Nurse tank sides and mid-section, Missing nameplate, A73 a74 – Great Plains NH3 Safety User Manual

Page 23

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Great Plains Manufacturing, Inc.

Table of Contents

Index

Ammonia Nurse Tanks

19

2013-07-15

Table of Contents

Index

407-551M

Nurse Tank Sides and Mid-Section

Refer to Figure 17 (depicting a pre-1988 ASME nameplate)
A72 Tank Nameplate:

Locate and inspect this plate. It may be anywhere
on the tank (but will be on the tank, and not on the
running gear or tongue). It is often at top center.

Check that the plate is present, and legible. The
1966 vintage plate depicted at right has marginal
legibility in places.

Do not accept a nurse tank with an illegible
nameplate. Do not accept a nurse tank that is not
consistent with the requirements of anhydrous
service. See ANSI K61.1/CGA G-2.1 for a complete
list of requirements, but some key items to check for
are:

Refer to Figure 17
A73
Safety Decals:

Study any safety decals. Make sure all operators
understand them, and have learned safety
procedures well enough that they know what to do
without consulting the decals after an accident.

A74 Instructional Decals:

Study any operating information provided in decal
form. If the nurse tank cart has no manual,
informational decals may be the only formal
documentation available.

Manufacturer name

Repair stamp - normally blank. An “R” here

indicates that the tank has been repaired by an
authorized facility. Do not accept a repaired tank
without an “R” stamp.

Tank serial number

MWAP: Maximum Allowable Working

Pressure (250 PSIG @ 125

°F, is minimum and

typical for NH

3

service)

Type: Must be “AG”

Official code “U”-over-”W” symbol. Any other

symbol here means the tank is not NH

3

service.

Year of manufacture. A tank made before

1999 may lack current safety features.
Do not use a tank made before July 1961.
Do not use an undated tank.

A post-1988 nameplate will also:

• be fully welded onto the tank (not riveted)

• specify the standard to which it was built, usually

ANSI K61.1 or CGA G-2.1

• explicitly specify “for anhydrous ammonia use”

• specify MDMT (Minimum Design Metal Temperature)

Missing Nameplate?
If there is no nameplate, check for evidence of
recertification within the last five years, such as FMCSA
Cargo Tank (CT) registration number, or paper
documentation under DOT SP-13554 or CSA B620.

Figure 16

Anhydrous Tank Nameplate

31562

A72u

A72p

A72m

A72y

A72s

A72r

A72t

A72m

A72r

A72s

A72p

A72t

A72u

A72y

Figure 17

Nurse Tank Operations Decals

31563

A73

A74

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