According to the detail and complexity you need, there are a couple of approaches to consider here. The best one would be to ignore the disagreements before and after the electrofusion welder works, but you can take it all the way and make your excess welding material that you can drop on every fitting you have. On my plant layouts, I always neglect them because we generally have plenty of space and disagreements can be ignored. A simple 10 meter pipe will integrate any variation from thermal expansion to welding. So unless you’re designing medical equipment or any such thing, I wouldn’t bother. Keep this as a reference if occasionally you have to do readings, or the client asks for these welds to be in position and neglect them the rest of the time. On the other hand, avoid grime if you require proper dimensions and BOM reports. Then you have to over-define the engagement dimensions so that the parts interfere and thereby reporting right route dimensions and pipe length, node to node. If you have to get all that precision and you have ample time, then I would recommend you to get the fusion fittings so that you can drop on every fitting. If you require fittings like tees, elbows, or anything else that has table and may go to a Content Center, then you should define the new planes driven by the fusion distance and then set your engagement to plane, so that you can drive the engagement for every fitting diameter separately. I suggest that you don’t change the pipe as you may use that pipe on different connection types such as jointed, welding, socket etc and it will mess things up. Carry out all the changes in the fittings and it will drive the pipe engagement also.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
January 2018
Categories |