The Southern African Institute of Welding (SAIW) is Africa’s leading welder training organisation and also hosts the leading nondestructive testing (NDT) facility in Africa.
The importance of NDT to the safety of structures must never be underestimated, SAIW systems and quality manager Harold Jansen tells Engineering News. “This is an area of engineering and industry that we must never take for granted. Safety and the protection of human life are the engineer’s number one priority and NDT is at the heart of such a priority.”
Jansen recommends that all companies in the NDT industry ensure that their competence levels are continuously tried and tested to ensure they are able to deliver the type of service the citizens of this country deserve.
The foundation of NDT, according to Jansen, is visual testing, or the visual observation of material or components, big or small, throughout its ‘engineering life span’. Other SAIW courses in sophisticated NDT technologies include magnetic particle testing, eddy current testing, radiographic testing and ultrasonic testing.
“Visual testing is an essential tool in assessing any engineering product, and should never be underestimated in terms of its efficacy as an NDT process,” Jansen points out. He explains that the three basic visual techniques in visual NDT testing are direct, indirect and translucent.
Direct visual testing involves the direct observation of an accessible inspection surface, with the eye within 600 mm of the area of observation. The incident angle between the eye and the inspection surface should not exceed 60º, as the method would then be regarded as a profile assessment, rather than a surface inspection. Mirrors can be used to modify the angle of vision, or to illuminate the inspection surface. Magnifying glasses not exceeding 10× magnification may also be used to assist in the testing process.
Indirect or remote visual testing relies on the use of equipment such as borescopes, fibrescopes, video probes or cameras, manipulated through mechanical means such as remotely operated robots or drones, to make a hard-to-reach surface visually observable. The image resolution, also known as image detail, must be comparable, incorporating aspects such as digital pixel size, colour and image sensors.
Translucent visual testing can only be performed if light can be transmitted through the material. This technique is seldom used in general engineering, as most engineering materials are opaque.
Jansen says that visual testing observes possible discontinuities that could influence the component’s operability and visual inspection involves looking at the component as a whole. “Engineering components have to undergo both visual testing and visual inspection.”
Edited by: Zandile Mavuso
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor: Features
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