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Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Powercrete J Application Instructions

How To Apply Powercrete J





Power crete J

The "Standard Kit" contains an installation guide, SDS and a 2 part epoxy coating (Powercrete J) in premeasured kits.  Part A (the large container) is the base and Part B (smaller container) is the curing agent.  
Power crete J
Insure that surfaces are clean of grease, oils, salts and other contaminents.  If necessary, use Acetone, MEK or other suitable solvent.  Perform cleaning when pipe is 3C above the dew point.

powercrete J
Blast clean surfaces to be coated with Powercrete J to a near white SIS Sa 2 1/2 or white SSPC-SP 5 using particle blasting.  Sweep blast adjacent FBE or CTE coating 50mm to either side of the cutback (the bare steel area).

Power crete J
A 70 to 80 micron (2.7 to 3 mil) surface profile is ideal.  Burnishing or polishing must be avoided.  Surface preparation can be controlled using surface profile tape.  Dry surface and insure ideal surface preparation. 
Power crete J
While not always necessary when applying Powercrete J, preheating can be useful just prior to application:  A: To eliminate moisture, preheat the cutback area to approximately 40C and B: to accelerate curing, preheat the cutback area to approximately 90C.

Power crete J
Warm parts A & B of the Powercrete J to 20C and mix by pouring all of part B into part A.  Thoroughly scrape container and lid of B.  Slowly begin mixing to avoid introducing air into the mixture.

Power crete J
Use a mixing speed when mixing the Powercrete J that uniformly blends the 2 parts, but does not create a vortex in the mixture or spillage.

Power crete J
 Reconfirm that the temperature is above 10C and 3C above the dew point.  Then slowly pour the Powercrete J (mixed) onto the pipe. 

Power crete J
 Use trowels, brush or roller to apply required minimum thickness of coating to the field joint.  Cover at least 50mm of the adjacent mainline coating. 

Power crete J
 Use a wet film gauge to measure that the desired thickness of Powercrete J has been achieved.  Double check around the weld to insure minimum desired thickness. 

Power crete J
 The curing rate for the Powercrete J will vary according to pipe and ambient application temperature.  Refer to a curing chart for Powercrete J to determine when to perform a Shore D check. 





Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Powercrete J and Powercrete R65/F1 Now In Stock

In Stock Powercrete Shipping

     Joint Specialists is proud to announce that we are now stocking and shipping (same day shipping on Powercrete) Powercrete J and Powercrete F1 in multiple different sizes. 

     Powercrete J is a solvent free epoxy polymer concrete mainline pipeline coating operating at a maximum temperature of 60C (140F).  Used for pipeline repairs and rehabilitation projects and other other steel structures, Powercrete J is used as a girth weld coating for FBE and CTE coated pipelines. 

  • 100% Solids Epoxy
  • no VOC
  • Exceeds AWWA C210
  • Excellent adhesion to FBE and CTE
  • Excellent Mechanical Properties
  • Suitable for pipeline operating temperatures to 60C
  • Exceptional adhesion and soil stress resistance on bare steel
  • Can be sprayed and hand applied up to 20 mils in one multi pass layer
General Application Procedure for Powercrete:
  • Area to be coated with Powercrete has to be clean, dry and free from oil, grease and dust.  All contamination that could interfere with the adhesion of the coating has to be removed according to SSPC-SP1.
  • Prior and during surface preparation, the temperature of the substrate must be at least 5F above the dew point.
  • Abrasive blasting should be to minimum SA 2 1/2 (SSPC-SP10/Nace2)
  • 3-4 mil recommended surface profile.
General Powercrete J Information:
  • Powercrete J Color:  Brown
  • Powercrete J Finish:  Glossy
  • Powercrete J is self priming
  • Coverage rate for Powercrete J is 81.5 square feet per gallon at 20 mils thickness
  • 100% Solid
  • Flash point of Powercrete J: >200F
  • Mixing ratio of Powercrete J: 4.8: 1 (a to b)
  • Potlife of Powercrete J is 20 minutes at 77F
  • Powercrete J Gel Time 30 minutes
  • Dry time of Powercrete J 1.7 hours
  • 65 Shore D is generally met within 4.2 hours
  • 75 Shore D is generally met in 5.2 hours (this is a full cure of Powercrete J)
Kit Sizes for Powercrete J:
20 pound Kit (1.32 gallons)
10 pound kit Powercrete J (.66 gallons)
5 pound kit Powercrete J (.26 gallons)
2 pound kit Powercrete J (.13 gallons)

 

Monday, April 25, 2016

DIRAX ULTRATEC

DIRAX for Corrosion Protection System for Directional Drilling and Crossing

     This report states the requirements and test methods for heat shrinkable wrap around sleeve systems to be used in directional drilling applications for corrosion protection and sealing of joints in pipe structures with a maximum operating temperature of 60C or less.

    The DIRAX system comprises two heat shrinkable wraparound sleeves closed with a patch closure and a two component solvent free epoxy primer.  The main sleeve is fabricated from a minimal 1.4mm thick irradiation crosslinked thermally stabilized, fiberglass reinforced heat shrinkable woven polyolefin backing that is coated internally with a minimal 1.0mm thick high performance hotmelt adhesive.  Adhesion to bare steel pipe surfaces is enhanced by the application of the primer. 

     The sleeve is closed using a special low profile closure patch.  The closure provides sufficient strength to withstand the shrink forces during installation. 

     The main sleeve edge profile that enters the soil first is smoothed by the application of an additional narrow wrap around sleeve of the same construction as the main sleeve. 

     The systems are installed using propane gas torches.  First the primer is mixed and applied.  While still wet, the wraparound sleeves are shrunk down onto it.  When heated above 125C, the sleeves shrink tightly around the substrate onto the wet primer. During recovery, the adhesive softens and flows to form an intimate bond with the primer and curing of the primer is initiated.  The bond strength builds up during cooldown and is fully retained after completion of the job. 

     The heat shrinkable sheets are manufactured from a radiation crosslinked, thermally stabilized, UV resistant heat shrinkable fabric, composed of a fiberglass reinforcement and polyolefin fibers embedded in a polyolefin matrix. 

     The inner surface of the heat shrinkable sheets is coated with a controlled thickness of a hotmelt adhesive. 

Monday, April 18, 2016

Heat Shrink Sleeve Quality Concerns

Heat Shrink Sleeve Inspection Concerns

NOTE:  This is not a product I sell or represent.

     I was contacted this weekend by a customer located somewhere outside of the USA.  They have been installing a heat shrink sleeve system purchased and manufactured in the far east.  Having installed a number of shrink sleeves already, they are finding a number of different things to be highly concerned about.  They asked my opinion:  are their concerns about the heat shrink sleeve issues they are observing valid? 

     I will get into more detail, but the quick answer is:  YES.  This person I'm speaking with is very observant and quite smart.  They are absolutely correct to be concerned about these issues. 

     I shared with them that most every specification that crosses my desk over the course of the last couple of years has a very strict direction in terms of heat shrink sleeve manufacturers:  "No shrink sleeve manufactures from China, Korea or India will be accepted."  This is not my recommendation - this is a policy that I see listed in specifications over and over.  Why is it specified like that?  My guess is that most companies are requiring manufacturers other than those countries because they have tried or evaluated shrink sleeve material from China/Korea/India in the past and they quite simply haven't found the products quality to be at an acceptable level yet. 

     That makes perfect sense to me.  I have evaluated products from those countries a number of times over the years.  They are always looking to break into the US market - and it is very common for me to be offered samples on just about a monthly basis.  I always see the same things when I accept their offers:  adhesives that don't flow or bond well -- and backing that is made from a low density PE and doesn't bring much to the table in the way of strength.  That is a very bad combination!  A shrink sleeve that doesn't stick well -- is not going to protect your pipeline!

     So back to this particular case.  This is a high temp line (80C) and upon inspection after installation - some red flags were raised:

shrink sleeve analysis
     Here we see some spaces where, upon shrinking of the sleeve, as the sleeve (naturally) begins to longitudinally shrink, the backing pulls back leaving some gaps in the adhesive.  These are areas that might be seen as 'fish eyes' in the two part epoxy world.  In these cases, the backing pulled back and the adhesive had flowed out -- but for some reason, these holes were left behind (there is another lower in the pipe that can be seen). 

     Now, this is does indeed raise a lot of issues - and we are not going to be able to answer them here.  First of all - it is possible this could be an installer issue.  It could be that the PE jacket here wasn't properly cleaned and that what happened there was that dust or dirt was on that little piece of PE and as a result, the adhesive didn't bond to the PE.  That is certainly possible.  It could also be though that this particular adhesive simply isn't flowing very well - and isn't filling properly underneath the sleeve.  If there are gaps here -- what is the step down area going to look like?  What is the weld bead area going to look like?  We can't know - but it could certainly be worth evaluating. 

     Of the 2/3 issues we will look at here - this one might be the most innocuous.  We can't definitively say what is going on - we can't say with 100% confidence that the adhesive has failed here - but we can certainly say 'this is something we would like to look more deeply into'.

     Onto the other issues here (I'll show two photos):


     Here we have two photos / areas that are showing the same problem:  hair line cracking of the adhesive.  This is HIGHLY concerning.  In the bottom picture, those cracks are what I would consider to be:  significant.  I know the top picture is more difficult to see - but those also are very concerning.  My first guess is that these adhesive are just not flexible enough to be used as a pipe coating.  If we see cracks here, where there has really been minimal stress on the pipe - I quite honestly can't imagine the sleeve offering any quality corrosion prevention after even a few weeks of normal and natural pipe movements.  We can clearly see (in the cracks) the beginnings of a leak path.  For all we can tell, the adhesive is also cracked underneath the back.  Not good.  Not good at all. 

     In recent years, there have been a number of shrink sleeve manufacturers pop up.  It isn't difficult to find some cheap labor - and a chemist or two to teach about peroxide bonding.  In addition, in some parts of the world, they try to reverse engineer different adhesives and mastics (this is not a simple task) and quite frankly, they think they copy them well...but they do not.  They then sell a cheap and inexpensive product into different marketplaces around the world (focusing specifically on the Middle East, Africa and Eastern Europe) and they dump a bunch of zero quality pipeline coatings on these jobs. 

     They pitch that they will save you money --- but your pipe is not corrosion protected.  They cost you money.  They cost you lots of money.  It may be a few years but you will have massive corrosion problems and when they are discovered, that Chinese shrink sleeve manufacturer will have changed their name, or gone out of business -- or it will turn out that you were actually dealing with a broker, not a manufacturer - and so the manufacturer is unwilling to stand behind their product because it was the brokers fault (these are all things that I've heard).  

     Raychem (now called Covalence / Seal for Life) - took decades, many PHD's, many chemists -- to perfect that design, creation and consistent manufacture of specialized adhesives and mastics.  Those cannot be reverse engineered.  They can not be copied over the course of a couple of years.  Please do not support the pretenders -- please specify and use only proven products with long successful use histories. 

Monday, April 4, 2016

BBS Installation Video

Bundled Bore Bumper System Installation Video


     Our BBS system is (and has been) used often to prevent pipe vs pipe damage during a bundled directional drilling pull through.  Installation is fast and easy and the finished product is excellent.  We have also been fortunate to be given the opportunity to collect before and after photos on occasion (BBS Case Study).

Basic installation steps are here:
  1. Clean pipe surface  - being certain all dust, oil, grease, dirt are gone.
  2. Preheat pipe surface to 140F to 160F
  3. Wrap and secure a single bumper piece 2" x 1"
  4. Mix and apply epoxy bonding agent 
  5. Wrap and shrink bumper holder in place (17" wide)
  6. Wrap and shrink 3" wide leader strip in place
  7. Check for proper installation