Seamless steel pipe is a tubular section or hollow cylinder, usually but not necessarily of circular cross-section, used mainly to convey substances which can flow — liquids and gases (fluids), slurries, powders and masses of small solids.
ASTM Seamless pipes
ASTM Standards can be purchased as a digital library subscription or individually from ASTM and other qualified standards providers.DIN/ EN steel pipe
DIN Standards are the results of work at national, European and/or international level.Steel Pipe & Tubing - All you need to know
Steel Pipe & Tubing seem similar at first blush and in fact they share many characteristics but they also have some important differences.
Definitions:
Steel Tubing is a hollow steel shape intended for structural purposes and made from carbon, stainless, or galvanized steel further divided as:
Mechanical Tubing is used in low stress applications such as fences, kitchens, restaurants, hospitals, solar panels and made with wall thicknesses up to 10 gauge.
Structural Tubing is for high stress structural application like bridges, buildings, roll cages, and underwater platforms with wall thickness from 3/16" and up. It is often referred to as Hollow Structural Sections or just the acronym HSS.
Pipe is a hollow structure that is intended to carry material such as liquids, gasses, or even solids. Its wall thickness is described by its Schedule and it is often broken down by type using the method of manufacturing it, either ERW or Seamless
How it's made:
Both Tubing and Pipe are manufactured by the first two methods below. The third is reserved for Tubing only.
Electric Resistance Welded, often abbreviated as ERW, is a process that uses specific machinery to shape the pipe and tubing. A continuous steel sheet is unwound from a coil and shaped using contoured rollers, forcing the edges together under pressure. These edges are then welded together by heating the material to over 2,000 degrees. After welding, the pipe or tubing is cut into the exact size needed.
Seamless Pipe (and tubing) is made by extruding a steel block or by drilling a solid steel bar. Next, the extrusion or the drilled steel bar is cold drawn through a dye to achieve the diameter and thickness needed. Because this process can cause mechanical hardening, sometimes the material is annealed and straightened as a final process. Seamless Pipe & Tubing is subdivided as:
Cold Drawn Seamless, or CDS, exhibits precise tolerances and a good surface finish.
Hot Finished Seamless, or HFS, has less critical tolerances and somewhat scaly finish and is not as strong as CDS.
For Drawn over Mandrel, or DOM tubing, the first stages of manufacturing are identical to ones used to make electric resistance welded tubing, but in the finishing stages the entire flash weld is taken out and the tube is cold drawn over a mandrel. A mandrel is a round object against which material can be forged or shaped. The cold drawn process provides the tube with better dimensional tolerances, improved surface finish and the strongest weld strength achievable.
Pipe Sizes:
Pipe Size is specified with two non-dimensional numbers:
- Nominal Pipe Size (NPS) for diameter based on inches.
- Schedule Number (SCH to specify the wall thickness of the Pipe.
Both the size and schedule are required to accurately specify a particular piece of pipe.
Nominal Pipe Size (NPS) is the current North American Set of standard sizes for pipes used for high and low pressures and temperatures. A further discussion of this is here.
Iron Pipe Size (IPS) was an earlier standard than NPS to designate the size. The size was the approximate inside diameter of the pipe in inches. Each pipe had one thickness, named (STD) Standard or (STD.WT.) Standard Weight. There were only 3 wall thicknesses at the time. In March 1927, the American Standards Association created a system that designated wall thickness based on smaller steps between sizes and introduced Nominal Pipe Size which replaced Iron Pipe Size.
Schedule Number for wall thickness ranges from SCH 5, 5S, 10, 10S, 20, 30, 40, 40S, 60, 80, 80S, 100, 120, 140, 160, STD, XS (Extra Strong) AND XXS (Double Extra Strong).
Pipe Grades:
A53 - ATSM A53 is a carbon steel alloy, used mostly for low pressure plumbing and comes in 3 types:
A53 Type F – Longitudinally furnace butt welded or continuous welded
A53 Type E – Longitudinally electric resistance welded (ERW)
A53 Type S - Seamless pipe
A106B – ASTM A 106 seamless pressure pipe, (ASME SA106 pipe) used in the construction of oil and gas refineries, power plants, and boilers.
A500B – Seamless carbon steel structural tubing in round, square and rectangular shapes. (HSS)
API 5L – Standards for pipe suitable for use in conveying gas, water, and oil in the natural gas and oil industries.
X52 – Welded pipe, widely used in petroleum and natural gas industries.
4130 – An alloy pipe often used int he Oil and Gas industries.
Other Pipe and Tubing Terms of Interest:
BPE – Black Plain End Pipe
BTC – Black Threaded & Coupled
GPE – Galvanized Plain End
GTC – Galvanized Threaded & Coupled
TOE – Threaded One End
Typical Pipe Coatings & Finishes:
Galvanized – Covered with a protective zinc coating on steel to prevent the material from rusting. The process can be hot-dip-galvanizing where the material is dipped in molten zinc or Electro-Galvanized where the steel sheet from which the pipe is made was galvanized during production by an electro-chemical reaction.
Uncoated – Uncoated Pipe
Black Coated – Coated with a dark colored iron-oxide
Red Primed – Red Oxide Primed used as a base coat for ferrous metals, gives iron and steel surfaces a layer of protection
Seamless pipes Execution Standard
We can makes and markets cold-drawn and hot rolled seamless steel pipes and cold-drawn special-section seamless pipes which are widely applied in the industries of petrochemical, boiler, automobile, mechanical, construction.
ASTM A106
Seamless Carbon Steel for High Temperature Service
ASTM A179
Seamless Cold-drawn Low-Carbon Steel Heat-Exchanger and Condenser Tubes
ASTM A192
Seamless Carbon Steel Boiler Tubes for High Pressure
ASTM A213
Seamless Ferritic and Austenitic Alloy Steel Boiler, Superheater and Heat-exchanger Tubes
ASTM A333
Standard Specification for Seamless and Welded Steel Pipe for Low-Temperature Service and Other Applications.
DIN 1629
Seamless Circular Tubes of Non Alloys Steels with Special Quality Requirements, it's main grades are St 37.0, St44.0, St52.0.
EN 10305
Are very popular in hydraulic and pneumatic power system, low-voltage circuit, power steering, fuel circuit and such.
DIN 2391
DIN 2391 standard specifies the Seamless steel tubes used forMechanical and Automobile.
ASTM A210
Seamless medium-carbon steel boiler and superheater tubes, including a minimum wall thickness of the security side.
Sunny Steel explains Seamless steel pipe
Seamless pipes are derived from solid steel that is in sheet or bar form and is formed into a solid round shape known as “billets” which are then heated and cast over a form such as a piercing rod to create a hollow tube or shell.
Material requirements
SMLS pipe is produced by heating a round billet of steel and then piercing it with a bullet-shaped piercer, over which the steel is stretched. This is followed by rolling and drawing to produce the desired dimensions. The final product is hydrostatically tested, inspected, coated if required, and stenciled with the specification. SMLS pipe is used in high-pressure, most critical locations and under most severe operating conditions. SMLS pipe is supplied according to ASTM Specifications A53, A106, A333, A312, A358, etc., and API 5L pipe
Seamless pipe Specification, standard and identification
- ASTM A106 for high temperature service
- DIN 17175 Material Comparison Tables
- ASTM A556M-88 cold drawn steel heater tubes
- ASTM A511/A511M Standard Specification
- ASTM A252-89 Standard Specification
- Schedule 40 (SCH 40)
- ST52 Steel Pipe
- Pressure pipe
- Standard for U bend Tubes
- Geological Drilling Pipe
- Coated pipe transportation
- Hot-rolled seamless steel pipe defects
- Pipe quenching and tempering
- Seamless steel pipe detection
- Seamless tube crack
- Hot rolled seamless steel pipe
- Hot forging and cold forging
- Precision seamless features and usage
- How to get rid of surface stains of cracking tube
- Steel pipe hydraulic pressure test equipment
- Seamless pipe extrusion
- Heat treatment defects
- Penstock Pipes for hydro power
- Seamless steel pipe with magnetic
- Seamless steel pipe pressure
- Seamless pipe flaring test
- Seamless steel pipe piercing
- Seamless pipe continuous casting
- Application of square seamless steel pipe
- Alloy seamless steel pipe
- GOST 633-80 Tubing and Couplings
- Precision Seamless Pipe
- Seamless welding process
- Seamless pipe defects and causes
- Welded and seamless wrought steel pipe
- Seamless pipe vs Welded pipe
- Quality testing for seamless pipe
- Piercing process
- China Mild steel pipe& Tubing
- Technical analysis of spiral tube
- Steel pipe hardness
- Pipe beveling
- Pipe cutting
- NDT equipment
- Pipe expansion process
- Seamless steel pipe piercing
- Pipe end processing
- Hot extruded steel pipe
- Line pipe
- Pipe end
- Roughness of steel pipes
- Characteristics of seamless pipe
- Characteristics of seamless steel pipe
- How to packing the steel pipes
- How to calculate a steel pipe theoretic weight
- Precision cold drawn steel tube production process
- Difference between galvanized pipe and seamless pipe
- Alloy tube (Alloy pipe) is a kind of seamless steel pipe
- Thermal molding manufacturing process
- Manufacturing Porcessing Specification for Seamless pipe
- Wall thickness tolerance of seamless steel pipe
- Drawing process of precision seamless tube
- Stress relief annealing of seamless steel pipe
- Hydrostatic testing and eddy current testing
- Difference between seamless and seam pipe
- Deoxidation iron requirements of seamless steel pipe
- Difference between seamless steel pipe and ordinary steel pipe
- Thick wall seamless steel tube production process
- Requirements on pipe billet for hot-rolled seamless tube
- Heat boiler seamless extrusion technology
- Seamless pipe heating temperature control
- Cold drawn steel tube advantages
- Cold drawn steel pipes pickling passivation
- Hot-rolled seamless steel pipe deformed processes
- Performance and characteristics of precision seamless pipe
- Seamless carbon steel pipe hardness test method
- Brinell hardness of carbon steel pipe
- The application and uses of carbon steel pipe
- The quality standards for seamless steel pipe
- Characteristics of welded steel pipe and seamless steel pipe
- The pipeline classification and grading
- Cooling in continuous casting
- Carbon steel tube mechanical properties
- Carbon steel pipes for cooling
- Carbon steel pipe rusting
- Difference between cold drawn tubes and cold rolled tubes
- Mechanical properties of seamless steel tubes
- Seamless pipe industry development patterns and trends
- Comparison for spiral pipes and seamless pipe
- Ultrasonic inspection of seamless pipes
- How To Distinguish Inferior Round Pipe
- Cold drawn seamless steel tube process
- Working pressure for long-distance oil and gas pipeline
- Cold drawn steel pipes Elongation and reduction of area
- Seamless steel pipe eddy current testing and magnetic flux leakage testing comparison
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