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High-Voltage Electrical Inspection of Pipeline Coatings - Item No. 21010

contributor authorNACE - NACE International
date accessioned2017-09-04T17:08:55Z
date available2017-09-04T17:08:55Z
date copyright08/01/1974 (R 2011)
date issued2011
identifier otherYLPNUEAAAAAAAAAA.pdf
identifier urihttp://yse.yabesh.ir/std;jsessionid=1B52F38963DAA552FFB5415FBAED6017/handle/yse/132420
description abstractGeneral
Electrical inspection (holiday detection) is a test of the continuity of a protective coating. This type of inspection does not provide information concerning coating resistance, bond, physical characteristics, or the overall quality of the coating, nor is it intended to do so. It detects bubble or blister-type voids, cracks, thin spots, and foreign inclusions or contaminants in the coating that are of such size, number, or conductivity as to significantly lower the electrical resistance or dielectric strength of the coating.
An initial electrical inspection, performed as soon after the application of the coating as practical, serves to check the materials and the application procedures. A final coating inspection, performed before lowering-in operations, will disclose any defect or damage (except disbonding) that has occurred during the construction period.
This standard presents acknowledged techniques for the use of holiday detectors currently used on pipeline coatings and presents a table of minimum testing voltages for various coating thicknesses. These minimum testing voltages do not apply to thin-film coatings (i.e., coating materials usually applied by a fusion-bonding process). Thin-film pipeline coatings are generally applied to a dry film thickness less than 0.5 mm (20 mil).
languageEnglish
titleNACE SP0274num
titleHigh-Voltage Electrical Inspection of Pipeline Coatings - Item No. 21010en
typestandard
page8
statusActive
treeNACE - NACE International:;2011
contenttypefulltext


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