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Back Figure 12-4.—Waterside grooving in a generating tube. | Up Utilitiesman (Advanced) - Manual for electric, plumbing, water and other utilities | Next Hydrostatic Tests |
98.145
Figure 12-5.General waterside thinning.
drum may be affected. Figure 12-5 shows general
waterside thinning.
WATERSIDE BURNING may occur if the
temperature exceeds about 750°F in plain carbon
steel tubes or about 1,000°F in most alloy
superheater tubes. The effect of waterside burn-ing
is the oxidation of the tube metal to a shiny, black,
magnetic iron oxide known as high-temperature
oxide.
WATERSIDE ABRASION is the term used to
describe waterside cavities that result from purely
mechanical causes rather than from corrosion. For
example, tube brushes or cutters may cause
abrasion spots at sharp bends in economizer,
superheater, and generating tubes. The surface
markings of such abrasions indicate clearly that
they result from mechanical abrasion rather than
from corrosion.
DIE MARKS appear as remarkably straight
and uniform longitudinal scratches or folds on the
watersides of the tube. They are the result of faulty
fabrication. Die marks, shown in figure 12-6, may
extend for the full length of the tube.
Localized corrosion occurs quite often along the die
mark.
TUBE CORRUGATION is a peculiar type of
heat blistering that occurs when the boiler water is
contaminated with oil. Corrugation may consist of
closely spaced, small-diameter, hemispherical
bulges, as though the tube metal had been softened
and then punched from the inside with a blunt
instrument. It may also exist as a herring-bone or
chevron pattern on the tube wall nearest the
flame, as shown in figure 12-7. It is not known
exactly why oil contamination of the boiler water
tends to cause this patterned corrugation.
98.146
Figure 12-6.Die marks on the waterside of a tube.
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