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Manufacturing orifice meter tubes - Image Departments - Technical Tips

Manufacturing orifice meter tubes

2/15/2010

Honing in on low-cost, high accuracy and shorter cycle times.




The tool-feed system can be programmed to expand the honing tool to a pre-determined spindle load that is adjustable for any application – protecting the machine, tooling, and workers – allowing inexperienced operators to produce consistent results.Some unlucky jobs in oil-patch metalworking and fabrication just should not be manual anymore, but they are. Mainly because better machining solutions are priced and built for higher-level applications. ID finishing of orifice meter tubes is one of those jobs that falls through the cracks of being just low-tech enough that it is often still tackled with a die grinder and some form of homemade hone. In addition, when you see the workers with the die grinders and the homemade hones doing this work, you know you are watching the workers who drew the short straws that day.

Meter tubes, also called meter runs, are critical parts of the orifice meter, a device that has been used for more than a century to measure gas flows. More than a million orifice meters are used in the United States, often at custody transfer points to determine billing amounts. Thus, there is an expectation for high accuracy, and the meter tube plays a critical role here.

How it Works
The beauty of the orifice meter is that it has no moving parts. It consists of specified lengths of meter quality pipe on either side of an orifice plate, which may be several inches thick, with a precisely sized round hole in it. Gas flow through the pipeline is restricted slightly by the size of the orifice, and the pressure difference on either side of the orifice, measured by sensors in the meter tube immediately upstream and downstream, is used to compute fluid flow.

The length of meter tubes varies with the pipe diameter, beta ratio, and whether the tubes are upstream or downstream from the orifice plate. The beta ratio is the ratio of the orifice hole diameter to the pipe diameter, and the maximum is 0.75. Meter tubes can be less than an inch in diameter, and up to 24" or more, but the majority fall between those two extremes.

Accuracy of the orifice meter requires a uniform and consistent gas flow, which the meter tube aids. The meter run provides a length of straight pipe, precisely sized and finished, which allows swirl or turbulence in the gas stream to smooth out, producing an optimum velocity profile before and after the orifice. A flow conditioner is often used inside the meter run upstream from the orifice to help smooth out the flow within a shorter length of pipe. The maximum and minimum surface roughness on meter run ID’s are functions of the beta ratio and nominal diameter of the tube, but typically fall in a range of 100µ" to 300µ" Ra. It seems contradictory, but an excessively smooth surface can cause irregularities in the gas velocity.

AGA and API spell out detailed specifications for meter assemblies and components. Moreover, as long as the end product meets specification, manufacturers use meter-quality tubing or standard pipe for meter runs. The meter run itself is actually a fabrication with welded flanges or fittings on both ends, so manufacturers must eliminate evidence of the weld bead and restore a correct ID surface finish. This is a multi-step process. The pipe may first be chucked into a lathe to machine out most of the weld bead, but most of the time it is ground down with a die grinder using an aluminum oxide rock or carbide burr on a long rod. The final step is honing, often with a manually stroked, homemade hone of some kind.

The manual homemade hone usually consists of a drill motor with a shaft several meters long that mounts standard honing tools. The lack of power stroking, a clutch system, automatic tool feed, or load meter/control makes this a very physically demanding job (for manually stroking the part) that requires good tactile sense to find tight spots in the bore, as well as to avoid binding the tool in the pipe – a condition that industry wags find darkly humorous.

Manual hones have dominated in this application because it simply does not demand the power, precision, and higher cost of an industrial tube hone, but that has changed with the introduction of low-cost, automated tube hones that can use legacy tooling. The budget-priced HTA tube hone is the first in this new class – an all-electric, lean design, engineered specifically for lighter-duty applications where initial machine cost is critical. Able to mount ANR275-type tooling, the most widely used tools on manual hones, it is aimed at surfacing applications, where stock removal is in the range of 0.030" (0.76mm). The base price of the machine is less than $50,000 for a model with a 12ft (4m) stroke, and it is ideal for meter runs because it is automatically stroked, safer (clutched), more accurate, and pays for itself quickly in reduced cycle times, less operator fatigue, and fewer workman’s comp claims. It includes high-end features, such as Siemens drives and PLC-control with touch-screen HMI for setting all machine parameters, including stroke reversal point, spindle/stroking speeds, and crosshatch angle calculation – try that with a homemade machine.

The control features a load meter to determine areas of bore tightness, with capability for dwelling the tool in tight spots using a joystick. Another advanced capability includes automatic tool tensioning, set through the PLC. The tool-feed system can be programmed to expand the honing tool to a pre-determined spindle load that is adjustable for any application, protecting the machine, tooling, and workers, and allowing inexperienced operators to produce consistent results. This also optimizes the performance of the honing abrasive.

The machine is available for 6ft (2m) and 12ft (4m) part lengths, with bore IDs of 2.5" to 21" (63.5mm – 533mm) and maximum part OD of 24" (610mm), and part weights to 4,000 lb (1,818kg). An electronically controlled, 3hp (2.24kW), AC gear motor powers the spindle at 0 up to 300rpm, while the servo-driven stroking system has a speed range of 0 up to 90fpm (27.4mpm).

The HTA includes a 48-gallon (182L) coolant reservoir and paper-media coolant filtration unit. Set on casters for easy maintenance, the coolant tank tucks under the machine frame to conserve floor space.

Initial grinding on the weld bead is often still needed before honing, but the speed, consistency, and safety of meter tube production are greatly enhanced with this affordable honing solution.

Sunnen Products Co.
St. Louis, MO
sunnen.com