Steam Trap Testing & Maintenance
When steam traps leak or fail, it can be extremely costly in
terms of product quality, safety and energy loss. There are
differences in the way particular steam traps work (for example,
inverted bucket trap versus float and thermostatic trap). An
Ultraprobe makes it easy to sense these differences and readily
determine operating conditions while steam traps are on-line.
How Ultrasonic Leak Detection Works
Steam traps can either be defined as continuous (or modulating
continuous) flow and "on-off" (hold-discharge-hold) types. UE
Systems' Ultraprobe series helps an inspector readily identify the
trap operation in all types of environments.
Inspectors can choose from simple "point and shoot" analog
instruments to sophisticated digital instruments with on-board
non-contact infrared thermometers, sound analysis and data
logging features. UE Systems unique frequency tuning feature
enables users to literally tune into the trap sound and clearly
identify leaking or blowing traps.
Leak Detection Method
Inspection methods vary depending on the type of steam trap.
Therefore the primary rule is to know the details of your system,
for example the way a specific trap may work under specific
conditions (heavy load vs. light load). In order to determine trap
condition such as leakage or blockage: touch upstream of the steam
trap and reduce the sensitivity of the instrument until the
intensity indicator reads about 50% of scale. If the instrument has
frequency tuning, you may also use this feature to hear the trap
sound quality more clearly. Simply tune the frequency (try 25 kHz)
until the sound you would expect to hear becomes clear. It's that
simple.
Next, touch downstream of the steam trap and observe the
intensity levels and sound patterns. A typical "on-off" trap should
have a pattern of close-discharge-close. If the sound heard is a
continuous rushing sound, it is most likely stuck open and wasting
steam. If the sound level is low (as compared to similar
traps under the same conditions), the trap is closed, blocked or
not in service.
Ultrasonic steam trap inspection is considered a "positive" test
in that an operator can instantly identify sound quality and
intensity differentials and thereby determine operating condition
accurately.
A steam trap troubleshooting guide is available from the
factory upon request.