jlbish
Petroleum
- Mar 1, 2015
- 22
Hi all,
I have a bit of an issue with a potable water pump on my site. We have two pumps in parallel, one duty, one standby (A and B). When changing over from A to B the last 3 times, the discharge pressure has dropped to zero. I have opened the casing vent on B pump, and there has been a lot of air in the pump casing. After venting out all the air and priming the pump again, it runs fine, but after extended time being off, it seems to get an air build up.
I am at a loss as to how this could happen. The pump suction valve is always open, with positive suction pressure (tank head about 50kPa), and the pump is primed and ready to go. There is always one pump running, with the discharge header pressure running about 1000kPa. There doesn't seem to be any way to get air ingress into the pump casing. The discharge line check valve doesn't seem to be passing, as the pump is not spinning backwards while it is not running.
The issue doesnt seem to be occuring on the A pump, which is identical in equipment and lineup.
I figured it must be some issue with the actual pump or its seal system...but with constant positive pressure from inside the line, I can't see how air at atmospheric pressure would get in.
Has anyone experienced a problem like this before? Any advice on what might be causing the air ingress?
Any light you may be able to shed on the issue would be useful.
Thank you in advance for any answers.
I have a bit of an issue with a potable water pump on my site. We have two pumps in parallel, one duty, one standby (A and B). When changing over from A to B the last 3 times, the discharge pressure has dropped to zero. I have opened the casing vent on B pump, and there has been a lot of air in the pump casing. After venting out all the air and priming the pump again, it runs fine, but after extended time being off, it seems to get an air build up.
I am at a loss as to how this could happen. The pump suction valve is always open, with positive suction pressure (tank head about 50kPa), and the pump is primed and ready to go. There is always one pump running, with the discharge header pressure running about 1000kPa. There doesn't seem to be any way to get air ingress into the pump casing. The discharge line check valve doesn't seem to be passing, as the pump is not spinning backwards while it is not running.
The issue doesnt seem to be occuring on the A pump, which is identical in equipment and lineup.
I figured it must be some issue with the actual pump or its seal system...but with constant positive pressure from inside the line, I can't see how air at atmospheric pressure would get in.
Has anyone experienced a problem like this before? Any advice on what might be causing the air ingress?
Any light you may be able to shed on the issue would be useful.
Thank you in advance for any answers.