I would say that dropping a cylinder 3 feet onto concrete is far less extreme than this test.
BTW they do drop test planes. Or at least the closest analog practical. It's pretty hard to pick up 3/4 of a million pounds.
And a 100 year old steel cylinder would have only 20 test cycles if it made every hydro on time. Hardly extreme. Maybe my sarcasm meter is just off.
Anyway, that doesn't mean that DD's experience in failure analysis doesn't have any merit, simply that he is skeptical because he has seen "sure things" that turn out to be not so sure. He has determined that based on his experience, his tanks have a lifespan where his confidence in their performance falls below what he is comfortable with. No harm in that.
Now I don't agree with his retirement stance, I feel that the current testing of steel tanks by competent personnel is enough to keep them in service and catch any issues, but I know how I handle my tanks, and if there was ever a situation where I had any doubt, I would rectify that immediately. Things with unknown pedigree should rightly be subject to more scrutiny until their fitness for duty can be adequately surmised. The probability of a fluke accident will always exist.
BTW they do drop test planes. Or at least the closest analog practical. It's pretty hard to pick up 3/4 of a million pounds.
And a 100 year old steel cylinder would have only 20 test cycles if it made every hydro on time. Hardly extreme. Maybe my sarcasm meter is just off.
Anyway, that doesn't mean that DD's experience in failure analysis doesn't have any merit, simply that he is skeptical because he has seen "sure things" that turn out to be not so sure. He has determined that based on his experience, his tanks have a lifespan where his confidence in their performance falls below what he is comfortable with. No harm in that.
Now I don't agree with his retirement stance, I feel that the current testing of steel tanks by competent personnel is enough to keep them in service and catch any issues, but I know how I handle my tanks, and if there was ever a situation where I had any doubt, I would rectify that immediately. Things with unknown pedigree should rightly be subject to more scrutiny until their fitness for duty can be adequately surmised. The probability of a fluke accident will always exist.