Millions of cylinders and cylinder valves are transported and used without any incidents every year. However, there have been incidents when a valve has been ejected from a cylinder because the threads on the cylin-der valve did not match the threads on the cylinder. Valve ejections can cause personal injury and/or death, property damage, and product loss. Investigations of these incidents indicate that the causes of the cylinder valve ejections usually have included:
using a cylinder valve with straight threads installed into a cylinder that has tapered neck threads; installing tapered cylinder valve threads into a cylinder that has straight neck threads; and/or interchanging International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and/or other metric classification threads with National Gas Taper (NGT) threads.
In some cases, it is difficult to visually determine if the threads on a valve are mismatched to the threads in a cylinder after a cylinder valve has been installed into a cylinder. Markings on valves and cylinders are used outside the United States that permit cylinder fillers and users to see if the cylinder valve and the cylinder have the same threads. The Compressed Gas Association (CGA) recommends that a coded marking system be used in the United States and Canada to ensure that valve threads and cylinder neck threads can be identified after the valve is installed into the cylinder.
This publication outlines the coded marking system to be used to identify and mark valve inlet threads and cylinder neck threads.
Product Details
Edition: 1st Published: 03/01/2018 Number of Pages: 12File Size: 1 file , 1.2 MB