Api Rp — 1110.pdf

RP 1110 forces you to use the "devil's thickness"—the lowest possible thickness the mill was allowed to ship. This is why a pipeline that should test to 1,200 psi often tests to 1,140 psi. That 60 psi isn't a rounding error; it's the difference between elastic and plastic deformation. Most operators use RP 1110 for the acceptance criteria (e.g., "No drop in pressure for 1 hour"). But the coolest part is the section on cyclic pressure testing .

Why does this matter? Because mills produce pipe with a minus tolerance (e.g., 0.01" thinner than spec). If you calculate your test pressure using the nominal thickness, you might accidentally overshoot the yield strength of the actual pipe by 3-4%. Api Rp 1110.pdf

Here is why API RP 1110 is actually the most important "insurance policy" you aren't reading closely enough. Most people think pressure testing is about strength —making sure the pipe doesn't explode at max operating pressure. Wrong. RP 1110 forces you to use the "devil's

If you work in pipeline integrity, you’ve likely seen the file name: API_RP_1110.pdf . It usually sits in a folder alongside dozens of other standards—API 1160, ASME B31.8, DOT 192. Most operators use RP 1110 for the acceptance criteria (e