LINEAR EXPANSION OF STEAM PIPES.
Wrought iron is said to expand 1⁄150,000 of an inch for each degree of heat communicated to it; to make the calculation take the length of the pipe in inches, multiply it by the number of degrees between the normal temperature it is required to attain when heated, and divide this by 150,000. Suppose the pipe is 100 feet long, and its temperature zero, and it is desired to use it to carry steam at 100 pounds pressure—equal to a temperature of 338 degrees—multiply 100 feet by 12 to reduce it to inches, and by 338, the difference in temperature; divide this by 150,000, and the result will be 2.7 inches, which would be the amount of play that would be required, in this instance, in the expansion joint.
Figs. 153 and 154.
[Figs. 153 and 154] show a properly designed arrangement of steam connections for a battery of boilers. To the nozzles, risers are attached by means of flanges, and from the upper ends of these risers pipes are led horizontally backwards into the main steam pipe. In this horizontal pipe, the stop valves, one to each boiler, are placed. These valves should have flanged ends as shown, so that they may be easily removed, if repairs become necessary, without disturbing any other portion of the piping. Unlike the engraving, the valve C should be arranged in another position: the stem should, of course, be horizontal or nearly so, in order that the valve may not trap water.
By this arrangement it will be seen that the movements of the boilers and the piping itself are compensated for by the spring of the pipes. The height of the risers should never be less than three feet, and when there are eight or ten boilers in one battery, they should be, if room permits, six to eight feet high, and the horizontal pipes leading to main steam pipe should be ten or twelve feet or more.
THE STEAM LOOP.
This is an attachment to a steam boiler, designed to return water of condensation. It invariably consists of three parts, viz.: the “riser,” the “horizontal” and the “drop leg,” and usually of pipes varying in size from three-fourth inch to two inches. Each part has its special and well-defined duties to perform, and their proportions and immediate relations decide and make up the capacity and strength of the system. It is, in fact, nothing but a simple return pipe leading from the source of condensation to the boiler, and, beyond this mere statement, it is hardly possible to explain it; it has, like the injector and the pulsometer pump, been called a paradox.
The range of application of the steam loop practically covers every requirement for the return of water of condensation. If used in connection with a steam engine, pump, etc., a separator of any simple form is connected in the steam pipe as close as possible to the throttle. From the bottom of the separator the loop is led back to the boiler, and the circulation maintained by it will dry the steam before it is admitted to the cylinder.