Cohort starts 11 Oct 3 enrolled
Finite Element Analysis (FEA) Fundamentals and ASME Section VIII Division 2 Part 5 Implementation for Pressure Vessel Design
- 7-day money-back guarantee
- Session recordings included
- Certificate of completion
Why enroll
Is this course for you?
You should take this if
- You work in Oil & Gas or Energy & Utilities
- You're a Mechanical / Piping & Layout professional
- You have 3+ years of hands-on experience in this field
- You prefer live, instructor-led training with Q&A
You should skip if
- You're new to this field with no prior experience
- You need a different specialisation outside Mechanical
- You need fully self-paced, on-demand content
Course details
Course suitable for
Key topics covered
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Training details
This is a live course that has a scheduled start date.
Live session
Starts
Sat, Oct 11, 2025
Duration
2.8 hours per day
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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
Excellent Mentor. Very well explained.
awsome
It is good
At first glance, the topics looked familiar, but the depth surprised me. The course went well beyond basic FEA theory and forced a closer look at how ASME Section VIII Division 2 Part 5 is actually applied on real pressure vessel jobs. Stress linearization, protection against plastic collapse, and buckling checks were covered in a way that tied directly to vessels used in oil & gas processing, like separators and heat exchangers, as well as steam drums in energy utilities. One challenge was wrapping my head around the acceptance criteria in Part 5 and how sensitive results can be to mesh density and load combinations. It took some effort to reconcile what the solver spits out versus what the code actually wants you to evaluate, especially for fatigue screening and local stress checks at nozzles and welds. A practical takeaway was learning how to properly define stress classification lines and load cases so the results stand up to code review. That filled a gap from past projects where FEA was done, but not fully code-aligned. The material feels immediately usable, and I can see this being useful in long-term project work.