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Sentinel holes

Sentinel holes are used as a simple form of thickness testing. A small hole of about I - 6 mm diameter is drilled from the outer wall of the piece of equipment to within a distance from the inner wall (in contact with the corrodent) equal to the corrosion allowance on the equipment (Fig. 9.11). The technique has been used even in cases where the corrodent spontaneously ignites on contact with the atmosphere. The philosophy is that it is better to have a little fire than a big one which would follow a major leak from corrosion through the wall. When the sentinel hole begins to weep fluid a tapered plug is hammered into the hole and remedial maintenance planned. Siting the sentinel holes is somewhat speculative although erosion at the outside of a pipe bend is often monitored in this way. [Pg.30]

Fig. 9.11 Sentinel hole method of monitoring corrosion of a pipe wall... Fig. 9.11 Sentinel hole method of monitoring corrosion of a pipe wall...
The techniques used for monitoring corrosion in a process plant are (i) visual inspection (ii) weight loss coupons (iii) electrical resistance probes (iv) measurement of corrosion potential (v) linear polarization measurement (vi) hydrogen probes (vii) thickness measurement and crack detection (viii) visual inspection (ix) sentinel holes. [Pg.299]

Sentinel holes Indicates when corrosion allowance has been consumed Useful in preventing catastrophic failure due to erosion at pipe bends, etc. Leaking hole indicates corrosion allowance has been consumed Infrequent... [Pg.250]


See other pages where Sentinel holes is mentioned: [Pg.252]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.215]    [Pg.215]    [Pg.252]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.215]    [Pg.215]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.250 , Pg.252 ]




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