| Foundry
Baghouse Replaced in Two
Weeks, Filter Area Increased
88% While Staying in Same
Footprint at Indianapolis
Casting Facility
With its Indianapolis
diesel engine plant running
at full capacity for more
than two years, one of
the nation's largets automotive
suppliers demanded matching
speed from Kirk & Blum
in replacing a 20-year-old
foundry baghouse at its
Indianapolis casting facility.
The facility casts blocks
and heads for the engine
plant, adjacent to it on
the Indianapolis site, as
well as for other customers.
The old dust collector at
the foundry had to be torn
out and the new baghouse
installed, including all
new controls, over a two-week
vacation shutdown. "We
shut down 6 a.m. Saturday,
July 1 and needed to be
back up and running by midnight,
July 16," said the
manager of facilities engineering
at the plant.
The time squeeze
was compounded by one
of space. Additional
baghouse capacity was
needed, but was restricted
by other structures at the
site to staying within the
same footprint.
Kirk & Blum answered
with:
Creative bag packaging,
redesigning the collectors
with tube sheets on staggered
centers to enable fitting
of more bags into the same
area.
Precision pre-fab and modularization
of major components creating
eight "packages" in
the shop, the largest that
could be trucked, then joining
them on-site into just four
units for lifting into place
by crane.
Tear-out took half the time
scheduled, all major rigging
work was completed by the
end of the first week, and
the new baghouse was on-line,
ready to go, at the end of
shutdown. The new baghouse
increases cloth filter area
by 88%, is structurally stronger,
improves operator control
and automation, and provides
greater maintenance accessibility.
High Pressure Project
Founded in 1907, Kirk & Blum
specializes in engineering,
fabrication, installation
and repair of dust and fume
control systems, and all
types of process ventilation
systems. It has extensive
experience with automotive
plants and the foundry industry.
Six Kirk & Blum facilities
in the midwest and southeast
U.S. enable fast response
and close coordination on
projects.
K&B's Indianapolis plant
performs many projects for
the large automotive supplier,
with major repairs and up-grades
scheduled during summer shutdown. "However,
the baghouse replacement
eclipsed any previous shutdown
project in magnitude and
scope," stressed Tim
Schneider, Kirk & Blum
Vice President and head of
the Indianapolis facility. "This
was a high profile, high
pressure job. Without the
baghouse being in operation,
the foundry can't run the
molding line." Any delay
on start-up of the foundry
mold line could have had
a domino effect, delaying
production on engines, then
on all vehicles to receive
the engines.
"We had to compress
what would typically be a
six-week installation project
for a greenfield site into
two weeks with no margin
for delays or fixes," said
Mike Richardson, K&B
Project Manager. "It
was a race against the clock.
Everything had to be done
on time and done right."
Creative Packaging
Prevented by other plant
structures from building
outward to expand baghouse
capacity, Kirk & Blum
looked inward and upward.
Designed the collectors
with tube sheets having staggered
centers to enable fitting
more bags into each bag compartment.
Plus:
Increased bag length from
7-1/2 ft. to 10 ft.
Increased module size by
unitizing three compartments
with common wall sections,
so all available space was
utilized.
The new baghouse has 12
compartments, each with 248
bags. Bags are 6-1/4" diameter
x 10 ft long. The creative
packaging enables a total
of 48,695 sq. ft. of cloth
compared to 25,918 sq. ft.
previously. At the existing
system volume of 174,000
CFM, the air-to-cloth ration
has been reduced from 6.7:1
to 3.6:1.
"We needed more cloth
capacity," according
to the client's facilities
engineering department, "The
bags tended to load up and
bind, so they couldn't clean
properly. System efficiency
and air flow were compromised." Decreasing
the air-to-cloth ratio eliminated
the load-up problem. There
is less pressure drop, so
the baghouse draws more air
without increasing fan speed.
Easy to Run and Maintain
Before the replacement,
capacity demands and system
design required that the
full baghouse be constantly
on-line, limiting maintenance
attention mostly to shutdowns.
Consequently, ease of maintenance
was given the highest priority
in all design consideration. "The
bag house redesign now allows
any of the 12 bag compartments
to be isolated and taken
off line at any time for
maintenance," the client
notes. "The
up-grade provides capacity
reserve, so there is no problem
in taking one of the units
off line."
Each compartment is fitted
with its own inlet and automatic
outlet dampers, plus access
door, enabling isolation
for maintenance or cleaning.
Each compartment is fitted
with a compressed air header
and 16 pulse valves for automatic
cleaning cycles.
The baghouse redesign greatly
improved space utilization
and accessibility. K&B
enclosed the entire baghouse
complex, complete with doors
at each end and each compartment,
allowing maintenance access
to all levels, including
the roof. Retractable stairs
enable access to the clean
air plenums. The enclosure
now provides space for inside
storage of replacement baghouse
components. New lighting
assures good visibility and
work lighting in enclosed
areas.
70's to 90's Controls
Controls were totally replaced. "We
pretty much went from 70's
to 90's technology," said
the client. "It gives
us more options, more precise
control."
The installation included
two new Motor Control Centers
(MCC). These house all of
the motor starters, transformers,
controls, programmable logic
controller (PLC), and the
operator interface. A new
distribution panel with circuit
breakers provides all control
power.
The operator interface/computer
gives ICC an automated system
with more flexibility and
control of the baghouse operation.
The operator interface displays
the baghouse operations on
graphics screens which show
the status of the equipment,
such as the amperage of the
four 150 hp fan motors, pressure
differentials, and damper
positions. This information
is constantly updated and
shown on the screens.
The operator interface is
connected to the PLC which
is used to send signals to
the control devices in the
system. The PLC also receives
signals from remote mounted
devices which give indications
about the system operation.
The PLC uses this information
to initiate programmed operations
(such as start a cleaning
cycle) or sound an alarm
if there is a problem. The
PLC program can be easily
revised to accommodate parameter
changes and additional equipment
that may be installed in
the future.
Precision Pre-Fab
""The key for
Kirk & Blum in successfully
completing the field work
in the two-week time frame
was doing as much fabrication
and assembly as possible
ahead of time," stressed
Doug Harris, Field Superintendent.
K&B divided the structure
into eight sections, each
as big as could be transported
to the site by truck. Three
baghouse compartments were
utilized as single components
with common walls, consolidating
the 12 baghouse compartments
into four units. A matching
clean air plenum was created
for each 3-compartment baghouse
unit. On site, each baghouse
unit was joined with its
clean air plenum. This left
four main "picks" by
a crane about 32,000 lbs.
each to erect the entire
baghouse complex. A 125-ton
crane was utilized for the
lifts.
"Fabrication of the
modules required custom-fitting," said
Harris. The rebuild retained
existing hoppers, on which
the new modules were mounted.
Structural steel supports
had to be reinforced to accept
the additional loads. Existing
manifolds were also retained.
These were removed during
tear-out, then reinstalled
with an additional spool
piece. "So, everything
had to be field measured
and fabricated very accurately
to fit the existing structure," he
noted.
"The client had specified
10 gauge steel for a baghouse
with a 3/26" thick tubesheet,
which we upgraded to 3/16" and
1/4" plate respectively," said
Harris. "Our special
expertise and facilities
for plate work let us provide
the heavier construction
and real dollar value with
little increase in initial
costs."
"Well
Planned and Executed",
Said the Client
"K&B received the
full go-ahead from the clienton
the project Apr. 1, only
three months from the start
of shutdown. Preliminary
engineering and field measurements
had been completed in order
to make a bid proposal but
the schedule still left only
10 weeks to do the shop fabrication," noted
Mike Richardson, K&B
project manager. "The
shop worked two shifts the
whole time to complete the
modules on schedule."
The fabrication phase reinforced
the client's confidence that
it had made the right decision. "The
fab work settled any concerns
we may have had about being
able to complete the project
on schedule," said the
client. "Everything
was extremely well planned
and executed. You could see
it coming together like clockwork."
Actually, Doug Harris, K&B
field superintendent, admits
to one mistake in planning
he allowed three days for
tear-out of the old system,
which actually took only
a day-and-a-half. The savings
proved crucial, as late on
the final week before shutdown,
as the customer needed additional
production and decided to
run an extra day.
Field
Phase
Kirk & Blum put together
an installation team "second
to none" for the field
phase of the project, according
to Mike Richardson, K&B
project manager.
K&B used a 12-man rigging
crew for each shift and worked
two 10 hour shifts for the
first 11 days of the shutdown.
Among other things, they
did more than 3/4 of a mile
of field welding in less
than a week.
K&B's electrical subcontractor,
had a crew of 7 or 8 people
per shift during the second
week of installation. They
completed all required tearout,
installation and testing
of the new control system.
A crew of five pipefitters
installed the compressed
air piping used to clean
the filter bags.
An insulating
crew was hired to spray polyurethane
insulation on the interior
of the baghouse to prevent
condensation. The main internal
sections of bag compartments,
clean air and dirty air plenums
were insulated before being
lifted into position. Later,
after the units had been
welded together, the foam
crew returned to insulate
the seams. When the insulating
work was completed, a separate
crew applied fire retardant
material to the entire baghouse
interior.
Two cranes and operators
handled lift requirements
a 125 ton unit for the main
picks, while a smaller crane
lifted roofing, interior
floors and smaller, miscellaneous
components and equipment.
"We had a lot of people
crawling around in a small,
confined area," said
Richardson. "Our biggest
problem was staying out of
each other's way."
Team Project
"This was a great team
effort," stressed Schneider,
K&B VP in charge of the
Indianapolis plant. "The
guys in the field really
came through with the pressure
on and the clock ticking.
but, they needed the guys
in the shop to do their job
right. When everything fits
it makes things so much easier
in the field."
Did he ever have doubts
about finishing the baghouse
job on schedule? "I
better not have," said
Schneider. "We scheduled
the crew to go straight to
another two-week shutdown
project at another foundry."
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