Skip to main content

[MW:7167] RE: 7165] NACE MR0175

Hi Moin,

 

Material According to NACE MR0175, implies that, the material will meet NACE MR0175, standard requirement as in Mechanical properties, Tensile strength, impact values, Hardness values, corrosion resistance values, etc and material chemistry.

While Hardness according to NACE means, the material will meet only Hardness requirement of   NACE MR0175 only

Hope these clears your doubts

Regards

Philip Taiye

Principal QA/QC Welding Engineer

(MIPs Quality Control)

DeltaAfrik Engineering Limited

2nd Floor, City Express Bank Building

Plot 1637 Adetokunbo Ademola Street

Victoria Island, Lagos  Nigeria

Phone: +234-1-461-8508, +2341-461-6137 ext. 1257
Cell: +234-(0)-803-803-1396
Fax: +234-1-262-2418

e-mail: taiye.philip@worleyparsons.com

 

 


From: materials-welding@googlegroups.com [mailto:materials-welding@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Moin - QC
Sent: Thursday, September 23, 2010 6:23 AM
To: materials-welding@googlegroups.com
Subject: [MW:7165] NACE MR0175

 

Hi,

Can somebody please explain the difference between ‘’ Material According to NACE MR0175’’ & ‘’ Hardness according NACE MR0175’’

I am purchasing some material from mill, but they said that they can meet the hardness requirement only, but cannot write ‘’ Material accordance to NACE MR0175’’ on material test certificate.

Material is seamless and welded pipe.

Thanks & Regards
SM


______________________________________________________
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This electronic mail transmission may contain information that is confidential, privileged, proprietary, or otherwise legally exempt from disclosure and is intended only for the use of the recipient named above. We do not waive confidentiality in the event this mail was transmitted wrongly. If you have received this communication in error, and are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you are prohibited from reading, printing, copying, or disseminating this message, any part of it, or any of the attachments it may carry. If you have received this message in error, please destroy all electronic and paper copies and notify the sender immediately of the inadvertent transmission. We would like to advise you that we would not waive any of our privilege for taking action against you in the event the confidentiality of this message has been compromised. Thank you for your cooperation
________________
This email has been scanned by the MessageLabs Email Security System.
For more information please visit http://www.messagelabs.com/email
______________________________________________________________________


*** WORLEYPARSONS GROUP NOTICE *** "This email is confidential. If you are not the intended recipient, you must not disclose or use the information contained in it. If you have received this email in error, please notify us immediately by return email and delete the email and any attachments. Any personal views or opinions expressed by the writer may not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of any company in the WorleyParsons Group of Companies."

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Re: [MW:34105] SA266 GR4N 4 Cycle SPWHT

Hi,  You are correct, Minimum refers to the one cycle for which this part will expose until final work shop PWHT. hence mill test certificate shall include this.  Max. SPWHT, refers to additional cycles of heat treatment that are reserved for future repairs during equipment lifetime.  Again, these simulated no. Of cycles shall be specified in MTC.  The idea is we need to make sure that steel mechanical properties are not compromised upon exposure to multiple repairs (i e 4 cycles in your case).  One could say, if steel is subjected to 4 cycles and is ok, then it should by defacto be good for one cycle, yet, this is wrong assumption cause mechanical problems and microstructure of materials varies accordingly based on no. Of cycles for which material will expose. This is apparent in alloy steel and especially for impact test values as an example.  In your case, this forged CS with properties before PWHT can be understood to be " as forged" condition (i.e. Wit...

Materails FAQs

Q: What are equivalents for standard Q 235 B (and Q 235 A) for U-channels? (asked by: boris.vielhaber@vait.com) A: DIN Nr. = 2393 T.2, 2394 T.2, EN 10025 W. Nr. DIN 17007 = 1.0038 Design DIN 17006 = RSt 37-2, S235JRG2 (Fe 360 B) Q: What is St DIN 2391 BK material? (asked by: dmcandrews@automaticstamp.com) A: Precision steel tubes, cold-finished/hard. Q: What is C.D.W. Boiler Tube? (asked by: montydude123@yahoo.com) A: Cold Drawn Welded Boiler Tube. Q: WHAT IS W.Nr. 1.4301? PLS TELL US IN EASY LANGUAGUE (asked...

Heat tint (temper) colours on stainless steel surfaces heated in air // Heat tint

Introduction The colour formed when stainless steel is heated, either in a furnace application or in the heat affected zone of welds, is dependent on several factors that are related to the oxidation resistance of the steel. The heat tint or temper colour formed is caused by the progressive thickening of the surface oxide layer and so, as temperature is increased, the colours change.   Oxidation resistance of stainless steels However, there are several factors that affect the degree of colour change and so there is no a single table of colour and temperature that represents all cases. The colours formed can only be used as an indication of the temperature to which the steel has been heated. Factors affecting the heat tint colours formed Steel composition The chromium content is the most important single factor affecting oxidation resistance. The higher the chromium, the more heat resistant the steel and so the development of the heat tint colou...