Vessel Inspection Solutions
Maintain the Safety of Critical Equipment
SCC(stress corrosion cracking)
Semiautomated Phased Array and Time-of-Flight Diffraction (TOFD) for Shell Welds
Monitor the structural health of the vessel, detect service cracks, and archive your data
- High-speed detection capabilities with intuitive imaging
- Reduced inspection time compared to radiography
- Immediate results enable you to detect and fix process problems right away
Learn More

Rope Access Conventional Ultrasonic Testing for Nozzles
Inspect nozzle welds for service cracks, even on top of the vessel
- A lightweight instrument facilitates rope access inspection
- Reduced inspection time compared to radiography
- Immediately quantifiable results enable fast on-site analysis
Learn More

Automated Phased Array for the Cylindrical Shell
Map corrosion at high speed and look for disbonds and SCC at the clad layer
- High-speed detection capabilities with intuitive imaging
- Increased probability of detection with one data point every square mm
- Up to 1mm near-surface resolution with dual linear array probes
Learn More

Manual Phased Array for Flanges and Bolts
Inspect the Sealing Surfaces of Flanges for Crevice Corrosion and Detect Cracking in Flange Bolts
- Use the power of imaging for bolt crack detection
- Easy access between the flange bolts with phased array probes that have a small footprint
- Reach the flange area of interest with one sectorial phased array scan
Learn More

Rope Access Conventional Ultrasonic Testing for Spherical Shells
Spot check for corrosion
- Easy and fast setup and detection with dedicated corrosion probes
- High-precision measurement of remaining wall thickness
- Reach vessel heights with a lightweight and powerful instrument
Learn More

Conventional and Phased Array Ultrasound for In-Service Vessels
Detect and map corrosion at high service temperatures
- Save time and reduce cost with in-service inspection
- High-resolution corrosion mapping with phased array probes up to 300 °F (150 °C)
- Precise spot checking with conventional ultrasound up to 840 °F (450 °C)
Learn More
