A procurement-ready guide for engineers, MRO teams, and project buyers
Below is a practical, spec-first breakdown of how to select and communicate flange requirements clearly—especially when multiple stakeholders (engineering, purchasing, installers, QA/QC, and logistics) touch the same order.
Why “pipe flanges” is not a complete spec
The most common standards you’ll see in U.S. purchasing
For large diameter steel flanges, ASME B16.47 is commonly referenced (NPS 26 through NPS 60) and includes pressure–temperature ratings, materials, dimensions, and more. (reliavalves.com)
In municipal waterworks service, buyers frequently encounter AWWA C207, which sets minimum requirements and dimensions for steel flanges used with steel water pipe and appurtenances in water utility conditions. (store.awwa.org)
Pressure class: what it means (and what it doesn’t)
Practical takeaway for procurement teams: if engineering gives you only “Class 300,” confirm the design temperature and flange material spec. That’s what drives the allowable pressure at temperature.
| Standard / Use Case | Common Class/Rating Labels | Best For | Watch Outs |
|---|---|---|---|
| ASME B16.5 (asme.org) | 150, 300, 400, 600, 900, 1500, 2500 (midstreamcalculator.com) | Most industrial PVF packages, fire pump rooms, mechanical/process piping | Pressure rating varies by material/temperature; confirm facing and gasket style (midstreamcalculator.com) |
| ASME B16.47 (large diameter) (reliavalves.com) | Commonly referenced up to Class 900 (piping-world.com) | Large OD pipelines, transmission, big pump stations | Series and bolt patterns matter—confirm exact standard callout and mating dimensions (reliavalves.com) |
| AWWA C207 (waterworks steel flanges) (store.awwa.org) | Classes B, D, E, F (water utility service) (apiint.com) | Municipal distribution, treatment plants, pump stations | AWWA pressure classes are not ASME classes; confirm bolt pattern and mating equipment (apiint.com) |
Material + temperature: where specs get real
If your team is operating in high ambient heat, steam service, or hot process lines, the allowable pressure may drop significantly as temperature rises. That’s why your PO should reference both the material specification and the design temperature basis, not only “Class 150.”
Step-by-step: a clean flange specification checklist (ready for RFQs)
1) Start with the mating component
2) Lock the governing standard
3) Specify class with temperature basis
4) Call out facing + gasket style
5) Add the “buyers always forget this” details
Include spares if the shutdown window is tight or if the line is critical.
Request MTRs, heat numbers, and marking requirements upfront.
Clarify bare, painted, galvanized, or coated—and packaging for transit.
U.S. buying and logistics realities (especially for project procurement)
IFW Supply supports procurement teams and project engineers sourcing PVF and related products with a practical focus on availability, specification matching, and documentation readiness—especially when your order includes mixed categories (industrial + waterworks + fire protection + safety) that must arrive together for a scheduled install.