RP 32-6 Inspection and Testing of In-Service Instrumentation
RP 32-6 Inspection and Testing of In-Service Instrumentation
RP 32-6 Inspection and Testing of In-Service Instrumentation
RP 32-6
July 1994
Document Title
International
AMENDMENTS
Amd
Date
Page(s)
Description
___________________________________________________________________
Inspection
Issued by:-
CONTENTS
Section
Page
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE i
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE ii
FOREWORD
Introduction to BP Group Recommended Practices and Specifications for Engineering
The Introductory Volume contains a series of documents that provide an introduction to the
BP Group Recommended Practices and Specifications for Engineering (RPSEs). In
particular, the 'General Foreword' sets out the philosophy of the RPSEs. Other documents in
the Introductory Volume provide general guidance on using the RPSEs and background
information to Engineering Standards in BP. There are also recommendations for specific
definitions and requirements.
Value of this Recommended Practice
This document represents the accumulated practices of the BP Group Companies for ensuring
a high standard of integrity assessment of instrumentation systems on in-service plant, within
the constraints for cost effective engineering.
Application
Text in italics is Commentary. Commentary provides background information which supports
the requirements of the Recommended Practice, and may discuss alternative options. It also
gives guidance on the implementation of any 'Specification' or 'Approval' actions; specific
actions are indicated by an asterisk (*) preceding a paragraph number.
This document may refer to certain local, national or international regulations but the
responsibility to ensure compliance with legislation and any other statutory requirements lies
with the user. The user should adapt or supplement this document to ensure compliance for
the specific application.
The Regional Annexe of this document refers to national or international regulations.
However, the responsibility for ensuring compliance with legislation and any other statutory
requirements lies with the user. The user should adapt or supplement this document to ensure
compliance for the specific application. Also listed within the annexe are documents to which
reference may be made for more detailed information.
Principal Changes from Previous Edition
This Recommended Practice is a major revision of BP Engineering CP 52 - Inspection and
Testing of Plant in Service which was last revised in January 1991 and which has now been
split into four separate documents and updated to give more constructive guidance on the
requirements for assessing the integrity of in-service instrumentation.
Feedback and Further Information
Users are invited to feed back any comments and to detail experiences in the application of
BP RPSE's, to assist in the process of their continuous improvement.
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE iii
For feedback and further information, please contact Standards Group, BP International or
the Custodian. See Quarterly Status List for contacts.
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE iv
1.
INTRODUCTION
This document is one of a series of Recommended Practices, which provide guidance
on the essential requirements for ensuring the integrity of all equipment within the BP
group operating centres. In particular this document is aimed at the integrity
assessment of instrumentation systems on plants in service.
This Recommended Practice is written as a guide to those in the operating centres
with responsibility for ensuring plants are maintained in a safe and reliable condition.
Although primarily written for the maintenance engineer, design engineers also need to
be aware of the content in order that they may:(a)
(b)
take account of the practices during system reliability studies and communicate
recommended special requirements or departures from this code to the future
operating centre.
In developing this Recommended Practice, account has been taken of guidance given in
national/international codes and standards and established good industry (Petroleum/Chemical)
practices.
2.
SCOPE
This Recommended Practice gives general guidance for assessing the condition of
operating instrument systems by focusing on their :(a)
(b)
This Recommended Practice does not address the functional integrity of instrument
control systems, safety valves, bursting discs and mechanical machinery.
Factors considered include organisation responsibilities, equipment registration,
categorisation, procedures, frequency of inspection, reporting, recording and basic
inspection and test requirements.
Contained in the regional annex at the rear of the practice is guidance on particular
national legislation. Also contained in Appendix B is a listing of documents which
may be used for reference purposes to support the recommendations of this practice.
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 1
It is of paramount importance that instrument systems installed for the protection of plant, personnel
or environment will operate correctly and reliably when a potentially hazardous condition is
approached. Instrument systems may remain static and not be called upon to operate for long
periods of time. Also component failure and deterioration may not be apparent to operators going
about normal duties. It is therefore necessary to carry out the regular programmes of inspection
and test contained within this document to ensure the protective instrumentation will function
correctly when called upon to do so.
Although not specifically covered by this document, it is also required that the inspection and test
programme for instrumentation should satisfy the plant requirements for availability and reliability.
Where the correct functioning of an instrument is critical to the operation of a plant, and plant
downtime incurs significant cost penalties, the inspection and test programme for the instrument will
be directed towards plant availability requirements, in addition to safety and integrity
considerations.
3.
INSPECTION ORGANISATION
3.1
Managements Responsibilities
It is the responsibility of management at each centre to:(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 2
3.2
3.3
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)
(g)
(h)
(i)
(b)
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 3
3.4
3.5
(a)
(b)
(c)
(b)
(c)
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 4
Engineering Co-operation
Every opportunity should be taken to optimise the use of resources and
plant outage times by integrating inter discipline inspections.
Therefore, organisations should be flexible to allow close links between
inspection organisations.
3.7
Competent Personnel
Personnel engaged on the testing and inspection of equipment must
have:(a)
(b)
(c)
Audit Function
To ensure the approach to system integrity is satisfactory, a department
with responsibility for assessment should commission independent
audits.
4.
GENERAL REQUIREMENTS
4.1
Introduction
This section outlines the general requirements for an inspection and test
system, including documentation and records. Because of the wide
diversity of operations, equipment and conditions, this practice cannot
provide the test and inspection requirements in detail for all the
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 5
Identification/ Registration
A register should be compiled of equipment requiring regular
inspection and test. Each item should be uniquely identified (Tagged)
and registered before being taken into service.
4.3
Support Documentation
The support documentation listed below should be readily available to
those engineers preparing and implementing inspection and test
procedures. These are items of general plant documentation and
should be verified, modified when necessary and issued in accordance
with site authorisation procedures.
(a)
Manufacturer
Type or Model
Serial numbers
Range and operating parameters
Reference to special materials of construction
Reference to special equipment requirements (e.g.
response time)
Date installed
Purchase order reference
Reference to hazardous area requirements
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 6
(g)
4.4
4.5
(a)
(b)
(b)
(c)
4.6
Records
A file or other suitable record should be established for all items of
equipment to be regularly tested/inspected. The record system should
contain a history of all inspection, testing, modification and
maintenance carried out on the system. For Category 1 and 2A
protective systems in particular, this history shall provide evidence,
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 7
4.8
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 8
Introduction
It is a fundamental requirement that all instrument systems are regularly
tested and/or inspected to ensure that their inherent integrity is
maintained. In addition, there is a requirement that protective
instruments are regularly tested to prove their functional integrity.
The need for inherent integrity assessment is justified on the basis that functional
testing alone does not normally confirm inherent integrity.
(b)
Schedule
(c) Reporting
A reporting system
results/findings.
5.2
Procedures
5.2.1
Preparation
recording
the
Approach
For protective instrumentation it is not necessary to include the two
aspects of integrity assessment within one procedure. It is common
practice to separate the trip/alarm functionality test from the inherent
integrity assessment. This is particularly applicable where the function
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 9
Manufacturers recommendations
(b)
Designer's recommendations.
(c)
(d)
(e)
Criticality of duty.
(f)
(g)
(h)
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 10
Approval
Prior to the issue and implementation of any procedure its:-
5.2.4
(a)
(b)
Review
Periodically, procedures need to be reviewed and the ongoing fitness
for purpose established. Revisions should be approved as above and
registered with a revision number. It is important that the procedure
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 11
Control
Each procedure should be allocated a unique identification number,
issue number and date. The number and location of copies should be
limited to the minimum required by the operating and
inspection/maintenance organisations. Unofficial copying should be
prohibited to prevent potential use of 'out of date' or inaccurate
procedures. This requirement is most easily achieved by the use of a
MMS.
5.3
Scheduling
For all instrument systems and their components, assessment must be
carried out on a regular basis. For this purpose inspection procedures
above must be organised into schedules.
Schedules should identify the equipment to be tested by its discrete
identification number, tag or loop reference. Against each system or
component the schedule should include:(a)
(b)
periodic frequency
(c)
due date
5.3.1
(b)
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 12
(c)
Operational history
(d)
(e)
(f)
Function
Fire Detectors/Alarms
Gas Detectors/Alarms
Automatic Fire/Gas Protection Systems
Heat Off Systems
Emergency Shutdown Systems
Over-Speed Trips
Purge Failure Trips
Flame Failure Trips (Self Checking)
Flame Failure Trips (Not Self Checking)
Remote Shutoff or By-pass Valves
Thermal Runaway Protection
Flow, Level, Press, Temp. Trips
Slide Valve Trips
Machinery Trips
Other Alarms
Plant Instrumentation
Test Intervals
(Months)
3 - 12
3- 4
6 - 12
6 - 12
3 - 12
12 - 24
6 - 12
12 - 24
6 - 12
6 - 24
6 - 24
3 - 12
3 - 12
6 - 24
12 - 36
12 - 60
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 13
5.3.2
Review
To ensure that inspection and test intervals are appropriate the
effectiveness of the programmes must be continually assessed and
adjusted where optimisation can be affected or deficiencies need to be
addressed.
The reason and justification for a change in test frequency should be
formally approved by the design and operating authorities. This
enables the changes made over the lifetime of a particular installation to
be identified and traced.
Plant modifications and operating condition changes must be
communicated to the design authority in order that the impact on the
related instrument systems and inspection programmes can be assessed.
When reviewing test frequencies, account should be taken of
modifications, recorded test results and failures, comments from the
testers and changes to operating conditions. Test periods may only be
increased when an analysis based on a significant number of test results
can demonstrate that the deterioration or failure rate of the equipment
justifies the extension. The significant number of test results can take
account of numbers of identical equipment items operating on similar
duties, in similar environments.
5.3.3
5.4
Reporting
Reports of all inspection and tests carried out must be recorded and
stored on file. In BP facilities with large inventories of instrumentation
the use of computerised systems are essential for this purpose.
To facilitate accurate reporting, report sheets should be structured for
assisting the recording of the information required as the test
progresses.
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 14
5.4.1
Report Sheet
To provide the above information the report sheet should include:(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
the reason for carrying out the inspection and test. This can be
a scheduled test, a test initiated due to a suspected fault or a
test following an incident where the system failed to respond.
(e)
(f)
(g)
the test equipment used, noting the Serial Number and the date
of its last calibration.
(h)
(i)
(j)
(k)
(l)
(m)
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 15
5.4.2
(n)
(o)
(p)
6.
REGIONAL ANNEX
This section supplements the foregoing international requirements, to
assist with application in the particular region identified.
6.1
United Kingdom
The following standards are relevant to the inspection and testing of
plant instrument systems.
IP Model Code 14
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 16
PES
SI 1029
EEMUA 160
SI 2169
SI 289
Pipeline
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 17
APPENDIX A
DEFINITIONS AND ABBREVIATIONS
Definitions
Standardised definitions may be found in the BP Group RPSEs Introductory Volume.
alarm
category 1 system
category 2A system
category 2B system
competent person
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 18
functional integrity
hazard rate
inherent integrity
inspection
inspectors
inspection authority
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 19
management
modification
operating authority
override
reliability
reliability analysis
testing
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 20
Abbreviations
FMECA
MMS
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 21
APPENDIX B
LIST OF REFERENCED DOCUMENTS
A reference invokes the latest published issue or amendment unless stated otherwise.
Referenced standards may be replaced by equivalent standards that are internationally or
otherwise recognised provided that it can be shown to the satisfaction of the purchaser's
professional engineer that they meet or exceed the requirements of the referenced standards.
BP Group Documents
BP Group RP 32-5
BP Group RP 50-2
BP Group RP 30-6
BP Group RP 32-3
BP Group RP 32-4
BP Group RP 44-1
ISO 10418
IEC/SC 65A
RP 32-6
INSPECTION AND TESTING OF
IN-SERVICE INSTRUMENTATION
PAGE 22