COSA Xentaur COSA 9610 User Manual

Page 14

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INSTALLATION, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE MANUAL – COSA 9610™

Page 14 of 44

2.4.

M

ECHANICAL

C

ONNECTIONS

2.4.1.

General

Location and amount of connections may vary depending on type and execution of

the analyzer. See the project specific drawings of your order.

Tubing connections on the COSA 9610™ are Swagelok double ferrule compression

type fittings for imperial sizes. (Reducers to metric fittings or NPT thread are

available)

Only seamless and annealed imperial size instrument tubing according ASTM A-249 at

a maximum permissible hardness of Rockwell B-90 may be used.

Tubing must be cut off straight and de-burred thoroughly. (Inside and outside of

tubing cutting edge)

The outside surface of the tube ends entering the fittings must be clean and free from

scratches.

Nuts and ferrules do not have to and must not be removed to avoid mixing up of the

nuts and or ferrules

Tubing must be pushed into the fitting onto the seat

Hand-tighten the nut and mark the nut against the fitting

Use a correct size wrench to lock the body of the fitting and tighten the nut with another

correct size wrench for 1- 1/4 turn for 1/4" fittings, 3/4 turn for 1/8" fittings. (Watch the marks)

Before connecting the tubing to the analyzer they must be blown through with dry

nitrogen or instrument air to remove all particles.

All connections must be checked against leakage prior to putting the analyzer in

operation or installing the tubing.

Pressurise the lines with nitrogen or instrument air at 7bar maximum to perform leak

test. Check each connection with soap. (e.g. snoop)

Make sure before pressurizing for leak-test that the power to the analyzer is off

(sample and calibration selection valves closed) and that the instrument air supply

isolation valve in the analyzer is closed.

Vent connections must not be pressure tested while connected to the analyzer.

Disconnect and cap these tubes if leak test is required.

Re-connection of the fittings is done by hand tightening the nut followed by wrench

tightening for 1/4 turn.

If a leak is detected, it might be fixed by tightening the fitting step by step a little

more (up to a 1/4 turn) until it is tight. Then the fitting has to be inspected if it has

not been over-tightened. This is done by disconnecting the fitting and to check if the

ferrules can still be rotated in relation to each other and the pipe. (If the ferrules can

also be moved in an axial direction the fitting is too loose) If the ferrules are stuck, the

pipe has to be cut just after the nut and newly installed according above instructions

using new ferrules. (The nut can be re-used)

If this does not solve the problem, remove the fitting and inspect the fitting body for

damage. If it is damaged the complete fitting must be replaced.

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