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Regulations 2(2), 7(5), 8(5), 14, 16(1), 19, 20(7)(a)

SCHEDULE 2(Annex I to the Pressure Equipment Directive)ESSENTIAL SAFETY REQUIREMENTS

PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS

1.  The obligations arising from the essential requirements listed in this Annex for pressure equipment also apply to assemblies where the corresponding hazard exists.

2.  The essential requirements laid down in the Directive are compulsory. The obligations laid down in these essential requirements apply only if the corresponding hazard exists for the pressure equipment in question when it is used under conditions which are reasonably foreseeable by the manufacturer.

3.  The manufacturer is under an obligation to analyse the hazards in order to identify those which apply to his equipment on account of pressure; he must then design and construct it taking account of his analysis.

4.  The essential requirements are to be interpreted and applied in such a way as to take account of the state of the art and current practice at the time of design and manufacture as well as of technical and economic considerations which are consistent with a high degree of health and safety protection.

1.    GENERAL

Pressure equipment must be designed, manufactured and checked, and if applicable equipped and installed, in such a way as to ensure its safety when put into service in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions, or in reasonably foreseeable conditions.

In choosing the most appropriate solutions, the manufacturer must apply the principles set out below in the following order:

Where the potential for misuse is known or can be clearly foreseen, the pressure equipment must be designed to prevent danger from such misuse or, if that is not possible, adequate warning given that the pressure equipment must not be used in that way.

2.    DESIGN

General

Design for adequate strength

2.2.1 The pressure equipment must be designed for loadings appropriate to its intended use and other reasonably foreseeable operating conditions. In particular, the following factors must be taken into account:

Various loadings which can occur at the same time must be considered, taking into account the probability of their simultaneous occurrence.

2.2.2 Design for adequate strength must be based on:

2.2.3 Calculation method

(a)Pressure containment and other loading aspects

(b)Resistance

(c)Stability aspects

2.2.4 Experimental design method

Provisions to ensure safe handling and operation

Means of examination

(a)Pressure equipment must be designed and constructed so that all necessary examinations to ensure safety can be carried out;

(b)Means of determining the internal condition of the equipment must be available, where it is necessary to ensure the continued safety of the equipment, such as access openings, allowing physical access to the inside of the pressure equipment so that appropriate examinations can be carried out safely and ergonomically;

(c)Other means of ensuring the safe condition of the pressure equipment may be applied:

Means of draining and venting

Corrosion or other chemical attack

Wear

Assemblies

Provisions for filling and discharge

Protection against exceeding the allowable limits of pressure equipment

Safety accessories

2.11.1 Safety accessories must:

2.11.2 Pressure limiting devices

2.11.3 Temperature monitoring devices

External fire

3.    MANUFACTURING

Manufacturing procedures

The manufacturer must ensure the competent execution of the provisions set out at the design stage by applying the appropriate techniques and relevant procedures, especially with a view to the aspects set out below.

3.1.1 Preparation of the component parts

3.1.2 Permanent joining

3.1.3 Non-destructive tests

3.1.4 Heat treatment

3.1.5 Traceability

Final assessment

Pressure equipment must be subjected to final assessment as described below.

3.2.1 Final inspection

3.2.2 Proof test

3.2.3 Inspection of safety devices

Marking and labelling

Operating instructions

(a)When pressure equipment is placed on the market, it must be accompanied, as far as relevant, with instructions for the user, containing all the necessary safety information relating to:

(b)Instructions must cover information affixed to the pressure equipment in accordance with 3.3, with the exception of serial identification, and must be accompanied, where appropriate, by the technical documents, drawings and diagrams necessary for a full understanding of these instructions;

(c)If appropriate, these instructions must also refer to hazards arising from misuse in accordance with 1.3 and particular features of the design in accordance with 2.2.3.

4.    MATERIALS

Materials used for the manufacture of pressure equipment must be suitable for such application during the scheduled lifetime unless replacement is foreseen.

Welding consumables and other joining materials need fulfil only the relevant requirements of 4.1, 4.2(a) and the first paragraph of 4.3, in an appropriate way, both individually and in a joined structure.

Materials for pressurised parts must:

(a)have appropriate properties for all operating conditions which are reasonably foreseeable and for all test conditions, and in particular they should be sufficiently ductile and tough. Where appropriate, the characteristics of the materials must comply with the requirements of 7.5. Moreover, due care should be exercised in particular in selecting materials in order to prevent brittle-type fracture where necessary; where for specific reasons brittle material has to be used appropriate measures must be taken;

(b)be sufficiently chemically resistant to the fluid contained in the pressure equipment; the chemical and physical properties necessary for operational safety must not be significantly affected within the scheduled lifetime of the equipment;

(c)not be significantly affected by ageing;

(d)be suitable for the intended processing procedures;

(e)be selected in order to avoid significant undesirable effects when the various materials are put together.

The pressure equipment manufacturer must define in an appropriate manner the values necessary for the design calculations referred to in 2.2.3 and the essential characteristics of the materials and their treatment referred to in 4.1;

(b)the manufacturer must provide in his technical documentation elements relating to compliance with the materials specification of the Directive in one of the following forms:

(c)for pressure equipment in categories III and IV, particular appraisal as referred to in the third indent of (b) must be performed by the notified body in charge of conformity assessment procedures for the pressure equipment.

The equipment manufacturer must take appropriate measures to ensure that the material used conforms with the required specification. In particular, documentation prepared by the material manufacturer affirming compliance with a specification must be obtained for all materials.

SPECIFIC PRESSURE EQUIPMENT REQUIREMENTS

In addition to the applicable requirements of sections 1 to 4, the following requirements apply to the pressure equipment covered by sections 5 and 6.

5.    FIRED OR OTHERWISE HEATED PRESSURE EQUIPMENT WITH A RISK OF OVERHEATING AS REFERRED TO IN ARTICLE 3(1)

This pressure equipment includes:

6.    PIPING AS REFERRED TO IN ARTICLE 3, SECTION 1.3

Design and construction must ensure:

(a)that the risk of overstressing from inadmissible free movement or excessive forces being produced, e.g. on flanges, connections, bellows or hoses, is adequately controlled by means such as support, constraint, anchoring, alignment and pre-tension;

(b)that where there is a possibility of condensation occurring inside pipes for gaseous fluids, means are provided for drainage and removal of deposits from low areas to avoid damage from water hammer or corrosion;

(c)that due consideration is given to the potential damage from turbulence and formation of vortices; the relevant parts of 2.7 are applicable;

(d)that due consideration is given to the risk of fatigue due to vibrations in pipes;

(e)that, where fluids of Group 1 are contained in the piping, appropriate means are provided to isolate `take-off' pipes the size of which represents a significant risk;

(f)that the risk of inadvertent discharge is minimised; the take-off points must be clearly marked on the permanent side, indicating the fluid contained;

(g)that the position and route of underground piping is at least recorded in the technical documentation to facilitate safe maintenance, inspection or repair.

7.    SPECIFIC QUANTITATIVE REQUIREMENTS FOR CERTAIN PRESSURE EQUIPMENT

The following provisions apply as a general rule. However, where they are not applied, including in cases where materials are not specifically referred to and no harmonised standards are applied, the manufacturer must demonstrate that appropriate measures have been taken to achieve an equivalent overall level of safety.

Allowable stresses

7.1.1 Symbols

7.1.2 The permissible general membrane stress for predominantly static loads and for temperatures outside the range in which creep is significant must not exceed the smaller of the following values, according to the material used:

Joint coefficients

Pressure limiting devices, particularly for pressure vessels

Hydrostatic test pressure

Material characteristics