Carbon Steel Pipe
Applicable Technologies
Wall Thickness
Leak & Gas Pocket
Acoustic Monitoring
Video Inspection
The first methods for producing steel pipe were introduced in the early 1800s, and they have steadily evolved into the modern processes we use today. Large diameter steel pressure pipes for water and wastewater applications are typically made with carbon steel and installed as buried assets. Steel pipe can be made using three main methods:
- Seamless (extrusion mold) – Hot steel is pushed through a die to create the pipe shape. Diameters of up to 20” (500mm) can be made this way. Expensive but the most reliable.
- Welded - A sheet of steel is wrapped around a form then welded at the seam. Less expensive but not as reliable as seamless for high-pressure situations.
- Casting Mold – Hot liquid steel is poured into a mold. Not very common and as reliable as seamless.
The primary benefit of steel pipe is its strength. These pipes don’t crack under most impacts and can operate under high pressure. Under abnormal loads, steel will bend, rather than break.
| Advantages | Disadvantages |
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Main Forms Failure in Steel Pipes
| Form of Failure | Causes of Failure | Indicators of Failure |
| Break failure | Pitting corrosion weakening wall | Damage to coating/linings, wall loss, pitting, and leaks |
| Longitudinal cracking | Thinning from general corrosion, and areas of pitting corrosion | Graphitization, groups of pitting, and wall loss |
| Pipe bursts | Third party damage | Construction activity |