She applied couplant to the rusty steel and moved the transducer. The A-scan showed a clean echo—then a sudden, sharp spike. Indication. She measured the signal rise time, compared it to the DAC (distance-amplitude correction) curve as outlined in Section 7 of RP 2X.
“Or we ignore it and let the sea do the cutting for us,” she said, already logging the flaw in her report. “API RP 2X isn’t a suggestion. It’s a promise to the next shift that they get to go home.”
“Leif, mark this. Length: 18 mm. Depth: 12 mm from the ID surface. That’s rejectable under Table 4.” api rp 2x pdf
It sounds like you’re looking for the document (Recommended Practice for Ultrasonic and Magnetic Particle Examination of Offshore Structural Steel, used in offshore oil & gas). That’s a technical standard from the American Petroleum Institute.
On a rust-stained offshore platform in the North Sea, NDT technician Mira Kostas flipped through a worn copy of API RP 2X. The wind gnawed at her coveralls as she calibrated the ultrasonic probe. The platform’s jacket—a lattice of steel nodes and braces—had survived thirty winters, but a recent ROV inspection hinted at cracks near node K-9. She applied couplant to the rusty steel and
Mira didn’t laugh. Last month, a different rig had ignored the recommended practice and missed laminar flaws. The node failed during a storm. Three men went into the water.
He sighed. “So we cut and re-weld.”
“RP 2X says 45-degree shear wave, 5 MHz,” she muttered, tracing the reference block. Her partner, Leif, grinned. “You talk to the standard like a preacher with a Bible.”
That night, the platform groaned around them—but not from failure. From the honest work of following the rules written in blood and ink. She measured the signal rise time, compared it