This discussion has been locked.
You can no longer post new replies to this discussion. If you have a question you can start a new discussion

regarding pump design

So I am having trouble designing pumps 

1) I don't have the system curve for pumps so I am providing the data on how do i utilize it to simulate real field pump

DATA:

PUMP TYPE: centrifugal 

TOTAL HEAD: 50m

DISCHARGE: 100m3/hr

PUMP INPUT: 160.195kw

SIZE:250*300mm

SPEED:1489rpm

the pumping head the plant is giving is 12m into the main pipeline

2) i have 4 working  + 2 standby pumps in parallel

how do i design which pump gets turned on when and 

how do i design them in parallel

please help

Parents
  • Hello Rahul,

    Assuming you have the design head and flow of 50 m and 100 m3/hr respectively, you can setup a design point pump definition where a single head vs flow value is used and the shutoff and maximum values are extrapolated. You can set them in parallel with independent pipes from your source to pump and then to your discharge point.

    With this setup, try turning the pumps "On" one by one and check the individual system head curves. If you have tied up your pumps to a single pumping station element then combination pump curves is a great way to see multiple pump curves, efficiency curves, overall efficiency curves, and system head curves to all be displayed on a single graph. This will also help you determine the best possible combination to run the pumps. See this technote which discusses about combination pump curves and solving them for the best pump combination: Pump Station and Pump Combination Curves

    Hope this helps.


    Regards,

    Yashodhan Joshi

Reply
  • Hello Rahul,

    Assuming you have the design head and flow of 50 m and 100 m3/hr respectively, you can setup a design point pump definition where a single head vs flow value is used and the shutoff and maximum values are extrapolated. You can set them in parallel with independent pipes from your source to pump and then to your discharge point.

    With this setup, try turning the pumps "On" one by one and check the individual system head curves. If you have tied up your pumps to a single pumping station element then combination pump curves is a great way to see multiple pump curves, efficiency curves, overall efficiency curves, and system head curves to all be displayed on a single graph. This will also help you determine the best possible combination to run the pumps. See this technote which discusses about combination pump curves and solving them for the best pump combination: Pump Station and Pump Combination Curves

    Hope this helps.


    Regards,

    Yashodhan Joshi

Children