Editorial

CPE Manufactures Lifting Girdles for Largest Nuclear Lift in the UK

Corus Process EngineeringCorus Process Engineering (CPE), part of Corus Northern Engineering Services (CNES) has successfully completed the manufacture and assembly of two, six-metre diameter steel lifting girdles that will be used to remove (lift and tail) the 400-tonne heat exchangers from the reactors at Calder Hall nuclear power plant in Cumbria.

Each reactor has four vertically mounted heat exchangers. These are located externally to the reactor building and were clad for insulation and weather protection. The heat exchangers weigh around 400 tonnes and measure 27m in length with a diameter of 5.5m. This will represent the largest ever lift in the UK nuclear industry. CPE delivered the lifting girdles to its customer Nuvia Limited (formerly NUKEM Limited) at the end of February 2008. Nuvia is one of several contractors chosen by Sellafield Limited to decommission the Calder Hall site.  Part of Nuvia’s responsibility was to design lifting girdles and cradles to enable the heat exchangers to be lifted, tailed and transported a lay down area. To do this two lifting girdles were required to lift and tail the vessels, which is where CNES’ fabrication and machining expertise came in.

The lifting girdles were manufactured and assembled at CNES’ Structural Workshops in Scunthorpe between August 2007 and February 2008. Materials relating to the project were bought from Corus Construction & Industrial. The manufacturing process for the carbon steel girdles involved profile cutting and rolling the circular shapes, machining and welding (flux cored arc welding) the interfaces between the two girdle halves, assembly, stress relieving, finish machining, painting and delivery.

Machining was carried out at CNES’ Scunthorpe machine shop using a large horizontal boring machine. CNES also had to construct spider structures to brace the two halves of the girdle during fabrication. Each half has a trunnion fitted at 90° to the joint face, this necessitated boring a hole in the fabrication, manufacturing and fitting the trunnion to the required tolerance. The girdles were then stress relieved and finish machined on the joint faces. The fitted bolts used to fasten the two halves together measured almost one metre in length with a diameter of 115mm. The units were inspected and painted prior to delivery to Nuvia

Steve Snowden, Production Control Engineer at CNES Structural Workshops commented: “Nuvia selected CPE because it trusted us and felt confident that we possessed the necessary technical expertise to carry out the job. We could also handle the front-end engineering that was required, plus provide all the traceability, method statements and other quality assurance-related factors that were key to the project. We also understand all the health and safety related regulations that are always our highest priority and we have the necessary fabrication, machining and surface treatment expertise to carry out the work to the required standards.”

For more information on Corus Process Engineering, please visit the website at www.corusprocessengineering.com or telephone David Scatchard on 01642 404 698 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.  

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