CMLs Showing Equipment Growth

Ever plot CML thickness and notice your piping or equipment growing over time?

This “reverse corrosion” phenomenon sweeping inspection departments can defile your data and give false impressions of real metal loss and corrosion rates.

How common are growth readings for CMLs? VERY. In fact, during Jeff Goldstein, P.E.’s latest webinar “Rethinking Piping Inspection Locations” he discussed a site with 12,000 of 40,000 CML readings showing growth over the last CML reading. That is 30% of readings showing a growth rate instead of an expected metal loss/corrosion rate. What you decide to do with these growth readings will have a big impact on maintenance and inspection plans moving forward. 

Maybe there was an undocumented piping or equipment replacement. 

Maybe the measuring device was not properly calibrated when the operator took CML readings. 

Maybe the CML readings were entered into software or spreadsheets incorrectly. 

Maybe the CML readings were taken in the wrong location.

Please spend some time trying to understand what is causing growth readings and act accordingly.

Previous
Previous

Stop Designing with Deadlegs

Next
Next

Storage Tanks Floating During Storms