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UE
Systems Ultrasonic Detection Equipment
Ultrasonic Marine Inspection
DESCRIPTION
Ultrasonic inspection
can be used in practically every phase of the maritime industry. There are
application for marine vessels, dry docks, ship repair and ship building. Some
of the major areas of inspection cover water tightness integrity of bulkheads,
leak detection of hatches and vapor recovery systems, condensers, steam systems,
pressurized gas systems (including nitrogen blankets), valve leak
detection/blockage and steam traps. Mechanical applications include early
warning of bearing failure, inspection of motors, pumps, gears, gear boxes and
compressors. Dry dock usage not only includes all of the above, but also
extremely large energy savings through compressed air leak detection.
How Ultrasonic Detection Works
High frequency sounds are produced by operating equipment and fluid flows.
The ULTRAPROBE detects subtle changes in mechanical equipment and turbulence
produced by leakage to provide early warning. Ultrasounds are translated into
the audible range where the sound quality is easily recognized through
acoustically isolating headphones. The headphones are designed to be used in the
extremely noisy environment of the engine room. Intensity level are read on a
meter for trending, diagnosis and trouble shooting purposes. A patented Warble
Tone Generator can be used to test for leaks in lieu of pressure by flooding an
area with intense ultrasound. The sound will deflect off a solid surface and
penetrate leak sites.
Detection Methods
To locate leaks around pressure or vacuum systems, simply scan the area
while listening for a "hissing" sound and follow it to the loudest
point. Vapor recovery systems can be checked on-line in this manner. Hatches and
bulkheads may be tested with the patented ultrasonic Warble Tone Generator.
Place the generator on one side (i.e. of the bulkhead) and scan the other side
for sonic penetration which will have a distinctive chirping sound. Scan the
area to the loudest point of emission which will indicate the leak site. For
valves, touch upstream and reduce the sensitivity to get a mid-line reading on
the meter, then touch downstream and compare intensity levels. A more intense
reading downstream indicates leakage. No sound indicates blockage. Bearings are
checked at 30 kHz. Set a baseline by selecting one test/reference point, touch
that point with the contact probe, reduce the sensitivity to obtain a low dB
level. An increase of 8 dB indicates "pre-failure" or lack of
lubrication, while an increase of 12-16 dB over baseline indicates the beginning
of the failure mode. It's that simple.
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Copyright ©1999-2000 UE Systems, Inc. |