AutoCAD Plant 3D Forum
Welcome to Autodesk’s AutoCAD Plant 3D Forums. Share your knowledge, ask questions, and explore popular AutoCAD Plant 3D topics.
cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

tapping connection on blind flange

3 REPLIES 3
SOLVED
Reply
Message 1 of 4
Anonymous
5324 Views, 3 Replies

tapping connection on blind flange

Anonymous
Not applicable

hello i need to do a tapping connection in the center of a 5" blind flange withe a 3" pipe how can i do that?

 

thank's

tapping connection on blind flange

hello i need to do a tapping connection in the center of a 5" blind flange withe a 3" pipe how can i do that?

 

thank's

3 REPLIES 3
Message 2 of 4
jason.drew
in reply to: Anonymous

jason.drew
Community Manager
Community Manager
Accepted solution

You could set that up with a custom part if it's something you don't place often.

 

If you plan to use these over and over again, I'd recommend setting up a new part in the catalog and adding it to your spec.

 

In this image below, I've added standard 4" flange blind to the model, then exploded it. I convert that to a standard AutoCAD block. Then used "PLANTPARTCONVERT" command to add ports on each side of the flange.

 

Flange Blind Convert

 

Next you want to setup the custom part. Click the "Custom Part" button up on the ribbon bar. When the custom part window comes up click "Choose block from model". Select your block and configure all the properties and port properties:

 

flange_blind2.jpg

 

The main property you need to fill in is "Long Description", what ever you type in there will come out on the BoM on the Iso drawing.

 

Port "S1" will be FL for flanged and in your case, 5" nominal diameter with matching pipe OD of 5.5625" (I used a 4" in this example)

 

flange_blind3.jpg

 

Port "S2" will be 3" nominal diameter, matching pipe OD of 3.5", endtype "TAP"

 

flange_blind4.jpg

 

Once you click "insert part" it will allow you to place the flange blind in the model. You can place it right up against plain end pipe and it should thrown in a weld neck flange. The little exclamation point shows that it's a custom part and not a spec part.

 

flange_blind5.jpg

 



Jason Drew
Designated Support Specialist

You could set that up with a custom part if it's something you don't place often.

 

If you plan to use these over and over again, I'd recommend setting up a new part in the catalog and adding it to your spec.

 

In this image below, I've added standard 4" flange blind to the model, then exploded it. I convert that to a standard AutoCAD block. Then used "PLANTPARTCONVERT" command to add ports on each side of the flange.

 

Flange Blind Convert

 

Next you want to setup the custom part. Click the "Custom Part" button up on the ribbon bar. When the custom part window comes up click "Choose block from model". Select your block and configure all the properties and port properties:

 

flange_blind2.jpg

 

The main property you need to fill in is "Long Description", what ever you type in there will come out on the BoM on the Iso drawing.

 

Port "S1" will be FL for flanged and in your case, 5" nominal diameter with matching pipe OD of 5.5625" (I used a 4" in this example)

 

flange_blind3.jpg

 

Port "S2" will be 3" nominal diameter, matching pipe OD of 3.5", endtype "TAP"

 

flange_blind4.jpg

 

Once you click "insert part" it will allow you to place the flange blind in the model. You can place it right up against plain end pipe and it should thrown in a weld neck flange. The little exclamation point shows that it's a custom part and not a spec part.

 

flange_blind5.jpg

 



Jason Drew
Designated Support Specialist
Message 3 of 4
Anonymous
in reply to: jason.drew

Anonymous
Not applicable

thank's 😉

0 Likes

thank's 😉

Message 4 of 4
Anonymous
in reply to: Anonymous

Anonymous
Not applicable

Can you make the tapping offset from the center of the blind flange?

0 Likes

Can you make the tapping offset from the center of the blind flange?

Can't find what you're looking for? Ask the community or share your knowledge.

Post to forums  

Autodesk Design & Make Report