Online Live Training Course on Detailed Instrumentation Design Engineering (Batch 2)
Sawrabh Raj
Sr Instrumentation Design Engineer, Global Trainer- Instrumentation Design
COMPLETED
Beginner course for learners
Foundational Learning
Access to Study Materials
Self-Paced Learning
Online Live Training Course on Detailed Instrumentation Design Engineering (Batch 2)
Course type
Instructor led live training
Course duration
25 Hrs
Course start date & time
March 25, 2025 at 03:30 PM
Language
English
This course format is where trainer will explain you the subject via online live session. This course will run as per specific date and time.
Why enroll
This course offers participants the opportunity to gain specialized knowledge and practical skills in designing and engineering instrumentation systems for industrial applications. Whether you're looking to enhance your career prospects, improve your technical expertise, or prepare for real-world project challenges, this course is designed to equip you with the tools necessary for success in the field of instrumentation engineering.
Value the Course Brings to Participants:
Industry-Relevant Skills: The course provides up-to-date knowledge on designing and implementing instrumentation systems, covering all the details an instrumentation engineer should know. It equips participants with hands-on expertise that can be applied directly to their current or future projects in diverse industries such as oil & gas, manufacturing, power generation, and pharmaceuticals.
Practical Application of Theory: Through case studies and real-world examples, participants will learn how to apply theoretical concepts to practical situations. This includes designing systems, preparing engineering drawings, and ensuring compliance with industry standards, all of which are critical for success in any instrumentation engineering role.
Enhanced Career Opportunities: With the increasing demand for skilled professionals in automation, process control, and instrumentation, completing this course will make participants more competitive in the job market. They will gain the ability to contribute to high-value projects, design complex systems, and manage instrumentation projects from start to finish.
Increased Confidence in Project Execution: By understanding the complete design process participants will feel confident in handling the technical challenges and intricacies of real-world instrumentation projects.
Exposure to International Standards and Best Practices: The course provides exposure to global standards, including safety codes and regulations. This ensures that participants understand how to design systems that meet industry and regulatory requirements, enhancing their credibility as professionals.
Improved Problem-Solving Abilities: Participants will develop critical thinking and troubleshooting skills, learning how to solve common design issues, improve system performance, and ensure long-term reliability of instrumentation systems in industrial environments.
Career Advancement and Leadership Skills: For those already in the field, the course offers the chance to advance to leadership positions by providing knowledge on managing instrumentation projects, cost estimation, procurement, and coordination between different engineering teams.
Course details
Course suitable for
Oil & Gas Instrumentation
Key topics covered
Course Index from Basic to Advance Level-
Introduction about EPC Company and How to do FEED Engineering.
Work Culture and How to work in EPC Company
Study of Legends and General Notes
Study and understanding of P&ID
Preparation of Instrument Index
Preparation of IO List
Codes and Standards
Hazardous Area Classification ( Includes Temperature Class, SIL Ratings, Intrinsic safety, Weather Protection)
Pressure Instruments
Temperature Instruments
Level Instruments
Flow Instruments
Control Valve ( Cv and on off Valve)
Pressure safety Valve
Wire and Cables, Cable schedule, Drum Schedule
Details Design Engineering
Discussion about Overall Plot plan and cutting of sectional drawings
Instrument Location Plan
JB Location plan
Field Instrument Wiring Layout
Main Cable and Cable Tray Layout
Field Instrument Air Piping and Tubing Layout
FGS Instrument Location Plan
Level Sketch
Hookup Drawings
Control System Overview
FGS Instruments Basic discussion.
Preparation of Requisition ( RFQ)
Technical Bid Evaluation (TBE/TBA) Procedure
VDR ( vendor Document Review) Procedure.
It will upscale your skills, you will be industry ready and able to join as Instrumentation Design Engineer in any EPC companies world wide.
Training details
This is a live course that has a scheduled start date.
Live session
March 25, 2025 at 03:30 PM
1 Hours every day
25 Days
Our Alumni Work At
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COMPLETED
March 25, 2025
Questions and Answers
A: 11.8 mA at zero DP smells like an equalising valve cracked open or one side isolated. Option A checks the physical DP condition first, before you blame electronics. Option B is tempting if you’ve been burned by noisy signals, but changing range hides the fault and violates the datasheet intent. Option C assumes the problem is in the PLC, yet the raw current already tells you something’s off upstream. Option D matters, but excessive loop resistance won’t land you neatly at mid-scale with zero DP applied.
A: The filled triangle with FO gives you the failure position only. Option C sticks to what ISA 5.1 actually conveys. Option A mixes up fail position with actuator action, a classic shortcut that breaks when you meet reverse-acting positioners. Option B contradicts the FO callout entirely. Option D sounds control-theory correct, but signal direction isn’t defined by the P&ID symbol alone.
A: 30% of a 10 bar URL is 3 bar minimum span. Option B clears that threshold while still covering normal DP. Option A looks neat but violates the 30% rule once you check the math. Option C is the brochure-driven mistake: accuracy and resolution suffer. Option D feels elegant for control, but it breaks the transmitter’s stated performance limits.
A: Entity matching is the gatekeeper in Ex i systems. Option B stops you from energising a non-compliant loop. Option A matters for corrosion, not ignition risk. Option C affects signal reading, not safety integrity. Option D should be single-point grounded, but doing it in the field JB is usually wrong and not the first safety check.
A: Duplicate tags break traceability across loops, alarms, and shutdown logic. Option B forces a correction before you energise anything. Option A happens in bar-napkin projects, not controlled facilities. Option C would violate basic loop design. Option D could happen, but you can’t assume it without drawings backing you up.
A: ΔP is 50 bar, exceeding 0.5 × 80 = 40 bar, so you’re into choked or incipient cavitation territory. Option A is the classic phase confusion. Option C ignores how vena contracta pressure behaves. Option D delays the problem until erosion shows up during turndown testing.
A: Liquid service needs a clear drain path. Option B prevents gas pockets. Option A is too shallow and traps bubbles. Option C sounds tidy but fails in real installations. Option D is the voice of someone who hasn’t had to blow a plugged line offshore.
A: SIL logic can’t depend on a mechanical safeguard it’s meant to back up. Option B flags loss of independence. Option A is too absolute; alarms are common. Option C confuses protection layers. Option D is simply false.
A: At 20 mA, available voltage for resistance is 12 V, giving 12/0.02 = 600 Ω. Option A forgets you size at 20 mA, not 10. Option C assumes a 15 V transmitter drop. Option D ignores physics and shows up in fault reports.
A: Double-ended shield grounding invites ground loops offshore. Option A fits the symptom. Option B rarely causes this level of noise. Option C affects sourcing, not EMI pickup. Option D is an ingress issue, not an EMC one.
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