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safety valve

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safety valve

a valve in a pressure vessel that allows fluid to escape when a predetermined level of pressure has been reached
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

safety valve

[′sāf·tē ‚valv]
(mechanical engineering)
A spring-loaded, pressure-actuated valve that allows steam to escape from a boiler at a pressure slightly above the safe working level of the boiler; fitted by law to all boilers. Also known as safety relief valve.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Safety valve

A relief valve set to open at a pressure safely below the bursting pressure of a container, such as a boiler or compressed air receiver. Typically, a disk is held against a seat by a spring; excessive pressure forces the disk open (see illustration). Construction is such that when the valve opens slightly, the opening force builds up to open it fully and to hold the valve open until the pressure drops a predetermined amount. This differential or blow-down pressure and the initial relieving pressure are adjustable. See Valve

McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Engineering. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

pressure relief valve

In a pressure tank for water storage, a pressure-actuated safety valve that is designed to open and relieve pressure automatically if the pressure within the tank exceeds the value for which it was designed to operate safely.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

safety valve

safety valveclick for a larger image
Safety valve: it ensures that the fluid bypasses anytime the pressure builds up beyond designated value.
A form of pressure relief valve that opens to relieve the pressure in the container any time the pressure rises above a predetermined value.
An Illustrated Dictionary of Aviation Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Safety Valve

 

a device to ensure the safety of equipment operating under high liquid, gas, or steam pressure when damage to the equipment may result from exceeding the established operating pressure. Safety valves are installed on steam boilers, compressed air receivers, and various technical devices and pipelines operating under pressure. When the pressure in the system rises above the permissible level, the safety valve opens and automatically releases the excess of the working substance, thus preventing an accident. When the pressure is reduced to the permissible level, the safety valve automatically closes. In the USSR, areas of mandatory use, installation, and servicing of safety valves are determined by special laws (seeBOILER INSPECTION).

Safety valves are divided into those loaded by weights and those that are spring-loaded. In the former, the stopper is loaded directly (for low pressures) or by a lever. In spring-loaded safety valves, the pressure of the medium on the stopper is opposed by the force of a spring.

G. G. MIRZABEKOV

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Keywords: cracked disc, safety valve, stress intensity factor, FE analysis.
In order to size the channels for practical flow rates and pressure drop as they occur in safety valves, the mass flow rate of the designed glass tube should be comparable to a real safety valve.
Mike Balhoff of Legg Mason estimates that the safety valve will generate perhaps $8 million to $10 million after taking into account the other restrictions on the fund.
Under normal circumstances the safety valve on the pneumatic valve island will stop the process, but in situations where there is an increased risk the redundancy block is positioned so that if the safety valve does not operate, then the process will be stopped by the Type MKRS valve.
It has also been retrofitted to solve poor control situations, safety valve popping problems, and intermittent low steam main pressure problems.
Keeping this political safety valve in good working order could be worth the risk of letting a thousand or even ten thousand flowers of political expression bloom.
Thompson, Peter Burke, and Natalie Zemon Davis, though, Nissenbaum argues that such ritual inversions ultimately served to reaffirm the existing social order by making the hierarchy explicit and by functioning as a kind of "safety valve" which allowed frustrated peasants to periodically "blow off steam." Much of the evidence here is drawn from Europe, though a few delightful episodes involving homegrown Bostonian "charivari" persuade the reader that this is very much an American story.
The safety valve, which should have kept the hot tap at 43C, was pouring out water at 59C.
THE FINAL PICK-OFF MOVE is our quick, or step-off, move that we call our "safety valve."
Leser says it will introduce a new pilot-operated safety valve series in August 2010.
In addition, as the mortgage holder's income goes up, preset levels automatically trigger increased mortgage payments, creating a safety valve of sorts for the lender by steadily reducing the deferred portion of the mortgage.
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