Coded Pressure Vessel Design (ASME CODES)
- Session recordings included
- Certificate of completion
- Interactive Video Lessons
- Completion Certificate
Why enroll
Is this course for you?
You should take this if
- You work in Manufacturing or Oil & Gas
- You're a Mechanical / Nuclear Science professional
- You have some foundational knowledge in the subject
- You want to build skills in GD&T, Machine Design
You should skip if
- You're looking for an introductory overview course
- You need a different specialisation outside Mechanical
- You need fully self-paced, on-demand content
Course details
Course suitable for
Key topics covered
Opportunities that await you!
Skills & tools you'll gain
Career opportunities
Training details
This is a live course that has a scheduled start date.
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What learners say about this course
Initially, I wasn’t sure what to expect from this course. The material stayed fairly grounded, especially when walking through open-loop versus closed-loop control beyond the textbook definitions. Examples tied well to things seen in chemical and pharmaceutical plants, like temperature control on a batch reactor and level control on a distillation column, rather than abstract blocks alone. There was also enough overlap with oil & gas and energy utilities to be useful, such as discussing pressure control on separators and basic boiler control logic. One challenge was mentally translating the simplified examples to real systems with dead time, sensor drift, and valve stiction. That gap is where junior engineers usually struggle, and it would have helped to explicitly call out those edge cases earlier. Still, the discussion on why open-loop control occasionally makes sense (maintenance modes, analyzer-based control) matched actual industry practice better than most courses. A practical takeaway was being more systematic about identifying the true process variable and disturbance before defaulting to a PID loop. Thinking at the system level—how one loop affects upstream and downstream units—was reinforced throughout. The content felt aligned with practical engineering demands.
Initially, I wasn’t sure what to expect from this course. Process control is something that shows up everywhere on site, but the theory behind it had always been a bit fragmented for me. The sections on open-loop vs. closed-loop control helped close that gap, especially when tied to real examples like distillation column temperature control in chemical/pharmaceutical plants and boiler drum level control in energy utilities. One area that stood out was how feedback control behaves under disturbances. That directly connects to issues seen on an oil & gas separator pressure loop I’ve worked on, where load changes kept throwing the controller off. A challenge during the course was translating the block diagrams into what actually happens in the DCS screens, especially when multiple control objectives conflict. It took a bit of effort to map theory to noisy plant data. A practical takeaway was learning a more structured way to decide whether a loop even needs tight closed-loop control or if a simpler approach is acceptable. That alone will save time during commissioning and troubleshooting. The content feels immediately usable, and I can see this being useful in long-term project work.
This course turned out to be more technical than I anticipated. The treatment of open- and closed-loop control went beyond block diagrams and actually tied into situations seen in chemical and oil & gas facilities. Examples around distillation column temperature control and refinery feed flow control felt familiar, especially when discussing interactions between loops rather than treating them in isolation. One challenge was translating the clean theoretical models into messy plant realities. Dead time, sensor drift, and valve stiction were touched on, but it still took effort to mentally map those concepts to something like boiler drum level control in energy utilities, where safety margins dominate tuning decisions. That gap is real in industry, and it showed up here. What worked well was the emphasis on understanding process behavior before jumping to controllers. A practical takeaway was the reminder to question whether a loop even needs to be closed, particularly for slow-moving pharmaceutical batch processes where manual intervention can be more robust. Compared with common industry practices, the course leaned more analytical than procedural, which is useful for system-level thinking. The content felt aligned with practical engineering demands.
At first glance, the topics looked familiar, but the depth surprised me. The walkthrough of the seven QC tools went beyond textbook definitions and showed where they actually fit in day‑to‑day engineering work. In oil and gas operations, tools like Pareto charts and fishbone diagrams map well to recurring issues such as pump seal failures or pipeline leak root causes. Similar patterns show up in energy utilities, especially when analyzing forced outages in thermal plants or nuisance trips in substations. One challenge was translating these beginner‑level tools into heavily regulated environments. For example, control charts are useful, but in a refinery or power station the data is often sparse, noisy, or filtered through SCADA systems, which creates edge cases the course only lightly touched on. Still, the comparison between the traditional seven QC tools and the newer ones helped frame when a simple check sheet is enough versus when affinity diagrams or tree diagrams make more sense. A practical takeaway was using Pareto analysis earlier in troubleshooting instead of jumping straight to design changes. Compared with common industry practice, this reinforces discipline at the system level. The content felt aligned with practical engineering demands.