According to API 541, prior to mechanical running test, each mounting foot shall be checked for ''soft feet.'' How is this check conducted?
The correct answer isB. In large motor inspection practice underAPI 541, asoft footcheck is performed to confirm that all motor mounting feet sit properly on the base and that tightening or loosening the hold-down bolts does not distort the motor frame. The accepted method is to first have the mounting bolts tightened, then place adial indicator verticallyat the foot,zero the indicator, and observe the movement when the bolt torque isrelieved or loosened. If the foot lifts or the frame shifts beyond the permitted tolerance, the condition indicates soft foot and must be corrected before the mechanical running test.
This matters because soft foot can introduce frame strain, misalignment, elevated vibration, bearing loading, and unreliable mechanical test results. In source inspection, the purpose is not merely to verify bolt tightness or visible fit-up, but to confirm that the machine is mounted without distortion under actual installed clamping conditions. Option A may reveal a gap but does not fully assess frame movement under bolt load. Option C reverses the usual verification sequence. Option D is inadequate because torque and visual appearance alone do not confirm absence of soft foot.
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