring more heat) and then drops to the "ambient" temperature. Lot of hurt in that alone. So how *do* you build a boiler so that neither of these terrible things happen? In plain simple words, please, no math allowed. Imagine I'm a bright 10th grade physics student, for example. 1) Over build. Build that bad boy so it will hold 3 "lungfulls" of pressure, then put a gage which reads "2.01 Lungfulls" as Max "never exceed", put a pop valve set to 2.5 lungfulls, then cross your fingers and pray for success. In other words, whatever steam pressure you want should be a fraction of the pressure the boiler can handle. Then inspect for weak spots, regularly. (I hope that isn't too much math :-) ) 2) make sure there is plenty of water to cover the firebox, especially the "flame crown" where the fire touches the metal. I've looked at boiler designs and they have a firebox which is in thermal contact with boiler tubes which contain water which is converted to steam. How does this differ from a water tank over a burner flame? More surface area gets heated, the water heats faster, you have power sooner. I've seen two basic designs: one with tubes of water in a firebox, the other with Tubes from the fire box through the water. YMMV, a lot of plumbing either way. Back in "zee old country," we had flash heaters. rather than keep a thirty gallon tank of water hot all the time, when you turned on the tap, the flash heater would light up (bottled butane gas) and heat a number of coils with the water flowing through them, and you had hot water which only had to travel a couple meters from the heater to the tap, rather than through the whole house. Same principle. tschus pyotr -- pyotr filipivich. as an explaination for the decline in the US's tech edge, James Niccol wrote "It used to be that the USA was pretty good at producing stuff teenaged boys could lose a finger or two playing with." |
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