I’ve seen a few shops refuse tanks in hydro but had generic inspection stickers off EBay. They wanted to see a shop name on it
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Do you have an example of a 51 year old steel 72 that exploded while in hydro and vis? None? Never? Do you know how high they pump those things? The guy I sold mine to told me they make great 100's.Just to clarify the OP has provided inaccurate information.
The tanks in question are 51 year old steel 72s . I wonder what other details my be in question
And that is maybe valid. But that isn't what's going on here. The cylinders had VIP stickers from the very shop that refused to fill them.I’ve seen a few shops refuse tanks in hydro but had generic inspection stickers off EBay. They wanted to see a shop name on it
And that is maybe valid. But that isn't what's going on here. The cylinders had VIP stickers from the very shop that refused to fill them.
Again welding cylinders operate at a much lower working pressure and I stand by my assertion that praxair or air gas have never provided me with a rental tank older than 20 years. Yes I have seen many privately owned tanks that predate the first world War. ]
Just to clarify the OP has provided inaccurate information.
The tanks in question are 51 year old steel 72s . I wonder what other details my be in question
Wow... my tanks are rotten, from craigslist
Dude.... what is wrong with you? I said the tanks are steels from 1970 and 1971, and so they are, but what if they are from 1961? or 1951?
Let's see the vip?
That's where vis comes in. It's a quick way to see if something has changed. Are you a trained visual inspector? If not, you should become. It's like $200 or so for the class. Even if you never vis a tank yourself (outside of class), it's worth it. The biggest surprise for me was how *MUCH* damage is perfectly fine. I don't have my book in front of me, but the amount of pitting that is allowed is *WAY* more than anyone's emotional "gut" would tell them is OK. Like I was shocked.
How do we *know* that tank is still safe? A hydro. A hydro does more than test the tank's ability to hold pressure. It does do that, but it's much pickier than that. It measures how much the tank *expands* while filling (which tells if the tank is being stressed at that level), and *contracts* when emptying (which tells if the tank is damaged by the process.) If the tank expands a certain amount (not too much and not too little!) we know the metal is acting like it's supposed to resisting the pressure. If the tank contracts back where it's supposed to, we know it's ready to do it again.
How do we know all of this? Centuries of metal knowledge and experience. We know if the tank stays in the defined range, it is fine. No matter 'how many times it's been filled, tumbled, etc. etc. etc.' The tank is still working as designed.