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2021-06-24_REVISION - M2012032
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2021-06-24_REVISION - M2012032
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Last modified
6/24/2021 1:16:54 PM
Creation date
6/24/2021 12:14:09 PM
Metadata
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Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
M2012032
IBM Index Class Name
Revision
Doc Date
6/24/2021
Doc Name
Adequacy Review Response #3
From
Ouray Silver Mines, Inc.
To
DRMS
Type & Sequence
TR14
Email Name
LJW
Media Type
D
Archive
No
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(16) FOREWORD <br /> Responding to evident need and at the request of The American Society of Mechanical Engineers, <br /> the American Standards Association initiated Project B31 in March 1926, with ASME as sole <br /> administrative sponsor. The breadth of the field involved required that membership of the <br /> Sectional Committee be drawn from some 40 engineering societies, industries, government <br /> bureaus,institutes, and trade associations. <br /> Initial publication in 1935 was as the American Tentative Standard Code for Pressure Piping. <br /> Revisions from 1942 through 1955 were published as American Standard Code for Pressure <br /> Piping, ASA B31.1. It was then decided to publish as separate documents the various industry <br /> Sections, beginning with ASA B31.8-1955, Gas Transmission and Distribution Piping Systems. <br /> The first Petroleum Refinery Piping Code Section was designated ASA B31.3-1959. ASA B31.3 <br /> revisions were published in 1962 and 1966. <br /> In 1967-1969, the American Standards Association became first the United States of America <br /> Standards Institute, then the American National Standards Institute. The Sectional Committee <br /> became American National Standards Committee B31 and the Code was renamed the American <br /> National Standard Code for Pressure Piping. The next B31.3 revision was designated <br /> ANSI B31.3-1973. Addenda were published through 1975. <br /> A draft Code Section for Chemical Plant Piping, prepared by Section Committee B31.6, was <br /> ready for approval in 1974. It was decided,rather than have two closely related Code Sections, <br /> to merge the Section Committees and develop a joint Code Section, titled Chemical Plant and <br /> Petroleum Refinery Piping. The first edition was published as ANSI B31.3-1976. <br /> In this Code, responsibility for piping design was conceptually integrated with that for the <br /> overall processing facility, with safeguarding recognized as an effective safety measure. Three <br /> categories of Fluid Service were identified,with a separate Chapter for Category M Fluid Service. <br /> Coverage for nonmetallic piping was introduced. New concepts were better defined in five <br /> Addenda,the fourth of which added Appendix M,a graphic aid to selection of the proper Fluid <br /> Service category. <br /> The Standards Committee was reorganized in 1978 as a Committee operating under ASME <br /> procedures with ANSI accreditation.It is now the ASME Code for Pressure Piping,B31 Committee. <br /> Section committee structure remains essentially unchanged. <br /> The second edition of Chemical Plant and Petroleum Refinery Piping was compiled from the <br /> 1976 Edition and its five Addenda,with nonmetal requirements editorially relocated to a separate <br /> Chapter. Its new designation was ANSI/ASME B31.3-1980. <br /> Section Committee B31.10 had a draft Code for Cryogenic Piping ready for approval in 1981. <br /> Again,it was decided to merge the two Section Committees and develop a more inclusive Code <br /> with the same title. The work of consolidation was partially completed in the <br /> ANSI/ASME B31.3-1984 Edition. <br /> Significant changes were made in Addenda to the 1984 Edition:integration of cryogenic require- <br /> ments was completed; a new stand-alone Chapter on high-pressure piping was added; and <br /> coverage of fabrication, inspection, testing, and allowable stresses was reorganized. The new <br /> Edition was redesignated as ASME/ANSI B31.3-1987 Edition. <br /> Addenda to the subsequent five Editions, published at three-year intervals, were primarily <br /> used to keep the Code up to date. New Appendices were added, however, on requirements for <br /> bellows expansion joints, estimating service life, submittal of Inquiries, aluminum flanges, and <br /> quality control in the 1990, 1993, 1999, and 2002 Editions, all designated as ASME B31.3. <br /> In a program to clarify the application of all Sections of the Code for Pressure Piping,changes <br /> were made in the Introduction and Scope statements of the 1996 Edition,and its title was changed <br /> to Process Piping. <br /> Under direction of ASME Codes and Standards management, metric units of measurement <br /> were emphasized. With certain exceptions, Sl metric units were listed first in the 1996 Edition <br /> and were designated as the standard. Instructions for conversion were given where metric data <br />
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