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A Powerful, Portable Pipe-Inspection Duo: the AxSEAM™ Scanner and OmniScan™ X3 Flaw Detector—A Customer Review

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Olympus AxSEAM long seam pipe scanner set up on a half-pipe standard with a longitudinal weld and an OmniScan X3 phased array flaw detector with full matrix capture (FMC) total focusing method (TFM) capabilities.

AxSEAM scanner and OmniScan X3 flaw detector set up on a half-pipe sample with simulated ERW defects in the Onet Technologies test lab (image courtesy of CEM magazine)

As a provider of engineering and maintenance services to nuclear power and petrochemical plants, Onet Technologies’ inspectors need portable and efficient ultrasonic testing (UT) equipment. And when inspecting complicated in-plant piping systems, the more multifunctional and compact their instruments are the better.

Onet Technologies already relies on Olympus’ portable OmniScan MX2 flaw detector. However, our NDT product specialist Benoit Cabirol suspected the company might benefit from some of our more recent innovations. Last fall, he loaned an AxSEAM™ scanner and OmniScan™ X3 phased array (PA) flaw detector to Onet’s R&D lab so they could test their potential advantages.

Innovative Tools Ease Weld Inspectors’ Job

The AxSEAM scanner is tailor-made for pipeline scanning, mainly longitudinal seams, but it also switches easily to circumferential (girth weld) scanning with a simple adjustment. Combining the AxSEAM scanner with the OmniScan X3 flaw detector—which also features advanced total focusing method (TFM) imaging—gives weld inspectors additional tools to ease their job:

  • The operator can install four phased array probes and thoroughly inspect pipe welds, using PA, time-of-flight diffraction (TOFD), and TFM techniques without switching probes.
  • A coupling-check warning lights up on the AxSEAM scanner’s ScanDeck™ module as soon as the OmniScan unit’s PA channels detect a lack of coupling.
  • An excessive scan speed warning light also alerts the operator when the instrument’s maximum acquisition speed is exceeded to avoid missing data.

Celia Chevallier—leader of the NDT R&D unit at Onet Technologies—conducted in-lab tests on a half-pipe sample using the AxSEAM scanner and OmniScan X3 flaw detector setup.

Onet Technologies nondestructive testing (NDT) expert using an AxSEAM scanner and OmniScan X3 phased array flaw detector in an in-laboratory setting to test the efficacy of the set up on circumferential and longitudinal weld seams in pipes.

Celia Chevallier, leader of the NDT R&D unit at Onet Technologies, performing lab tests using the AxSEAM scanner and OmniScan X3 flaw detector (image courtesy of CEM magazine)

Célia Chevallier,responsable Cellule R CND chez Onet Technologies

(Image courtesy of CEM magazine)

The following interview with Celia Chevallier appeared in issue no. 73 of Contrôles Essais Mesures (CEM) magazine (translated from French). Here, she discusses the equipment’s performance during the testing.

CEM: To what extent is Onet Technologies involved in weld inspection?

Celia Chevallier: Onet Technologies is committed to the excellence of the French and international nuclear industry. As an engineering and services company, our main mission is to support the nuclear industry stakeholders in developing, operating, maintaining safe conditions, or even the dismantling of nuclear facilities.

When we use inspection equipment in nuclear power plants, we need it to be portable and built for industrial applications—this also goes for the equipment we use for petrochemical inspections. The OmniScan X3 flaw detector could soon replace our OmniScan MX2 units, given its advanced functionalities.

CEM: Can you expand on that?

C. Chevallier: The TFM available on the OmniScan X3 flaw detector is a plus. Our experts are sometimes called upon to analyze defects on welds. This requires pushing techniques to the maximum and sometimes mixing complementary techniques. Having a device that offers the possibility of combining different techniques means that you don't have to bring several flaw-detection instruments with you. Also, the OmniScan X3 unit's user interface guides us, while leaving us free to choose our parameters, which we like.

“The warning lights…they tell us, without having to shift our focus, whether the coupling is good or not.”

CEM: Do you think the AxSEAM scanner could be helpful to you?

C. Chevallier: Yes, especially its integrated warning system. Normally, operators need to constantly check the inspection instrument's display to monitor the coupling of each probe. The warning lights visible on the ScanDeck module are very practical in that they tell us, without having to shift our focus, whether the coupling is good or not.

CEM: Are there any other features that convinced you?

C. Chevallier: The AxSEAM scanner appeals to us because it is easy to adjust and quick to set up—major advantages when we have to switch from one type of weld to another. This scanner enables us to check pipes of different thicknesses, while mitigating the difficulty of installing the probes. With the AxSEAM, this adjustment is quick and easy. Another detail that is important to me: the AxSEAM scanner has a brake so you can release your grip on it to remove a probe, for example. The laser guide is also an asset.

CEM: Onet Technologies and Olympus have worked together for a while. What sort of relationship do your companies have?

C. Chevallier: Onet Technologies has been an Olympus customer for many years. We appreciate Olympus products because they meet our expectations. Also, our Olympus collaborators know how to advise us and apply their expertise to meet our specific requests. For example, Olympus once mobilized their teams to design a particular probe holder for us that was not offered in the catalog.

For more information on these and Olympus’ other nondestructive testing (NDT) instruments, go to https://www.olympus-ims.com/en/all-products/.

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Staff Writer

Sarah Williams worked for nearly a decade as a researcher and copywriter in the broadcast media industry. Now Sarah applies her skills as a writer and editor to produce compelling, high-quality material on topics related to Evident’s wide range of nondestructive testing (NDT) solutions. She writes about the latest remote visual, microscope, ultrasonic, eddy current, and phased array technologies. She also explores their applications and contributions to improving the quality and safety of the world around us. Sarah works at the office in Quebec City, where she resides with her partner, David, and her three children, Sophie, Anouk, and Éloi. 

March 4, 2021
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