[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 49, Volume 2]

[Revised as of October 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 49CFR178.60]



[Page 861-865]

 

                        TITLE 49--TRANSPORTATION

 

   CHAPTER I--PIPELINE AND HAZARDOUS MATERIALS SAFETY ADMINISTRATION, 

                      DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

 

PART 178_SPECIFICATIONS FOR PACKAGINGS--Table of Contents

 

                 Subpart C_Specifications for Cylinders

 

Sec. 178.60  Specification 8AL steel cylinders with porous fillings 

for acetylene.



    (a) Type and service pressure. A DOT 8AL cylinder is a seamless 

steel cylinder with a service pressure of 250 psig. However, the 

attachment of heads by welding or by brazing by dipping process and a 

welded circumferential body seam is authorized. Longitudinal seams are 

not authorized.

    (b) Authorized steel. The authorized steel is as specified in table 

I of appendix A to this part.

    (c) Identification of steel. Material must be identified by any 

suitable method except that plates and billets for hot-drawn cylinders 

must be marked with heat number.

    (d) Manufacture. Cylinders must be manufactured using equipment and 

processes adequate to ensure that each cylinder produced conforms to the 

requirements of this subpart. No defect is permitted that is likely to 

weaken the finished cylinder appreciably. A reasonably smooth and 

uniform surface



[[Page 862]]



finish is required. Welding procedures and operators must be qualified 

in accordance with CGA Pamphlet C-3 (IBR, see Sec. 171.7 of this 

subchapter).

    (e) Footrings. Exposed bottom welds on cylinders over 18 inches long 

must be protected by footrings.

    (f) Welding or brazing. Welding or brazing for any purpose 

whatsoever is prohibited except as follows:

    (1) The attachment to the tops or bottoms of cylinders of neckrings, 

footrings, handlers, bosses, pads, and valve protecting rings is 

authorized provided that such attachments and the portion of the 

container to which they are attached are made of weldable steel, the 

carbon content of which may not exceed 0.25 percent.

    (2) Heat treatment is not required after welding or brazing weldable 

low carbon parts to attachments, specified in paragraph (f)(1) of this 

section, of similar material which have been previously welded or brazed 

to the top or bottom of cylinders and properly heat treated, provided 

such subsequent welding or brazing does not produce a temperature in 

excess of 400 [deg]F in any part of the top or bottom material.

    (g) Wall thickness; wall stress. The wall thickness/wall stress of 

the cylinder must conform to the following:

    (1) The calculated wall stress at 750 psi may not exceed 35,000 psi, 

or one-half of the minimum ultimate strength of the steel as determined 

in paragraph (l) of this section, whichever value is the smaller. The 

measured wall thickness may not include galvanizing or other protective 

coating.

    (i) Calculation of wall stress must be made by the formula:



S = [P(1.3D2 + 0.4d2)] / (D2 - 

    d2)



Where:



S = wall stress in pounds psi;

P = 750 psig (minimum test pressure);

D = outside diameter in inches;

d = inside diameter in inches.



    (ii) Either D or d must be calculated from the relation D = d + 2t, 

where t = minimum wall thickness.

    (2) Cylinders with a wall thickness less than 0.100 inch, the ratio 

of straight side wall length to outside diameter may not exceed 3.5.

    (3) For cylinders having outside diameter over 5 inches, the minimum 

wall thickness must be 0.087 inch.

    (h) Heat treatment. Each cylinder must be uniformly and properly 

heat treated, prior to tests, by any suitable method in excess of 1100 

[deg]F. Heat treatment must be accomplished after all forming and 

welding operations, except that when brazed joints are used, heat 

treatment must follow any forming and welding operations but may be done 

before, during, or after the brazing operations. Liquid quenching is not 

authorized.

    (i) Openings. Standard taper pipe threads required in all openings. 

The length of the opening may not be less than as specified for American 

Standard pipe threads; tapped to gauge; clean cut, even, and without 

checks.

    (j) Hydrostatic test. Each cylinder must successfully withstand a 

hydrostatic test as follows:

    (1) The test must be by water-jacket, or other suitable method, 

operated so as to obtain accurate data. The pressure gauge must permit 

reading to an accuracy of 1 percent. The expansion gauge must permit 

reading of total expansion to an accuracy of either 1 percent or 0.1 

cubic centimeter.

    (2) Pressure must be maintained for at least 30 seconds and 

sufficiently longer to ensure complete expansion. Any internal pressure 

applied after heat-treatment and previous to the official test may not 

exceed 90 percent of the test pressure.

    (3) Permanent volumetric expansion may not exceed 10 percent of 

total volumetric expansion at test pressure.

    (4) One cylinder out of each lot of 200 or less must be 

hydrostatically tested to at least 750 psig. Cylinders not so tested 

must be examined under pressure of between 500 and 600 psig and show no 

defect. If a hydrostatically tested cylinder fails, each cylinder in the 

lot may be hydrostatically tested and those passing are acceptable.

    (k) Leakage test. Cylinders with bottoms closed in by spinning must 

be leakage tested by setting the interior air or gas pressure at not 

less than the service pressure. Any cylinder that leaks must be 

rejected.

    (l) Physical test. A physical test must be conducted as follows;



[[Page 863]]



    (1) The test is required on 2 specimens cut longitudinally from 1 

cylinder or part thereof taken at random out of each lot of 200 or less, 

after heat treatment.

    (2) Specimens must conform to a gauge length of 8 inches with a 

width not over 1\1/2\ inches, a gauge length 2 inches with a width not 

over 1\1/2\ inches, or a gauge length at least 24 times thickness with a 

width not over 6 times thickness is authorized when a cylinder wall is 

not over \3/16\ inch thick.

    (3) The yield strength in tension must be the stress corresponding 

to a permanent strain of 0.2 percent of the gauge length. The following 

conditions apply:

    (i) The yield strength must be determined by either the ``offset'' 

method or the ``extension under load'' method as prescribed in ASTM E 8 

(IBR, see Sec. 171.7 of this subchapter).

    (ii) In using the ``extension under load'' method, the total strain 

(or ``extension under load'') corresponding to the stress at which the 

0.2 percent permanent strain occurs may be determined with sufficient 

accuracy by calculating the elastic extension of the gauge length under 

appropriate load and adding thereto 0.2 percent of the gauge length. 

Elastic extension calculations must be based on an elastic modulus of 

30,000,000. In the event of controversy, the entire stress-strain 

diagram must be plotted and the yield strength determined from the 0.2 

offset.

    (iii) For the purpose of strain measurement, the initial strain must 

be set while the specimen is under a stress of 12,000 psi, the strain 

indicator reading being set at the calculated corresponding strain.

    (iv) Cross-head speed of the testing machine may not exceed \1/8\ 

inch per minute during yield strength determination.

    (m) Elongation. Physical test specimens must show at least a 40 

percent elongation for a 2 inch gauge length or at least a 20 percent 

elongation in other cases. Except that these elongation percentages may 

be reduced numerically by 2 for 2 inch specimens and 1 in other cases 

for each 7,500 psi increment of tensile strength above 50,000 psi to a 

maximum of four such increments.

    (n) Weld tests. Specimens taken across the circumferentially welded 

seam must be cut from one cylinder taken at random from each lot of 200 

or less cylinders after heat treatment and must pass satisfactorily the 

following tests:

    (1) Tensile test. A specimen must be cut from one cylinder of each 

lot of 200 or less, or welded test plate. The specimen must be taken 

from across the major seam and must be prepared and tested in accordance 

with and must meet the requirements of CGA Pamphlet C-3. Should this 

specimen fail to meet the requirements, specimens may be taken from two 

additional cylinders or welded test plates from the same lot and tested. 

If either of the latter specimens fail to meet the requirements, the 

entire lot represented must be rejected.

    (2) Guided bend test. A root bend test specimen must be cut from the 

cylinder or welded test plate, used for the tensile test specified in 

paragraph (n)(1) of this section. Specimens must be prepared and tested 

in accordance with and must meet the requirements of CGA Pamphlet C-3.

    (3) Alternate guided-bend test. This test may be used and must be as 

required by CGA Pamphlet C-3. The specimen must be bent until the 

elongation at the outer surface, adjacent to the root of the weld, 

between the lightly scribed gage lines-a to b, must be at least 20 

percent, except that this percentage may be reduced for steels having a 

tensile strength in excess of 50,000 psi, as provided in paragraph (m) 

of this section.

    (o) Rejected cylinders. Reheat treatment of rejected cylinders is 

authorized. Subsequent thereto, cylinders must pass all prescribed tests 

to be acceptable. Repair by welding is authorized.

    (p) Porous filling. (1) Cylinders must be filled with a porous 

material in accordance with the following:

    (i) The porous material may not disintegrate or sag when wet with 

solvent or when subjected to normal service;

    (ii) The filling material must be uniform in quality and free of 

voids, except that a well drilled into the filling



[[Page 864]]



material beneath the valve is authorized if the well is filled with a 

material of such type that the functions of the filling material are not 

impaired;

    (iii) Overall shrinkage of the filling material is authorized if the 

total clearance between the cylinder shell and filling material, after 

solvent has been added, does not exceed \1/2\ of 1 percent of the 

respective diameter or length but not to exceed \1/8\ inch, measured 

diametrically and longitudinally;

    (iv) The clearance may not impair the functions of the filling 

material;

    (v) The installed filling material must meet the requirements of CGA 

C-12 (IBR, see Sec. 171.7 of this subchapter); and

    (vi) Porosity of filling material may not exceed 80 percent except 

that filling material with a porosity of up to 92 percent may be used 

when tested with satisfactory results in accordance with CGA Pamphlet C-

12.

    (2) When the porosity of each cylinder is not known, a cylinder 

taken at random from a lot of 200 or less must be tested for porosity. 

If the test cylinder fails, each cylinder in the lot may be tested 

individually and those cylinders that pass the test are acceptable.

    (3) For filling that is molded and dried before insertion in 

cylinders, porosity test may be made on sample block taken at random 

from material to be used.

    (4) The porosity of the filling material must be determined; the 

amount of solvent at 70 [deg]F for a cylinder:

    (i) Having shell volumetric capacity above 20 pounds water capacity 

(nominal) may not exceed the following:



------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                     Maximum acetone

           Percent porosity of filler             solvent percent shell

                                                    capacity by volume

------------------------------------------------------------------------

90 to 92.......................................                     43.4

87 to 90.......................................                     42.0

83 to 87.......................................                     40.0

80 to 83.......................................                     38.6

75 to 80.......................................                     36.2

70 to 75.......................................                     33.8

65 to 70.......................................                     31.4

------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (ii) Having volumetric capacity of 20 pounds or less water capacity 

(nominal), may not exceed the following:



------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                     Maximum acetone

           Percent porosity of filler             solvent percent shell

                                                    capacity by volume

------------------------------------------------------------------------

90 to 92.......................................                     41.8

83 to 90.......................................                     38.5

80 to 83.......................................                     37.1

75 to 80.......................................                     34.8

70 to 75.......................................                     32.5

65 to 70.......................................                     30.2

------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (q) Tare weight. The tare weight is the combined weight of the 

cylinder proper, porous filling, valve, and solvent, but without 

removable cap.

    (r) Duties of inspector. In addition to the requirements of Sec. 

178.35, the inspector shall--

    (1) Certify chemical analyses of steel used, signed by manufacturer 

thereof; also verify by check analyses, of samples taken from each heat 

or from 1 out of each lot of 200 or less plates, shells, or tubes used.

    (2) Verify compliance of cylinder shells with all shell 

requirements, inspect inside before closing in both ends, verify heat 

treatment as proper; obtain all samples for all tests and for check 

analyses, witness all tests; verify threads by gauge, report volumetric 

capacity and minimum thickness of wall noted.

    (3) Report percentage of each specified alloying element in the 

steel. Prepare report on manufacture of steel shells in form prescribed 

in Sec. 178.35. Furnish one copy to manufacturer and three copies to 

the company that is to complete the cylinders.

    (4) Determine porosity of filling and tare weights; verify 

compliance of marking with prescribed requirements; obtain necessary 

copies of steel shell reports prescribed in paragraph (b) of this 

section; and furnish complete test reports required by this 

specification to the person who has completed the manufacturer of the 

cylinders and, upon request, to the purchaser. The test reports must be 

retained by the inspector for fifteen years from the original test date 

of the cylinder.

    (s) Marking. (1) Tare weight of cylinder, in pounds and ounces, must 

be marked on the cylinder.

    (2) Cylinders, not completed, when delivered must each be marked for 

identification of each lot of 200 or less.

    (3) Markings must be stamped plainly and permanently in locations in 

accordance with the following:



[[Page 865]]



    (i) On shoulders and top heads not less than 0.087 inch thick; or

    (ii) On neck, valve boss, valve protection sleeve, or similar part 

permanently attached to the top end of cylinder; or

    (iii) On a plate of ferrous material attached to the top of the 

cylinder or permanent part thereof; the plate must be at least \1/16\ 

inch thick, and must be attached by welding, or by brazing at a 

temperature of at least 1,100 [deg]F throughout all edges of the plate. 

Sufficient space must be left on the plate to provide for stamping at 

least four (4) retest dates.



[Amdt. 178-114, 61 FR 25942, May 23, 1996, as amended at 66 FR 45386, 

45388, Aug. 28, 2001; 67 FR 51654, Aug. 8, 2002; 68 FR 75748, 75749, 

Dec. 31, 2003]