Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
Revision: 4.0
Approval Date: January 11, 2011
Applicability
Revision
4.0
Description
The contents of the latest revision shall be mandatory and
effective immediately if it pertains to CODES,
REGULATIONS, AND/OR SAFETY.
Effective Date
January 11, 2011
PAGE i
Table of Contents
1
2
General ..................................................................................................................... 1
Related Standards and Abbreviations ................................................................... 1
2.1
2.2
2.3
2.4
3
4
Materials ................................................................................................................... 2
Quality Assurance ................................................................................................... 2
4.1
4.2
4.3
4.4
General ............................................................................................................. 10
Right of Entry ................................................................................................... 10
Time of Inspection ........................................................................................... 11
Subcontracting................................................................................................. 11
Location of Tests ............................................................................................. 11
Receiving, Shipping and Handling ................................................................. 11
9
10
11
12
General ............................................................................................................... 8
Repair or Removal of Field Joint Defects....................................................... 10
Construction practices............................................................................................ 8
6.1
6.2
Welding .................................................................................................................... 4
5.1
5.2
5.3
5.4
5.5
PAGE ii
13
14
15
Preparation ....................................................................................................... 15
PAGE iii
General
This Specification applies for facility piping construction, mainline valve assembly sections and
components manufactured remote from the final location only and does not cover mainline
pipeline construction.
Piping materials, fabrication, installation, inspection and testing shall conform to the latest
edition of CSA Standard Z662 Oil and Gas Pipeline Systems and shall also comply with the
applicable standards referenced in CSA Z662 and with National Energy Board Onshore Pipeline
Regulations.
Where an item or activity is not covered by CSA Z662, it shall be completed in accordance with
the latest edition of ASME B31.3 Process Piping.
The term piping as used herein includes the pipe itself, valves, fittings, flanges, gaskets,
bolting, piping components, gauge and other instrument connections, vents, drains and the pipe
support system. For instrument connections, piping includes the branch up to and including the
first block valve.
Shop fabrication scope of work shall be approved by the Company.
The following codes and standards are applicable to all work covered in this Specification.
2.1
Company Standards
EES023
EES129
Auxiliary Valves
2.2
Industry Standards
ASME B31.3
Process Piping
CSA W48
CSA Z662
2.3
Regulatory Standards
2.4
Abbreviations
ASME
AWS
CAN/CGSB
CSA
PAGE 1
CWB
ERCB
FCS
HAC
IFC
MT
NDE
NDT
NEB
NEMA
NPS
PT
RT
Radiographic Testing
SMAW
UT
Ultrasonic Testing
WPS
Materials
In general, the Company will supply all piping materials larger than NPS6 and the Contractor
shall supply all piping materials NPS6 and smaller. Exceptions to this general rule will be
identified in the drawings.
Materials supplied by the Company will be specified on the drawings or in the contract. The
Contractor shall supply all remaining material required to complete the work. All Contractor
supplied piping materials shall be new, unused and undamaged, and shall conform to
requirements of the drawings and Enbridge Engineering Specifications for mechanical materials
supplied under specifications EES023 Flanges and Fittings, EES129 Auxiliary Valves or
other referenced specifications.
The Contractor may propose alternative material options to the Company, for review and
approval prior to purchase and fabrication of these materials.
The Contractor shall notify the Company, within 48 hours of receipt of materials, if the materials
have not been supplied in accordance with the requirements of the drawings, specifications,
and/or if materials dimensional tolerances exceed CSA Z662. Permitted misalignment
(diameter, wall thickness, out-of-roundness) of piping shall not exceed that allowed by CSA
Z662.
Quality Assurance
The Company may identify additional quality assurance requirements during the bidding period.
PAGE 2
4.1
NDE Records
The Company reserves the right to inspect all NDE reports/readings for auditing purposes. Film
and reports/readings shall be catalogued according to the isometric weld map Q drawings. The
Contractor shall be responsible for the insertion of the applicable weld isometric drawing as well
as the carbon copied/photocopied signed report, into the radiographic envelope. The isometric
drawing must identify the weld detail information, such as heat numbers of adjoining members,
welder identification and the weld location itself. All film and reports/readings must be forwarded
to the Company for record retention prior to final payment for work.
4.2
Prior to the shipment of fabricated piping, the Contractor shall supply one copy of the following
documentation for the Company's review and approval:
a) all Non Destructive Examination Reports;
b) Weld Visual Inspection Reports;
c) Weld Traceability Identification drawings (identifying welders, weld numbers, NDE numbers,
Weld Procedure numbers, etc.);
d) Material Traceability Identification drawings (identifying material description, mill test
numbers, functional tags, etc.);
e) Material Test Certificates (Mill Test Report, Certification of Compliance, Mill Analysis
Report);
f)
g) Pressure Test Reports (see FCS014 - Pressure Testing - Facility Piping); and
h) As-built red lined drawings (minimum 11x17).
The Contractor and the Inspector shall ensure all welds are identified as per the isometric weld
map Q drawings, on x-ray films and/or UT report, final weld map, as-built and NDT report. The
documents shall identify the Contractor, Contractor Quality Inspector, Company Inspector, and
include signature of acceptance by both the Contractor and Company Inspector.
After approval of the above documentation, the Company will allow the Contractor to ship the
material and documentation to site. Further to the documentation outlined above, the Contractor
shall supply the Company, within one week of shipping, all applicable original copies of the
documents listed in the permanent construction record retention index along with as-built
drawings and all RT film.
4.3
In addition to submitting all contractually required documentation, the Contractor shall supply
the Company, within one week of substantial completion, all applicable RT film and original
documents listed in the permanent construction record retention index for fabrication shop and
field, along with two copies of D size as-built red lined drawings. These as-built red lined
drawings shall also include Q-drawings with shop fabricated as-built information.
PAGE 3
4.4
Identification of Welds
The work of each welder shall be identified according to a number assigned by the Contractor.
Identification of welding shall be by a non-erasable crayon or paint-type pencil approved by the
Company. This welder identification shall be transferred to the weld mapping and tracability
records immediately. Welder identification numbers shall be unique and not be re-assigned on
the project. Steel dyes shall not be used for identification purposes.
Welding
5.1
General Requirements
5.1.1
5.1.2
Definitions
Welding terms and definitions will be as per the latest editions of CSA Z662 and AWS Standard
A3.0. Also refer to Clause 2.2 - Abbreviations contained within this Specification.
5.1.3
Welding Equipment
All welding equipment used in connection with the work shall be satisfactory to the Company
and kept in good mechanical order to produce code compliant welds. Equipment or supplies not
meeting Company requirements shall be replaced to the satisfaction of the Company.
SMAW welding machines shall have a minimum NEMA rating of 200 Amps, 30 Volts, 60% duty
cycle. Welding machines shall have adequate controls to obtain output adjustments of all
SMAW requirements and be capable of full rated output at all times.
Welding cables shall be of sufficient capacity and condition that the voltage drop in full cable
length does not exceed 10%. Splices in welding cable shall be made in a skilled manner that
assures a secure connection that will not heat up while in service. Electrode holders shall be as
light as practical, with whips approximately 3 m long. Electrode holders and electrodes shall not
be placed in water for cooling purposes. Ground attachment devices shall be of such design as
to firmly grip the pipe and not arc; having as large a contact area as practical. Arc burns on pipe
as a result of poor grounding shall be considered equal in severity to welding rod arc burns.
PAGE 4
5.1.4
When required, the Contractor shall supply controlled hydrogen welding electrodes in
undamaged hermetically sealed containers and store them to avoid moisture contamination.
Once the seal has been broken, the materials shall be stored in cabinets or ovens designed for
the purpose, and continuously maintained at holding temperatures recommended by the
manufacturers.
Any controlled hydrogen electrode which has been out of the original container or the heated
oven for more than one hour shall be discarded or re-dried in accordance with the applicable
electrode manufacturer's recommendations with respect to time and temperature. Electrodes
that have been wet shall be discarded.
5.1.5
Welding shall not be performed when the quality of completed welds would be impaired by
weather conditions including but not limited to cold, airborne moisture, blowing sand, high
winds, etc. The Contractor shall provide wind breaks of a type that will give adequate protection
to the welder and the weld.
5.2
Welding Procedures
The qualification of production welding procedures and repair welding procedures shall be
performed concurrently.
Weld procedures shall be developed as specified by the latest editions of CSA Z662, or for
other than partial-penetration butt welds, welding procedure specifications that are established
and qualified as specified in the ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code Section IX may be
used, provided that:
a) the welder qualification tests are as specified in the ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code
Section IX;
b) the standards of acceptability for visual and non-destructive inspection of the production
welds are as specified in ASME B31.3;
c) CSA Z662 Table 7.1 - Equivalent ASME S-1 group numbers for welding procedures for
piping materials applies;
d) for welding steel piping materials having a specified minimum yield strength higher than 386
Mpa, an increase in carbon equivalent of more than 0.05% from that of the material used for
the procedure qualification shall be considered to be an essential change and shall
necessitate requalification of the welding procedure specification or establishment and
qualification of a new welding procedure specification;
e) in addition to Enbridge approval, ASME Section IX welding procedures should be approved
and stamped by an ASME Authority. Refer to Appendix F - Boiler and Pressure Vessel
Governing Bodies for Provinces and Territories for a listing of governing bodies within
Canada;
f)
PAGE 5
g) Enbridge design requirement for above grade Pipeline Facility weldments require
demonstrated toughness testing at temperatures as low as -45C (-50F). Cellulosic coated
electrodes are not necessarily intended for these low temperature applications. As a result,
Pipeline Facility welding applications in which all passes are to be made with cellulose
coated electrodes are to be discouraged and will be restricted to below grade joining of pipe
to pipe.
Compared to low hydrogen electrodes, cellulosic coated electrodes increase potential
susceptibility to delayed hydrogen assisted cracking (HAC). In order to determine if HAC has
occurred in completed welds, a higher degree of inspection rigor will be required. As such,
100 percent delayed NDT (next day or longer) of all welds will be required to detect cracking
which may have developed after completion of welding.
Welding procedures shall be submitted by the Contractor to the Company for review and
approval by Pipeline Integrity or Pipeline Integrity's designate. Alternative procedures must be
submitted as soon as possible to allow a reasonable approval period for the Company without
affecting the work schedule. As a guide, allow two weeks for Company review and approval of
welding procedures. Contractors must submit WPS in conjunction with a welding matrix that
identifies the specific material, WPS and other relevant variable combinations that are required
for construction. Refer to Appendix G - Examples of WPS Datasheets and Weld Procedure
Material Matrices. As a minimum, all WPS Datasheet(s) submitted for company approval shall
contain the information provided in the appended examples. Prior to performing a weld, the
corresponding company approved WPS Datasheet shall be signed off by each welder using the
Datasheet and submitted as part of the required permanent records retention turnover
documentation.
5.3
Qualification of Welders
Each welder shall be required to provide proof of a provincial welding certification (i.e., Alberta
"B" Pressure or a CWB certification) and pass a welder qualification test by visual inspection
and either destructive or radiography, or with prior company approval, ultrasonic methods and
using an approved qualified welding procedure. The acceptance criteria shall be in accordance
with CSA Z662 or ASME Section IX whichever is applicable. The Contractor is responsible for
the coordination of 100% NDE of all welds using a NDE service provider contracted directly to
Enbridge.
The welder CSA Z662 qualification test may be performed as a production weld if approved by
the Company.
A copy of all welders qualifications is required as per requirements of CSA Z662 or ASME.
Qualification records shall be made of the tests given to welders and of the detailed results of
each test and submitted as part of turnover documentation.
A list of qualified welders and the procedure specifications in accordance with which they are
qualified to weld shall be maintained.
Welding parameters for each WPS shall be checked and recorded by the Contractor for each
welder as a minimum during welder qualification testing. These records will be kept on file with
the Welder Qualification Records.
PAGE 6
5.4
The Contractor shall employ such means required to ensure piping integrity. The standards of
acceptability are minimum requirements on welding workmanship and shall meet the standards
of acceptability as set out in CSA Z662 or ASME B31.3, whichever is applicable. The Company
shall be permitted to reject welds which appear to meet these non-destructive inspection
standards of acceptability if, in its opinion, the depth, location or orientation of the discontinuity
might be detrimental to the structural integrity of the welds.
Records of welding parameters used for production welding and the resolution of any nonconformance shall be maintained to demonstrate compliance with the requirements of this
Specification and the welding procedure specifications. Records shall comprise part of the
permanent records retention.
The Company reserves the right to measure welding parameters on any production weld. When
the parameters measured on a weld do not comply with the specified values, the Company
reserves the right to reject such weld and any weld made after the last compliant record unless
the party responsible for the work can demonstrate such welds are in compliance.
Non-compliance to the requirements of this Specification and of the welding procedure
specification shall be cause for weld rejection.
5.5
5.5.1
Non-Destructive Examination
Non-Destructive Examination Procedures
The NDE service provider shall be directly contracted by the Company. All NDE shall be
coordinated by the construction contractor in a planned and efficient manner.
The NDE Contractor shall satisfy the Company that the proposed non-destructive examination
methods are capable of identifying imperfections that could result from the particular welding
process and joint configuration being considered. The NDE Contractor shall perform their scope
of services in accordance with the latest version of the Enbridge Construction Services
Radiography Examination Scope and Procedures for NDE Contractors (see Appendix E Enbridge Construction Services Radiography Examination Scope and Procedures for NDE
Contractors).
The NDE Contractor shall be responsible for providing all completed NDE documentation to the
construction contractor for their use in performing quality control. This activity shall be
completed on a progressive basis.
The construction contractor shall perform their quality control and then submit the completed
NDE documentation within 48 hours of receipt to the Company/Inspector as part of the
Permanent Records Retention. This activity shall be completed on a progressive basis.
The construction contractor's quality control shall visually inspect and document 100% of all
welds as per CSA Z662 and ASME Section V. All NEB regulated station/terminal/facilities butt
welds and tie-in welds, including repairs, shall be 100% radiographically examined. All ERCB
regulated station/terminal/facilities butt welds and tie-in welds, including repairs, shall be 100%
radiographically examined, unless otherwise approved by the Company. Other methods such as
liquid penetrant and magnetic particle can be used in situations where radiography may not be
appropriate. The acceptance of these or other methods require Company approval through
change management.
PAGE 7
The Contractor shall provide a suitable high-intensity viewer with sufficient capacity to illuminate
radiographs of excessive density without difficulty to verify film flash information, repair locations
and to ensure traceability requirements.
All attachment welds to the station piping shall be 100% inspected by magnetic particle
methods.
All socket welds shall be subject to 100% inspection using magnetic particle.
Welds on fire water systems shall be subject to a minimum of 15% radiographic inspection.
The Company may choose to ask for a demonstration of an alternate non-destructive method
that can accurately detect weld imperfections. Once satisfied, the Company shall approve the
use of alternate examination techniques for the work being considered.
5.5.2
Construction practices
6.1
General
A welding datasheet shall be issued by the fabrication contractor to each welder defining the
process variables and constraints prior to commencement of welding for each WPS used.
For position welds, the minimum number of welders shall be as follows:
a) one for less than or equal to NPS 12; and
b) two for greater than NPS 12.
Tack welds are not permitted when using external line-up clamps unless preheating
requirements are met.
The welding of alignment lugs (dogs) shall only be permitted in the joint bevel. Lug welds shall
be ground out before removal.
Unless otherwise specified, all butt welds shall be full penetration welds.
All pressure retaining joints, including socket welds, shall have a minimum of two passes.
Socket welds shall have 1.6 mm (1/16 in.) minimum gap between the bottom of the socket and
end of pipe prior to welding. Minimum gap spacing will be verified by conducting RT inspection
per welder on a random basis.
The start of all weld passes shall overlap and no pass shall start closer than 50 mm from the
start of the preceding pass.
Pipe shall be cut squarely followed by reaming, burring and cleaning before installation. Pipe
runs shall be straight and true.
PAGE 8
Where a pipe is cut, pipe identification such as pipe number, specification, grade, heat number,
manufacturer and date of manufacture shall be transferred to both ends of the pipe. Dye
stamping of the pipe or weld shall not permitted for that purpose.
The welding of supports, bracing bars or counter balance weights to pressure piping and
components shall not be permitted.
Bolt holes of all flanges shall straddle the north-south (N-S) or vertical centre lines unless
otherwise noted on the drawings.
Electric welded pipe shall be aligned so that the longitudinal seam will be located on the upper
surface of the line within 300 mm of the vertical (preferably at the 2 oclock and 10 oclock
positions). Successive joints of pipe shall be rotated to left or right by not less than 200 mm to
prevent the aligning of weld seams in adjacent pipe sections. Longitudinal seams on pipe bends
shall be located on the neutral axis of the bend.
The inside diameters of piping components shall be aligned accurately within existing tolerances
on diameters, wall thickness and out-of-roundness.
Dimensions of flanged branch connections from centre line of pipe to face of flange shall be
equal to the dimensions of a standard welding tee plus the length of a weld neck flange unless
otherwise noted on the drawings.
For stub-ins, the hole cut for the branch shall have the bore the full size of the branch inner
diameter.
Nipples for connections on insulated piping shall have enough length so as to extend beyond
insulation by a minimum of 38 mm.
6.1.1
Each joint of pipe or spool shall be internally inspected and, if required, cleaned to ensure all
foreign material is removed from the entire joint length. The internal cleaning process will be
verified by the Company Inspectors.
Preparatory to aligning pipe for welding, the bevelled ends of each joint shall be thoroughly
cleaned of paint, rust, mill scale, dirt or any other foreign material detrimental to the quality of
the welds. Any satisfactory method approved by the Inspector may be used for this cleaning
operation.
6.1.2
Cleaning of Welds
Each bead shall be thoroughly cleaned of scale, dirt and slag by a method satisfactory to the
Inspector prior to the application of succeeding beads. The completed weld shall be cleaned
free of slag.
6.1.3
When files are used for cleaning up the final or cap pass, the metal adjacent to the weld shall
not be grooved below the pipe surface. Should this occur, the Contractor shall cut out the
defective weld or make a repair satisfactory to the Company.
PAGE 9
6.2
6.2.1
The Contractor shall submit welding repair procedures for the Company's approval. The
acceptance of repair procedures is contingent upon a demonstration of such procedures for
each type of repair to be undertaken. The Contractor shall conform to the approved repair
welding procedures for each instance of repair.
At the option of the Company and under the supervision of the Inspector, with the exception of
cracks, welds may be repaired by grinding or gouging to sound metal and re-welding. Such
repaired areas shall be re-inspected per CSA Z662 or ASME B31.3 requirements, whichever is
applicable. No further repairs shall be allowed in previously repaired areas without Company
permission.
6.2.2
Repair of Welds
The accumulated length of weld repairs shall not exceed 25% of the total length of the girth
weld.
When welding piping together at places where cut-outs have been made for any reason, one
replacement weld will be used if it is practical to pull the piping back into position without
imposing strain on the piping. Otherwise, a pup joint of not less than 1.22 m shall be installed.
6.2.3
Arc Burns
Arc shall be struck only in the weld groove. Arc burns on the pipe surface shall be repaired in
accordance with CSA Z662 and the Company must be notified prior to repair.
7.1
General
At the discretion of the Company, piping assemblies may be fabricated at the Contractors shop
or other fabrication facility. The requirements for shop fabricated piping shall be the same as for
site fabricated piping except for the following:
a) When the Contractor fabricates piping, they shall determine the location of site welds. It is
the Contractor's responsibility to check existing facilities and its own work to verify location,
elevations, etc. in order to ensure that adequate field fit allowances are provided. For all
piping, it is the Contractor's responsibility to field check and verify all elevations and
dimensions to ensure correct fit-up of the piping.
7.2
Right of Entry
PAGE 10
7.3
Time of Inspection
All piping shall be subject to inspection by the Inspector at any time during fabrication. Ample
notice of when fabrication will start and when tests will be made shall be given to the Company
so that the Inspector may witness any particular phase of the work as per Enbridge
requirements (e.g., hydrotesting).
7.4
Subcontracting
Should the Contractor subcontract any portion of the work, the Subcontractor shall be subject to
inspection and testing by the Inspector as would be the case if the Contractor were to perform
the fabrication in his own shop. The Contractor is responsible for managing all aspects of their
Subcontractors as it relates to all Enbridge requirements. Subcontractors must be pre-approved
by the Company.
7.5
Location of Tests
All inspection and tests shall be made at the Contractors fabrication shop unless agreed to by
the Company.
All flanged connections to be made with new specified gaskets and torquing of the bolts
following Appendix B - Flange Installation Quality Control Form. Connections shall be
documented by the contractor and verified by the Inspector prior to coating/painting as agreed
upon by the project team.
7.6
The Contractor is responsible for receiving and inventory of all Company supplied material. The
Contractor is responsible for preparing, loading and transporting all fabricated piping to site.
Before transporting, all piping spools shall be cleaned on the inside and outside. Suitable end
closures shall be provided and installed to protect piping against the ingress of dirt and moisture
during transportation and site storage. The Contractor shall ensure that all piping spools are
protected from damage during transportation.
Adequate precautions shall be taken to prevent damage to spools after fabrication.
The Contractor shall ensure that the spool sizes and configurations are such that they can be
safely transported to site and allow for safe off-loading at site.
Transportation to site shall not be made until the Company has accepted the work.
The Contractor shall notify the Company as soon as possible of any unused pieces of piping.
8.1
The Contractor shall handle the piping in such a manner to prevent any damage to the piping
and any applied coating/painting. The Contractor shall take adequate precautions to avoid
damaging of pipe ends or the denting, gouging, grooving or flattening of the pipe. Piping shall be
moved by means of an engineered and approved lifting device complete with certification
records. In addition, only an approved spreader bar shall be used. The Contractor shall submit
PAGE 11
for approval the proposed lifting hook and spreader bar design. A registered Professional
Engineer shall approve the engineering integrity of the design prior to submission.
All piping and fittings shall be kept free of dirt and other foreign matter while storing, handling,
fabricating or erecting. While in storage, piping and fittings shall be kept off the ground in a safe,
neat and orderly fashion on sleepers, racks, etc. Flange faces, open ends and pipe threads
shall be protected prior to, during and after installation.
Just prior to installation, the Contractor shall request a visual inspection by the Inspector of the
piping and fittings to ensure that it is clean, dry and free of foreign matter.
The Contractor shall remove all dents in the pipe by cutting out the dented length of the pipe, rebevelling the cut ends, welding up and recoating upon approval by the inspector/project team. If
the Contractor has dented the pipe, this work shall be at the Contractors expense.
8.2
Pipe Fabrication
When the Contractor fabricates piping, they shall determine the location of field welds on
drawings. It is the Contractor's responsibility to check existing facilities and its own work to verify
location, elevations, etc. in order to ensure that adequate field fit allowances are provided. For
all piping, it is the Contractor's responsibility to field check all elevations and dimensions to
ensure correct fit up of the piping and equipment.
Where the Contractor will be completing piping left by others, the cutting off of weld caps and
removing blind flanges, etc. (except double faced blinds) shall be the responsibility of the
Contractor at no cost to the Company.
8.3
Pipe Installation
Open ends of installed pipe shall be sealed at the end of each day.
Where screwed fittings and valves are specified to be back-welded, a continuous seal weld shall
be made. Thread compound shall not be used on threaded components that will be seal
welded. Threads must be fully covered by weld bead.
For flanged connections, new specified gaskets shall be used for every assembly. The
Contractor shall furnish sufficient gaskets to meet this requirement. Gaskets are to be free of
foreign materials. Inside diameter of gaskets shall not protrude inside the piping ID. Torque the
bolts following Appendix A - Tightening and Torquing Flanges and document the connection
using Appendix B - Flange Installation Quality Control Form.
Where flat ring gaskets are specified, these shall be of the type whose outside diameter is
contained within the bolt circle. Where full face gaskets are specified, these shall be of the
type whose outside diameter is the same as the outside diameter of the flange.
Underground Piping
The Contractor shall install all piping to the grades, lines and elevations shown on the drawings.
Tolerances shall be as follows:
a) underground piping shall be within 75 mm of specified line and within 50 mm of specified
grade, with no sags or low spots; and
b) stub up risers shall be within 25 mm in any direction of the location shown on the drawings.
PAGE 12
Buried flanges shall not be used for joining pipe sections unless specifically indicated in the
drawings.
When stringing alongside a pipe trench, pipe shall be securely supported on timber or sandfilled sacks supported by skids in such a way as to prevent damage to the exterior surface
and/or painting/coating of the piping.
Piping for underground service shall be checked before being lowered into the trench to ensure
that no foreign material, manufacturer's defects or cracks exist that might prevent the proper
jointing of the pipe or its operation. Piping shall be carefully lowered into the trench by means of
approved tools or equipment (i.e., cranes, side booms, etc.) in a manner that will prevent
damage to the piping.
When installing small diameter fittings to tap into piping, before backfilling cover the fitting with a
short length (i.e., up to 2 ft.) of plastic pipe or a pylon as a warning for future excavating
activities.
When backfilling buried small piping (less than 50.8 mm (2 in.) diameter), install mechanical
protection and plastic warning tape/ribbon in accordance with Appendix D - Plastic Warning
Tape Detail Drawing.
Plastic warning tape/ribbon shall be placed over all station piping during backfill. As a guideline,
plastic warning tape/ribbon shall be buried approximately 450 mm (18 in.) above the top of the
largest utility in accordance with Appendix D - Plastic Warning Tape Detail Drawing. Where
practical, yellow tape continuously labelled Caution shall be used for station piping.
Plastic Marking Tape shall be of a type specifically manufactured for marking underground
facilities. The tape shall be acid and alkali-resistant polyethylene film, 150 mm (6 in.) wide with
minimum thickness of 0.10 mm (0.004 in.). Tape shall have a minimum strength of 121.4 Mpa
(1750 PSI) lengthwise and 10.3 Mpa (1500 PSI) crosswise.
Precaution shall be taken to ensure that displacement of underground pipe does not occur
through soil displacement or flotation due to the presence of trench water. Pipe that has been
displaced shall be removed from the trench and re-laid after the trench is dewatered and
reshaped as necessary.
All underground piping shall be inspected and approved by the Inspector prior to backfilling.
10
When pipe routing is selected and the piping is installed by the Contractor, the Contractor shall,
prior to commencing any work, review the proposed routing and installation details with the
Inspector and obtain the Inspector's approval from the project team before proceeding with the
work.
Multiple runs of site routed piping shall be grouped in established banks at organised elevations
with a change in elevation provided at each change of direction and with sufficient space
allowed between piping runs so that proper maintenance can be performed. Particular
considerations shall be given to insulated piping so that there is no interference between
insulation, piping supports and structural steel.
All piping shall be installed in a neat and orderly manner along straight lines, both vertically and
horizontally, parallel to building walls and partitions and building lines. Piping supports shall be
supplied and installed by the Contractor. All piping shall be adequately supported and braced
against cross sway where necessary.
PAGE 13
Overhead clearance shall be 2.3 m (minimum) in buildings and above walkways and platforms.
Cold springing of piping shall only be performed when requested on the drawings. No cold
springing shall be done except when the Company has given specific approval prior to the work.
In general, cold springing will not be approved on any piping larger than 60.3 mm diameter.
Piping shall not be run near the floor, across walkways or working spaces where it will create a
hazard. Areas for access shall be free of piping interference.
Under no circumstances shall buried threaded connections be used.
No piping less than NPS 2 shall be buried. When routing smaller piping from above grade to a
buried connection, a reducer shall be located a minimum of 0.3 m (1 ft.) above finished grade.
Provision should be made for the isolation and removal of the above grade piping without
draining buried process lines (i.e. valve and union or flanges).
The piping shall be installed with flanges or unions so that the removal of equipment can take
place without the cutting of any piping.
Lube oil, gland seal and cooling piping at equipment such as pumps shall be supported
independent of the equipment and arranged to permit easy dismantling of the equipment without
removal of block valves.
No bushings or sharp edge swages shall be used.
Modified fittings such as tapped blind flanges shall not be used.
In areas without leak detection and spill containment threaded piping is to be avoided in favour
of welded or Swagelok SS tube and tube compression fittings.
11
Tubing Installation
All tubing connections shall be made using only Swagelok tube fittings and shall be made by an
individual who has completed the Swagelok Tube Fitting Installation and Safety Seminar. The
installer shall follow Swagelok's installation instructions for tube fittings and possess a Swagelok
Certified Safety Installation Card. A copy of this card shall be retained for the Permanent
Construction Records. All tubing connections shall be inspected and documented on the form
provided in Appendix C - Tubing Connection Verification Form.
12
Spring support installation details are shown on individual detail drawings. Installation, settings,
etc., are to be in accordance with these drawings.
Unless specified otherwise on pipe support details, spring supports should be installed with
travel stops in place. Travel stops on spring hangers shall not be removed before hydrotest.
After completion of hydrotest at site, the stops in the spring supports shall be removed by the
Contractor. For piping that is fabricated and hydrotested at the fabrication shop, the spring
support travel stops shall not be removed after the shop hydrotest but after installation at site by
the Contractor.
After the removal of travel stops, the hanger should be adjusted until the load indicator moves to
the cold position. On inspection of the system, after a reasonable period of operation, the load
indicator should be at the hot position. If it is not, the support should be readjusted to the hot
position.
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During installation of spring hangers or supports on pump piping systems, it is essential that
pumps be aligned within the limits of misalignment allowed by the pump manufacturer,
applicable Company specifications and industry standards. At this stage, the piping system will
be empty of process fluid and at ambient temperature. Pipe flanges should be carefully mated to
the pump to minimize initial pipe strains on the pump.
Compressor or turbine piping which will contain vapour shall be aligned cold when the system is
complete with stops removed.
Installer shall not modify, add, delete or move supports on a spring supported system without
the approval of the design engineer.
13
This procedure should be followed to ensure pump case stress is minimised by proper pump
suction and discharge piping installation and alignment.
If the contractor has an alternative installation procedure, it shall be submitted to the Company
Project Engineer for approval. This shall be done well in advance to permit discussion and
approval prior to its use.
Axial direction means in the same direction as the pump shaft. Radial direction is perpendicular
to the pump shaft direction.
13.1
Preparation
1) The pump and motor should be aligned to within 0.001 in./ft. in the horizontal and vertical
angular offset and within 0.001 in. soft foot (see FCS015 - Mechanical Equipment
Installation). The pump flanges should be aligned with the horizontal scribe marks on the
pump base.
2) Mount dial indicators on the horizontal, vertical and axial positions taking readings off the
pump hub with the spacer removed. This will indicate whether there is any movement in the
pump when the pump elbows are tightened.
13.1.1
1) Fabricate pump elbow (stub end, elbow and flange ring). Ensure that the planes of the stub
end faces are perpendicular to each other and to the plane of the elbow.
2) Fabricate the remaining piping up to the tie-in point leaving tack welds on one joint in each
plane (axial, vertical, and radial directions). Do not weld the tie-in. Allow for downward
movement of the pipe due to the compression of the neoprene pad on the pipe supports.
3) Attach the pump elbow and piping to the pump with new gaskets and torque the bolts
following Appendix A - Tightening and Torquing Flanges. Ensure that the flanges are faced
using a hand wrench according to this procedure.
4) Tighten the piping support at the bottom of the pump elbow.
5) The bevel ends of the tie-in weld must be within 0.020 in. of each other in the horizontal and
vertical positions and have the proper gap for welding without applying any force to either
end of the pipe. If these dimensions are not met, then one or more of the tack welded joints
and/or the tie-in bevel ends must be cut and adjustments made to achieve this line up.
PAGE 15
6) After the tie-in weld is made, the remaining tack welded joints may be completed. Two
welders should work 180 apart to minimise distortion due to the heat of welding. The
Inspector shall witness the final tie-in weld.
7) Allow the pipe to cool.
8) The dial indicators should read zero movement (0.002 in. maximum) in the pump hub.
9) Loosen both pump elbow flanges to relieve any induced strain from the welding and
retighten as in step 3 above. There should be zero movement in the pump hub when the
pump elbow is tightened.
13.1.2
1) Fabricate and install the pump piping up to the pump elbow and tighten the pipe support.
2) The horizontal flange below the pump elbow must be level to within 0.002 in./ft. in the axial
and radial directions.
3) Shim the stub end flange faces the thickness of a compressed flexitallic spiral wound gasket
away from the opposing raised face weld neck flange to determine the proper length of the
stub ends before welding them to the elbow. Insert 4 bolts at the 3, 6, 9 and 12 oclock
positions and soft tighten to hold the shims in place.
4) Cut the stub ends and weld the elbow. Two welders working 180 apart to minimise
distortion due to the heat of welding shall weld the pipe.
5) Shim the bottom elbow flange to the weld neck flange as in step 3 and note the upper flange
face in relation to the pump flange. The faces should be parallel to within 0.020 in./ft. in the
vertical and axial directions. The raised faces should be concentric with each other to within
0.060 in. If not, the elbow may require mitre cutting and re-welding to obtain these
tolerances.
6) Assuming proper face tolerances have been achieved, install the bolts and gaskets. Hand
tighten the bolts on the lower flange. This will help ensure the faces are square for the final
tie-up.
7) Hand tighten the bolts on the upper flange. The dial gages should indicate no more than
0.001 in. movement in any direction after this and any subsequent tightening.
8) Tighten the bolts as per Appendix A - Tightening and Torquing Flanges.
Caution: Monitor the dial indicator continuously to ensure movement in any one
direction does not exceed 0.001 in.
Do not use the dial indicators to determine flange bolt tightening sequence. This may
result in uneven flange gasket face loading.
14
Torquing Procedure
15
Insulation
Piping shall be insulated where indicated on the drawings. The Contractor shall provide a
complete and finished insulation system.
PAGE 16
Insulation shall not be installed until all radiographic inspection and testing is complete and all
hydrostatic testing and tracing installation is complete. Temporary support and handling of
insulated pipe shall comply with the insulation manufacturer's recommendations.
Insulated pipe shall only be primed as per FCS019 - Painting and P-210 - Shop and Field
Painting: Construction Appendix 1.
When a line is to be insulated, the insulation shall extend to point of connection to an uninsulated line or to equipment.
15.1
jacketing shall be secured using 0.5 in. wide by 0.020 in. thick type 304 stainless steel
bands on 12 in. centres, using stainless steel wing seals;
on piping entering the ground the last 300 mm above ground shall be insulated with
Foamglass and wrapped with Pittwrap (Pittsburgh Corning);
j)
the aluminum jacketing from the fibreglass section immediately above shall be extended to
overlap the Pittwrap (Pittsburgh Corning) by 100 mm; and
k) all jacket joints and seams shall be sealed with caulking. All protrusions through the
jacketing shall be flashed and sealed as required to be watertight.
15.2
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15.3
a) Flexible covers shall be designed to enclose the entire seal drain piping from the pump up
to, and including, the orificed gate valve.
b) Covers shall have all parting lines covered with a flap constructed of the same material as
the outer jacket. The flap shall be installed in a manner which provides proper water
shedding. The flap shall be secured with Velcro.
c) All covers shall have sufficient through blanket quilting pins installed in sufficient quantities
to prevent the insulation insert from shifting or pulling away from the edges of the cover
shell.
d) Wind flaps complete with drawcords shall be incorporated into the blanket design to
securely close the blanket ends over the line insulation.
e) All drawcord ends shall be heat sealed to prevent cord fraying. Cord ends shall be knotted
to prevent the cord from pulling out of the wind flap.
f)
Sewn covers shall use inside seam construction and shall have all slits and penetration
openings top stitched to provide added strength at stress points.
g) All blankets shall have a printed tag sewn to the outer jacket. The tag shall identify:
i. Manufacturers name and address;
ii. Date of manufacture; and
iii. Manufacturers part or serial number.
k) Covers shall be sewn based on dimensions taken from the completed pump seal drain
piping according to the insulation manufacturers instructions.
l)
Materials:
i. Outer Jacket and Inner Liner
ii. Insulation
iii. Stitching
PAGE 18
Appendix A
Tightening and Torquing Flanges
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Note: Before torquing while the pipeline is under pressure, contact Facilities Integrity.
WARNING: If the pipeline contains NGL or gas, do not torque while the pipeline is under
pressure.
PAGE 31
Appendix B
Flange Installation Quality Control Form
PAGE 32
PAGE 33
Appendix C
Tubing Connection Verification Form
PAGE 34
PAGE 35
Appendix D
Plastic Warning Tape Detail Drawing
PAGE 36
PAGE 37
Appendix E
Enbridge Construction Services Radiograpohy Examination Scope
and Procedures for NDE Contractors
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Appendix F
Boiler Pressure Vessel Governing Bodies for Provinces and
Territories
PAGE 55
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Appendix G
Examples of WPS Datasheets and Weld Procedure Material Matrices
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