The unique challenges of storage tank painting

Projects involving the painting and coating of storage tanks yield some unique challenges. The sizes of tanks vary widely, and so do their elevations. Most tank projects involve the need for fall protection. Virtually all of them involve confined space and all the risks associated with operating within them.

These are a few of the distinct concerns a contractor must account for before beginning a project involving storage tank painting and coating.

Entering confined spaces

Depending on the substance that occupied the tank before repainting, there is the possibility of a buildup of dangerous fumes near the bottom of the tank. Vapors from fuel or other chemicals, present in high enough concentrations, can be harmful or even fatal to crews working among them.

To protect against these hazards, air quality must be examined with a multi-gas monitor each time a crewmember is about to enter the tank. According to OSHA’s standards for the atmospheric testing of confined spaces, multi-gas monitors must be capable of testing for “oxygen, flammable gasses and potential toxic air contaminants that may be present as a result of the processes that take place in or around the confined space.”

Any job involving confined spaces also requires the presence of a “hole watch,” a crewmember whose sole responsibility is to monitor the entrance to the space and maintain constant radio communication with the crew inside. It is his duty to respond quickly in the event of an emergency.

Ventilation

Coatings themselves may also emanate fumes during the painting process. While applying them in open air this may not be cause for concern, but when applying coatings in a confined space the accumulation of these fumes can reach dangerous levels.

For this reason, it is necessary that crews spending protracted periods of time painting inside of a tank wear air-supplied respirators. In addition to these hoods, careful consideration must be given to air circulation.

It is essential that there is positive and negative airflow inside the confined space to ensure a fresh air exchange. The goal is to get roughly one complete cycle of fresh air into the tank every hour.

Fall protection

Tank painting jobs often require a fresh coat for both the inside and outside of the tank or tower. The need for fall protection on lofty, iconic water towers such as the ones we’ve painted at Alsip or Two Harbors is obvious. But even ground-level tanks like the one at Eglin Air Force Base rise multiple stories off the ground and necessitate safety systems be in place.

On jobs involving smaller tanks, staging systems are often constructed inside the tank itself. A T-system, consisting of two pick boards arranged perpendicular to one another and controlled by three motors, can raise crews to the appropriate working level. Crewmembers using the T-system should maintain a constant attachment to a safety line running from the ceiling to the bottom of the tank.

In the case of extremely large tanks, “door sheets” can be cut into the side of the structure. Man lifts can then be driven in through the opening, eliminating the need to construct a staging system. Once the job is mostly completed, the door is welded back onto the tank and coated last. This method, though often requiring the services of a subcontractor for cutting and welding, can be well worth it for the time that it saves.

A question of scale

Some projects, like the one we executed at the tank farm on the Point Loma Submarine Base, involve fields of many tanks. Jobs like these can represent a significant logistical challenge.

If it’s your job to choose to a contractor for a tank-painting job, you’ll want to make sure you choose one with plenty of experience. This will ensure that the contractor has the skills, equipment and staff to handle your job.

 

Another Thomas milestone: 1000 days with no stoppage or delay at Point Loma Submarine Base

It’s not really boasting to say that Thomas Industrial Coatings is one of the best industrial painting and coating contractors in the country. That’s just Thomas Pride. After all, we’ve got a long history of quality, efficiency, and satisfied clients to back us up. But when one of our crews hits an incredible milestone on a project we’ve been hired to complete? Well, it’s hard not to brag on them just a little.

Painting and coating pipeline and fuel storage can be a tough job, as you may have read in an earlier post here on our blog. It’s that type of project that has been keeping our San Diego crew busy for quite some time now as they prepare the surface and coat the fuel farm on the Point Loma submarine base. They’ve put in a lot of hard work to keep up with both the tight deadlines and high standards of quality the military demands, but they’re training and dedication to professionalism has seen them through to a fantastic achievement: completing 1000 days on the project with no work stoppage or delays whatsoever.

Everyone here at Thomas Industrial Coatings would like to say congratulations to our San Diego/Point Loma crew, as well as General Contractor Nova-UCCO Joint Venture and all the other subcontractors who helped us achieve this incredible goal. Once again, our workers have raised the bar for what should be expected of a contractor in the painting and coatings industry, and we simply could not be prouder. Way to go!

(photo of the Point Loma project courtesy of root-pass.com)

28,000 sq ft storage tank coating completed for Air Force

Thomas Industrial Coatings recently completed 28,000 square feet of industrial coating work for the United States Air Force at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida.

Hired for both storage tank surface preparation and storage tank industrial coating application, the project amounted to $430,000 worth of work for the Pevely, Missouri based company.

Services rendered included blasting and painting a storage container on-site at the air base. The former was executed with locally recycled coal slag and the latter utilized a zinc, epoxy, urethane paint system to coat the tank’s exterior.

This project marks one of many that Thomas Industrial Coatings has completed for the United States Department of Defense. Learn more about the storage tank surface preparation and coating project.

 

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