1、 ANSI/AWWA C207-13 (Revision of AWWA C207-07) AWWA Standard Effective date: June 1, 2013. First edition approved by AWWA Board of Directors June 17, 1955. This edition approved Jan. 20, 2013. Approved by American National Standards Institute March 26, 2013. 6666 West Quincy Avenue Advocacy Denver, C
2、O 80235-3098 Communications T 800.926.7337 Conferences www.awwa.org Education and TrainingScience and TechnologySections The Authoritative Resource on Safe Water Steel Pipe Flanges for Waterworks Service, Sizes 4 In. Through 144 In. (100 mm Through 3,600 mm) SM Copyright 2013 American Water Works As
3、sociation. All Rights Reserved. ii AWWA Standard This document is an American Water Works Association (AWWA) standard. It is not a specification. AWWA standards describe minimum requirements and do not contain all of the engineering and administrative information normally contained in specifi- catio
4、ns. The AWWA standards usually contain options that must be evaluated by the user of the standard. Until each optional feature is specified by the user, the product or service is not fully defined. AWWA publication of a standard does not constitute endorsement of any product or product type, nor doe
5、s AWWA test, certify, or approve any product. The use of AWWA standards is entirely voluntary. This standard does not supersede or take precedence over or displace any applicable law, regulation, or codes of any governmental authority. AWWA standards are intended to represent a consensus of the wate
6、r supply industry that the product described will provide satisfactory service. When AWWA revises or withdraws this standard, an official notice of action will be placed on the first page of the Official Notice section of Journal - American Water Works Association. The action becomes effective on th
7、e first day of the month following the month of Journal - American Water Works Association publication of the official notice. American National Standard An American National Standard implies a consensus of those substantially concerned with its scope and provisions. An American National Standard is
8、 intended as a guide to aid the manufacturer, the consumer, and the general public. The existence of an American National Standard does not in any respect preclude anyone, whether that person has approved the standard or not, from manufacturing, marketing, purchasing, or using products, processes, o
9、r procedures not conforming to the standard. Ameri- can National Standards are subject to periodic review, and users are cautioned to obtain the latest editions. Producers of goods made in conformity with an American National Standard are encouraged to state on their own responsibility in advertisin
10、g and promotional materials or on tags or labels that the goods are produced in conformity with particular American National Standards. Caution n oti Ce : The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) approval date on the front cover of this standard indicates completion of the ANSI approval proc
11、ess. This American National Standard may be revised or withdrawn at any time. ANSI procedures require that action be taken to reaffirm, revise, or withdraw this standard no later than five years from the date of ANSI approval. Purchasers of American National Standards may receive current information
12、 on all standards by calling or writ- ing the American National Standards Institute, 25 West 43rd Street, Fourth Floor, New York, NY 10036; (212) 642-4900, or emailing infoansi.org. ISBN-13, print: 978-1-58321-942-3 eISBN-13, electronic: 978-1-61300-231-5 ISBN-10, print: 1-58321-942-0 eISBN-10, elec
13、tronic: 1-61300-231-9 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information or retrieval system, except in the form of brief excerpts or quotations for review purpose
14、s, without the written permission of the publisher. Copyright 2013 by American Water Works Association Printed in USA Copyright 2013 American Water Works Association. All Rights Reserved. iii Committee Personnel The Steel Water Pipe Manufacturers Technical Advisory Committee (SWPMTAC) Task Group on
15、updating AWWA C207, which developed this standard, had the following personnel at the time: Mike Vanderbosch, Chair Brent Keil, Vice-Chair General Interest Members S.A. Arnaout, Hanson Pressure Pipe Inc., Dallas, Texas (AWWA) D. Acquistapace, Pacific Coast Flange, Mound House, Nev. (AWWA) H.H. Barda
16、kjian, Manufacturers Consultant, Glendale, Calif. (AWWA) E. Bird, Smith-Blair Inc., Texarkana, Texas (AWWA) S. Bradberry, Ford-Meter Box Co., Pell City, Ala. (AWWA) B. Card, Manufacturers Consultant, Sugar Hill, Ga. (AWWA) A. Collins, JCM Industries, Nash, Texas (AWWA) K. Couture, American SpiralWel
17、d Pipe Company, Birmingham, Ala. (AWWA) J. Crandall, Garlock, Palmyra, N.Y. (AWWA) D. Dechant, Manufacturers Consultant, Aurora, Colo. (AWWA) R. Deremiah, Hanson Pressure Pipe Inc., Dallas, Texas (AWWA) M. Fite, Pacific Coast Flange, Mound House, Nev. (AWWA) J. Forni, Jifco Inc., Livermore, Calif. (
18、AWWA) B.D. Keil, Northwest Pipe Company, Pleasant Grove, Utah (AWWA) G. Kohlbeck, Felker Brothers, Marshfield, Wis. (AWWA) M. Langenhan, Total Piping Solutions Inc., Olean, N.Y. (AWWA) J.L. Luka, American SpiralWeld Pipe Company, Columbia, S.C. (AWWA) J. Olmos, Ameron, Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. (AWWA
19、) B. Payne, CAB Inc., Nacogdoches, Texas (AWWA) D. Piontek, Total Piping Solutions Inc., Olean, N.Y. (AWWA) R.N. Satyarthi, Baker Coupling Company Inc., Los Angeles, Calif. (AWWA) D. Seals, JCM Industries, Nash, Texas (AWWA) K.L. Shaddix, Smith-Blair Inc., Texarkana, Texas (AWWA) C. Shelley, Victaul
20、ic, Atlanta, Ga. (AWWA) B.P. Simpson, American SpiralWeld Pipe Company, Birmingham, Ala. (AWWA) G. Tate, Viking Johnson, Hitchin, U.K. (AWWA) N. Thogersen, Romac Industries Inc., Bothell, Wash. (AWWA) Copyright 2013 American Water Works Association. All Rights Reserved. iv M. Vanderbosch, CAB Inc.,
21、Nacogdoches, Texas (AWWA) B. Vanderploeg, Consultant, Portland, Ore. (AWWA) The AWWA Standards Committee on Steel Pipe, which reviewed and approved this standard, had the following personnel at the time of approval: John H. Bambei Jr., Chair Dennis Dechant, Vice-Chair John Luka, Secretary General In
22、terest Members W.R. Brunzell, Brunzell Associates Ltd., Skokie, Ill. (AWWA) R.J. Card, Lockwood Andrews (2) the fact that cast valves and fittings * American National Standards Institute, 25 West 43rd Street, Fourth Floor, New York, NY 10036. Hill, H.O., et al., Fabricated Steel Ring Flanges for Wat
23、er Pipe Service for Low Pressure and Low Temperatures, Jour. AWWA 36(9):968 (September 1944). ASME International, Three Park Avenue, New York, NY 10016. Copyright 2013 American Water Works Association. All Rights Reserved. x will always have flanges of large outside diameter, which cannot be reduced
24、 because of the wall thickness of this equipment; (3) the need for interchangeability of equipment through the use of common drilling patterns; and (4) the fact that standards could be based on the successful usage and good service records of existing installations. A survey of water utility users i
25、ndicated that it was desirable to maintain the outside diameter and drilling of flanged fittings and valves given in ANSI/ AWWA C500, Gate Valves for Water and Sewage Systems, and ANSI/ASME B16.1, Cast Iron Pipe Flanges and Flanged Fittings (for classes 25, 125, 250, and 800). The committee decided
26、to follow this practice for sizes 6 in. through 48 in. (150 mm through 1,200 mm). In its extensive deliberations, the ASME/AWWA committee had available the results of special research and testing conducted by Armco Steel Corporation, Bethlehem Steel Company, and Taylor Forge and Pipe Works. The vari
27、ous design methods and test results were given in “Steel Ring Flanges for Steel Pipe,” Bulletin 47-A (1947), from the Ameri- can Rolling Mill Company, Middletown, Ohio. The design of flanges for waterworks service, with the results of the preceding report, was published in Journal AWWA in October 19
28、50, pp. 931944. A discussion in the paper by Taylor Forge, participants in the ASME/AWWA committee, states the reasons why a waterworks flange is not an ASME/Taylor Forge flange. Concern about high secondary stresses at the attachment, e.g., thick material to thin wall pipe, is covered here along wi
29、th the published “Design of Wye Branches” (Journal AWWA June 1955, appendix C, pp. 581630). Beginning in 2006, a special flange task group investigated development history of the flange dimensions found within the standard. After five years of research the task group reached the following conclusion
30、s. 1. There is no one exact stress-based design method that could reproduce the thickness values in the tables. However, it appears the ring flange thicknesses in this standard are based on using the LaTour-Barnard design procedure (ARMCO Bulletin 47-A, 1947) for ring flanges, which is based on ASME
31、 integral flange design procedures. 2. A current design analysis was performed based on the LaTour-Barnard proposed design method (which was based on physical tests on pipes with steel ring flanges) that demonstrated comparable results. It is worthwhile to mention that the original LaTour-Barnard de
32、sign procedure was a bending stress design methodology. 3. It has been established that flange thickness design based solely on a stress- based design procedure is incorrect. In Barnards October 1950 Journal AWWA paper he writes: “When the test results were analyzed, it became obvious that the design formulas used in establishing American Standard flange dimensions predicted fantastically high localized stresses even when the joint assembly performed satisfactorily. Since a method Copyright 2013 American Water Works Association. All Rights Reserved.