PSSR FAQs
Air receiver examination: common questions
Does an air receiver need a PSSR examination?
Yes, where it is in scope. A compressed-air receiver whose pressure times internal volume exceeds 250 bar litres is a pressure system under PSSR, and it must not be operated without a written scheme of examination. You can read the duty in the HSE guidance on the
Pressure Systems Safety Regulations.
Do I need a written scheme of examination, or a certificate?
A written scheme. Regulation 8 says a pressure system in scope must not be operated unless a written scheme of examination, drawn up or certified by a competent person, is in place. The examination against that scheme then produces a certified written report. Our
guide to PSSR explains the scheme and what it must contain.
How often should an air receiver be examined?
To the intervals the written scheme sets, which depend on the duty and condition. In practice a receiver often has a more frequent external and working examination with a less frequent internal examination, where the vessel is opened up. The competent person sets and reviews those intervals.
Is it covered by PSSR or PUWER?
PSSR, where it is over 250 bar litres. Below that threshold the written scheme duty falls away, but the receiver is still work equipment to be maintained and inspected under PUWER, and your insurer may still require an examination. A PUWER inspection does not replace a PSSR examination.
What does the examination cover?
The shell, end caps and internal surfaces, the base and drain where condensate corrodes, the safety relief valve tested to confirm it lifts, the pressure gauge checked for accuracy, the isolation valve and pipework, and the nameplate and safe working pressure.
Who is competent to examine a pressure system?
A competent person with the training, skills, experience and knowledge for the system, and independent of its day-to-day operation. Our engineer surveyors examine compressed-air systems regularly and report to the written scheme.
Why does the receiver have to be opened for an internal examination?
Because the corrosion that fails an air receiver is on the inside, at the bottom where water sits, and no external look will find it. The scheme sets when an internal examination is due, and the vessel is prepared and opened so the inside can be examined directly.
Do you examine air receivers across the UK?
Yes. Our engineer surveyors travel to workshops, factories and plant rooms nationwide, a single receiver or a full compressed-air system. Call 0330 043 8191 to arrange a visit around your shutdown.
Is your air receiver due an examination?
Talk to an engineer surveyor, get a quote and book your inspection anywhere in the UK.