A practical guide for procurement teams, MRO managers, and project engineers buying flanges across the United States

“Pipe flanges” sounds straightforward—until a submittal gets rejected, bolt patterns don’t match in the field, or a lead time slips because one detail was missing from the PO. This guide breaks flange specification into clear, checkable steps so you can align engineering intent with what actually arrives on the dock—whether you’re supporting industrial projects, waterworks, irrigation, or fire protection infrastructure.

1) Start with the standards: B16.5 vs. B16.47

Most “what flange do I need?” questions are really “what standard does this system require?” For U.S.-based projects, the starting point is often ASME.

Standard
Common use
Why it matters on the PO
ASME B16.5
Most “standard” flange sizes in many industrial piping systems
Defines dimensions/ratings for common NPS ranges and pressure classes (e.g., 150, 300, 600, etc.)—critical for bolt circle and thickness compatibility.
ASME B16.47
Large-diameter flanges (often where weight/rigidity becomes a design issue)
Requires calling out Series A or Series B—mixing them can create field fit-up problems due to different dimensions/weights.

For B16.5, you’ll frequently see pressure classes like 150, 300, 600, 900, 1500, and 2500. The class is not a “PSI at all temperatures” label; it ties to allowable pressure at specific temperatures and materials, so engineering context matters. (asmeflanges.com)

2) If it’s B16.47, don’t skip Series A vs. Series B

One of the most common procurement pitfalls with large-diameter flanges is assuming “B16.47 is B16.47.” In practice, Series A and Series B can differ in weight and dimensions. Series A is often heavier (and can impose greater loads), while Series B is often lighter and may be selected for economy where external loads are manageable. (wermac.org)

PO tip
If the project spec says ASME B16.47, make sure the purchase description includes Series A or Series B, plus the pressure class and facing (RF/FF/RTJ). That one missing field can turn into a costly return or a schedule hit.

3) Choose the flange type based on install realities—not habit

Flange “type” affects welding, inspection requirements, alignment tolerance, and maintenance access. The right choice depends on the piping code, service, and contractor preference—but procurement should know what the type implies.

Flange type
Typical strengths
Watch-outs for buyers
Weld Neck (WN)
Strong, common in higher-stress service; good alignment characteristics
Confirm schedule/bore details; verify facing (RF/RTJ) matches gasket plan
Slip-On (SO)
Often easier fit-up; common in many utility/industrial contexts
Welding details matter; ensure spec acceptance for the service and code
Blind (BL)
Ideal for future tie-ins, isolation points, test headers
Weight/handling; studs length changes based on gasket/facing
Threaded / Socket Weld
Useful for certain small-bore or maintenance-friendly installs
Confirm pressure/temperature limits and vibration considerations with engineering

Even when two flanges share “Class 150” on paper, the practical outcome depends on flange standard, material group, and temperature. Getting alignment early between engineering, contractor, and purchasing saves change orders later. (asmeflanges.com)

4) Material callouts: ASTM A105 is common, but don’t stop there

Material selection is where performance and compliance meet. In many carbon steel applications, you’ll see ASTM A105 specified for forged components like flanges and fittings, often for ambient to higher-temperature service. (blog.projectmaterials.com)

What to confirm beyond “A105”
Heat treat / condition (when applicable, e.g., normalized requirements)
Impact testing or supplementary requirements (when project spec or service conditions require it)
Coating/finish (rust preventative, paint system, or bare for welding)
Documentation (MTRs, traceability, marking requirements)

If the flange is part of a broader “PVF” package (pipe, valves, and fittings), consider how valve testing and documentation expectations interact with the flange deliverable schedule—especially on tight-turn projects with multiple trades. API 598 is commonly referenced for valve inspection/testing at the manufacturer level. (reliavalves.com)

5) A “complete flange spec” checklist you can paste into a PO

When a flange order goes wrong, it’s rarely because the supplier didn’t want to help—it’s because one field was assumed. Here’s a clean checklist procurement and project engineers can align on:

• Standard: ASME B16.5 or ASME B16.47 (if B16.47, specify Series A or Series B) (asmeflanges.com)
• Size: NPS and (if required) bore/schedule
• Pressure class: 150 / 300 / 600 / etc. (asmeflanges.com)
• Type: WN / SO / BL / THD / SW / etc.
• Facing: RF / FF / RTJ (match gasket and mating flange)
• Material: e.g., ASTM A105 (or alternate alloy per spec) (blog.projectmaterials.com)
• Quantity + spares: include commissioning spares when appropriate
• Documentation: MTRs, heat numbers, marking, packaging requirements
• Delivery constraints: project need-by date, partial ship approvals, export packing (if applicable)

Quick “Did you know?” facts (useful for preventing spec mix-ups)

Pressure class isn’t a single PSI value
ASME pressure classes relate to allowable pressure at specific temperatures and materials—always confirm service temperature before “up-classing” or “down-classing.” (asmeflanges.com)
Large flanges aren’t “one size standard”
ASME B16.47 requires Series A or Series B selection—this can affect dimensions and weight, which can affect installation and supports. (wermac.org)
“A105” usually implies forged carbon steel components
ASTM A105 is widely used for forged piping components (including flanges) in ambient to higher-temperature pressure service. (blog.projectmaterials.com)

U.S. procurement angle: multi-site standardization helps more than you think

For organizations buying across multiple U.S. metros (Boise, Salt Lake City, Denver, Phoenix, Seattle, and beyond), flange errors tend to multiply when every site has its own shorthand. A simple internal “minimum PO fields” standard can reduce:

• Expedites caused by mismatched bolt patterns or facings
• Returns due to B16.47 Series A/B confusion
• Field rework when schedule/bore assumptions were wrong
• Documentation gaps when QA/QC needs traceability

If your projects include export shipments, plan early for packing/crating, inspection hold points, and consolidated documentation so flanges, valves, and companion items arrive as a usable kit—not a staggered set of partials.

Talk with IFW Supply about pipe flange sourcing (domestic or export-ready)

IFW Supply supports procurement teams and project engineers with PVF and related packages across fire protection, waterworks & irrigation, industrial, and safety applications—helping confirm spec details early so your flange order matches field conditions and documentation requirements.

Request a Quote / Spec Check

Include: standard (B16.5/B16.47), Series (if B16.47), NPS, class, type, facing, material, qty, and required documents.

FAQ: Pipe flanges

What’s the minimum information I should provide when ordering a flange?
At minimum: ASME standard (B16.5 or B16.47), size (NPS), pressure class, flange type (WN/SO/BL/etc.), facing (RF/FF/RTJ), material (e.g., A105 or project-specified alloy), quantity, and documentation needs. If it’s B16.47, include Series A or Series B. (asmeflanges.com)
Is “Class 150” always safe up to 150 psi?
Not necessarily. ASME pressure classes relate to allowable pressure at certain temperatures and materials. Verify service temperature and material group before deciding a class. (asmeflanges.com)
When should I expect to use ASME B16.47 instead of B16.5?
B16.47 is commonly referenced for larger-diameter flanges. If the piping design calls for B16.47, confirm whether the project requires Series A or Series B so dimensions and weights match the design intent. (wermac.org)
What does ASTM A105 mean for flanges?
ASTM A105 is a common specification for forged carbon steel piping components (including flanges) used in ambient to higher-temperature pressure service. Always confirm whether supplementary requirements (like impact testing) apply to your project. (blog.projectmaterials.com)
Do flange orders need to mention valve testing standards like API 598?
Flanges themselves aren’t “tested” under API 598 (that standard is for valve inspection and testing), but many projects purchase flanges and valves together. Aligning documentation expectations (MTRs, test certificates, inspection hold points) across the package reduces QA/QC delays. (reliavalves.com)

Glossary (quick definitions)

ASME B16.5
A widely used ASME standard covering dimensions and pressure classes for many common pipe flanges and flanged fittings. (asmeflanges.com)
ASME B16.47 (Series A / Series B)
ASME standard for large-diameter steel flanges; Series A and Series B can differ in dimensions and weight, so the series must be specified. (wermac.org)
Pressure Class (e.g., Class 150)
A rating system tied to allowable pressure at stated temperatures and materials; not a single “PSI always” number. (asmeflanges.com)
Facing (RF / FF / RTJ)
The machined surface style where the gasket seals. Matching facing types across mating flanges is essential for a proper seal.
ASTM A105
A common specification for forged carbon steel piping components such as flanges and fittings used in pressure service (ambient to higher temperature). (blog.projectmaterials.com)
MTR (Material Test Report)
Documentation identifying the material’s heat/chemistry/mechanical properties and traceability—often required for industrial and critical-infrastructure projects.
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