Overexpanded by 2 PSI is nonsensical.
Since I don't understand the test, can you elaborate a little?
Thanks.
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Overexpanded by 2 PSI is nonsensical.
As I understand it, for a hydro test they pump with water (for safety, since it can't compress. If a tank pops with air it goes boom, with water it just leaks) and it stretches a little (and they measure how much). When they relieve the pressure, they measure how much it relaxes back (by measuring the water that comes back out). With those, they get the elastic and plastic expansion numbers on it and that determines pass or fail. PSI is a measurement of pressure, not volume, so it doesn't compute as a expansion number.Since I don't understand the test, can you elaborate a little?
Thanks.
I believe I may have been mistaken on measuring the water inside... the measurement of expansion may be done by measuring the water level rise and fall in a water jacket around it.
Regards roundout procedure, if I get that right it's that the coating method used on those tanks can put them slightly out of round at rest. Which distorts the internal volume (reduces it). So the round out pressure puts it back into a true cylinder so they get an accurate measurement of expansion.
Of course, my advice is worth what you payed for it! lol. I could be off a little on the details, but this is my over all understanding of it.
Respectfully,
James
Your hydro facility sounds like most fire extinguisher places in my area. I take my beer CO2 tanks there, but they've screwed me on scuba cylinders. I have PST and worthingtons which will never see a fire extinguisher hydro place.
When you drop galvanized tanks off for hydro, you need to ask the person you give your tanks to; "Do you do 90% roundout?".
Then, look that person in the eyes. If they look at you funny, have a puzzled look, blank stare..... Walk out.
90% roundout is really just a prestretch of the tank done before actual hydro. This is the exact worthington criteria for rejection:
For hot-dip galvanized cylinders, in lieu of the 10% permanent expansion rejection criteria detailed in §180.205, cylinders are to be condemned if the elastic expansion exceeds the REE that is marked on the cylinder.
When you pick up the tank, you can ask them what measured elastic expansion (EE) was. EE and relative elastic expansion (REE) are in cubic centimeters, not PSI, so it sounds like that shop might not know what they are doing.
My galvanized tanks' EE have never even got close to their REEs.