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Design of Pressure Vessel using PV Elite – Different Component Design Requirement & it’s impact banner

Design of Pressure Vessel using PV Elite – Different Component Design Requirement & it’s impact

Design of Pressure Vessel using PV Elite – Different Component Design Requirement & it’s impact banner
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Design of Pressure Vessel using PV Elite – Different Component Design Requirement & it’s impact

3(15)
2501 views
FREE
3 hrs
Next month
English
Shanmugam V
Shanmugam VLead / Senior Mechanical Engineer/Static Equipment Engineer
  • Session recordings included
  • Certificate of completion
  • Interactive Video Lessons
  • Completion Certificate
Volume pricing for groups of 5+

Why enroll

1. How elementary and advanced topics of Solid mechanics are applied in development of Pressure vessel codes and standards.
2. Theoretical background behind design code requirements which helps an engineer understand the strengths, weaknesses and applicability of the code requirements.
3. An insight into the newly introduced codes.
4. Bridging the gap between theoretical knowledge and code requirements.
5. University students who want to take up career in static equipment engineering and wants to learn about the most widely used Industrial standard.
6. Experienced engineers who want to understand the background of code rules and requirements

Is this course for you?

You should take this if

  • You work in Oil & Gas or Pharmaceutical & Healthcare
  • You're a Mechanical professional
  • You have some foundational knowledge in the subject
  • You prefer live, instructor-led training with Q&A

You should skip if

  • You're looking for an introductory overview course
  • You need a different specialisation outside Mechanical
  • You need fully self-paced, on-demand content

Course details

This course will cover basic and advanced topics of Pressure Vessel Engineering Design and Manufacturing requirement to provide a robust understanding of the background theory behind technical requirements of Pressure Vessel codes and standards. This will serve as a refresher course on core and advanced topics of Pressure Vessel Engineering to understand technical background of design and analysis as per codes & standards.

This course covers all important aspects of Pressure Vessel Design, Fabrication and testing, which comprises of

• Design, Analysis and Engineering requirement for Pressure Vessel

• Metallurgy and Material Selection while designing Pressure vessel

• Fabrication prerequisite while Pressure Vessel engineering

• Heat Treatment requirement for Pressure Vessel

• Testing & Inspection essentials for Pressure Vessel Design

All of above topics are covered in different modules of this course hence we encourage you to enroll all modules to learn all major and critical areas of Pressure vessel engineering.

Classifications of Static Equipment Engineering is a specialized discipline of Mechanical Engineering which covers the design of static equipments like Pressure vessels (Process Columns, Drums, Reactors, Separators, Drain vessel), Heat exchangers (Shell and Tube, Plate and Frame, Plate and Shell, Air Coolers), Atmospheric Tanks (Low pressure and LPG Tanks), Flare Stack in chemical, petrochemical, or hydrocarbon facilities. We have different courses to cover above listed equipment & do participate in all courses.

Course suitable for

Key topics covered

This module talks about fundamentals of Pressure vessel Design & Engineering. Following topics are covered in this module
1. Different Component Design Requirement & it’s impact
a. Local Load Analysis WRC 537 & WRC 297
b. Flange rating
c. Stiffiner ring design
d. Saddle design
Do enroll other module to learn more on fundamentals of Design of pressure vessel and understand ASME Code that are critical for a static equipment engineer.

Opportunities that await you!

Skills & tools you'll gain

PVElite

Career opportunities

Training details

This is a live course that has a scheduled start date.

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Why people choose EveryEng

Industry-aligned courses, expert training, hands-on learning, recognized certifications, and job opportunities-all in a flexible and supportive environment.

What learners say about this course

Dr Surekha Prabhu
Dr Surekha Prabhu R & D | Drilling & Completion Fluid I Catalysis I Analytical Chemistry I Material Science I LLM Trainer
Feb 25, 2026

This course turned out to be more technical than I anticipated. The PV Elite walkthroughs went beyond button‑clicking and actually tied the calculations back to ASME Section VIII logic, which is often skipped in short tools trainings. The sections on metallurgy and PWHT were especially relevant to oil & gas service, where sour conditions and material toughness drive decisions more than people admit. It was also useful to see how the same vessel assumptions shift in chemical/pharmaceutical applications, where cleanliness, cyclic operation, and inspection access become system‑level constraints. One challenge was keeping track of where PV Elite defaults diverge from typical EPC practices, especially around corrosion allowance and nozzle reinforcement. Some edge cases—like local stresses from heavy agitator nozzles or partial vacuum during startup—required extra attention and weren’t fully resolved by the software alone. That mirrors real projects, honestly. A practical takeaway was a more structured way to review PV Elite outputs before IFC, particularly checking PWHT exemptions and test pressures against fabrication realities. Compared to industry training I’ve seen, this connected design, fabrication, and inspection better. I can see this being useful in long-term project work.

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Bhavesh Suthar
Feb 25, 2026

Initially, I wasn’t sure what to expect from this course, especially since it’s marked beginner and I already work on pressure vessels for oil & gas projects. The value came from how it tied PV Elite modeling back to ASME Section VIII logic instead of treating the software like a black box. Topics like material selection for corrosive service in chemical/pharmaceutical units and PWHT requirements were explained in a way that matched what actually shows up on datasheets and vendor drawings. One challenge was keeping up with the code references during the early modules. Jumping between PV Elite inputs and the rationale behind allowable stresses took some effort, particularly around external pressure checks and nozzle reinforcement. That said, it filled a knowledge gap I had around why certain PV Elite warnings appear and when they actually matter. A practical takeaway was learning a more structured way to set up load cases and corrosion allowance assumptions, which I used the following week on a small separator tied into an energy utilities steam system. The fabrication and inspection sections also helped during a shop drawing review. Overall, it felt grounded in real engineering practice.

Vezos Oliveira
Vezos Oliveira
Feb 25, 2026

Initially, I wasn’t sure what to expect from this course. Coming from oil & gas projects with pressure vessels tied into larger process systems, a “beginner” label usually means oversimplification. That wasn’t entirely the case here. The walkthrough of ASME Section VIII logic inside PV Elite, especially around testing criteria, lined up reasonably well with what’s done in chemical and pharmaceutical plants where documentation and traceability matter as much as calculations. One challenge was switching between theory and the software screens. At times the PV Elite inputs for hydrotest pressure, joint efficiency, and PWHT assumptions moved faster than expected, and reconciling those with code clauses took some effort. That said, the discussion on material selection and heat treatment highlighted edge cases that are often missed, like low-temperature service in energy utilities or post-hydrotest distortion risks on thin shells. A practical takeaway was building a simple test and inspection checklist directly from the design inputs—useful when coordinating with fabrication and QA teams. Compared to typical industry practice, the course pushed a bit more on why certain testing criteria exist, not just how to click through them. The content felt aligned with practical engineering demands.

Abdelwahid Aiachi
Abdelwahid Aiachi
Feb 25, 2026

Initially, I wasn’t sure what to expect from this course. Coming from oil & gas projects with a lot of exposure to pressure vessels and storage tanks, the content felt familiar at first, but it did surface gaps that juniors usually struggle with on site. The sections on heat exchangers for energy utilities, especially power plant auxiliaries, were closer to how things actually get executed compared to what’s taught in college. One challenge was keeping the level right for beginners while still touching real-world issues. Some edge cases—like package equipment limits of supply or vendor deviations from ASME requirements—were mentioned but could have gone a bit deeper. Still, it was useful to see how static equipment decisions ripple into piping stress, layout, and commissioning schedules at a system level. Compared to typical industry onboarding, this course does a better job explaining *why* certain checks exist, not just what to fill in on a datasheet. A practical takeaway was the step-by-step way to map certifications, early career roles, and the transition from design to site support. That’s something many engineers only learn the hard way. I can see this being useful in long-term project work.

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