I have a Lift Station that has two force mains and 3 pumps coming out of it. The municipality cycles between each pump through out the day. Is there a way to set up controls to switch between these 3 pumps? I currently have the model set up to cycle between two but I am unsure of how to add another pump in there. The flow out of the Lift Station in a dry day needs to be 2/3 down one force main and 1/3 down the other force main.
Hi Jack,
Yes, it is possible to set up controls to alternate between pumps, though some creativity is necessary, utilizing pipe open/close status as variables. You can read details on how in this article from our Wiki: Controls for alternating or cycling between multiple pumps
Regards,
Jesse DringoliTechnical Support Manager, OpenFlowsBentley Communities Site AdministratorBentley Systems, Inc.
Thank you Jesse,
I used that article previously to set up the correct controls to get the model to cycle between 2 pumps but I wasn't sure how to integrate a 3rd pump that needed to turn on after the other two had cycled. Do you have any ideas on how to get the third pump to be in corporated?
Thanks,
Hello Jack,
For the third pump, you can use controls based on hydraulic conditions, as mentioned in referred wiki.
Do you have any hydraulic condition like tank level or control of any other element on which operation of pump 3 depends?
Sushma Choure
Bentley Technical Suppport
If the pumps are identical, why worry about which one is running. The hydraulic results would be the same. If one is different, what is the reason the operator would run it? Build that reason into your controls.
I agree with Tom's comment about first considering whether it is hydraulically relevant to the design or decision-making.
If it really is necessary to cycle between three or more pumps, then as Sushma said, you can extend the same general concept, using two or more fictitious pipes in order to create multiple combinations of open/closed, to determine which pump should turn on next. Here is a brief example for three pumps:
I have updated the related wiki article with this information
Answer Verified By: Jack Earney