Valve Maintenance Shutdown Planning and Turnaround Management
- ted wang
- May 28
- 2 min read
Planned maintenance shutdowns are the primary opportunity to inspect, repair, and replace critical valves. Effective turnaround planning reduces downtime and ensures all valve work is completed safely.
Valve Inventory and Criticality Assessment
Before a turnaround, classify all valves by criticality, maintenance history, and anticipated condition. Focus resources on valves with the highest consequence of failure or known problems.
Safety critical valves: Overpressure protection, emergency isolation, fire valves
Operability critical: Valves whose failure stops production
Maintenance history: Valves with repeated failures deserve special attention
Age-based: Valves beyond design life requiring inspection or replacement
Scope Development and Work Order Creation
Define the scope of work for each valve clearly. Work orders must specify the task, spare parts required, inspection criteria, and completion acceptance standard.
Overhaul: Full disassembly, inspection, new seals and packing
Inspection only: Disassemble and inspect; reassemble without replacement if acceptable
Replacement: Remove existing valve and install new or refurbished unit
Calibration: Positioner or actuator setting verification without disassembly
Spare Parts Management for Turnarounds
Order spare parts well in advance. Long lead items like exotic alloy trim and specialized packing materials must be on hand before the shutdown begins. Late parts cause schedule overruns.
Seal kits: Body seals, packing, and soft seat kits for each valve type
Actuator parts: Diaphragm, spring, O-rings for pneumatic actuators
Trim kits: Seat, plug, and cage assemblies for control valves
Lead time check: Specialty items may require 12-20 weeks; plan accordingly
Post-Turnaround Testing and Documentation
After repair, each valve must be tested and documented before returning to service. Pressure testing, leak testing, and functional testing confirm the work was completed correctly.
Hydrostatic test: Body and seat tested to 1.5x MAWP
Seat leakage test: API 598 acceptance criteria for the specified leakage class
Functional test: Actuated valves stroked fully and response time recorded
Documentation: Work order completion, as-left condition, and test results archived

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