jobarr
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 7, 2013
- 13
Question: Is it legitimate to use peak hour demand for the sizing of domestic water booster pumps?
I am working on a project where we need to size a booster pump skid to provide domestic water for a subdivision with 224 homes. There is already a separate fire pump which will handle fire flows, so our booster pump only needs to supply domestic demand.
Based on a year's worth of water meter data in the area, the average daily demand was determined to be 350gpd/house. This seems to be in-line with general guidelines for water usage in our region.
In order to determine the peak hour demand, I did the following: (350gpd/house)(224homes)(1.1 to account for losses in the system)(peaking factor of 4). This gives me a peak hour demand of 240gpm (or 14,373gph). For my scenario, is 240gpm a reasonable number to use as the basis for designing a booster pump skid?
Based on what I have been able to find by searching around on-line, this seems like a pretty realistic approach. However, when I step back and think about it, I get a little uneasy. It seems like it would be pretty easy for a 224 home subdivision to have an instantaneous demand that exceeds 240gpm. Is there an additional peaking factor that I should apply to the 240gpm in order to account for instantaneous demand?
This booster pump will supply all of the domestic water to the subdivision, and it provides the necessary pressure for the system. There is a storage tank next to the pump house that will provide adequate supply for the demand, and we will likely be installing a pressure tank to prevent the pumps from having to cycle on and off constantly.
Thanks in advance for any help you can provide. If there are good references that provide guidelines on this, that would be appreciated. Also, if anyone has a good guideline on how to choose a peaking factor based on the size of the population being served, that would also be much appreciated.
I am working on a project where we need to size a booster pump skid to provide domestic water for a subdivision with 224 homes. There is already a separate fire pump which will handle fire flows, so our booster pump only needs to supply domestic demand.
Based on a year's worth of water meter data in the area, the average daily demand was determined to be 350gpd/house. This seems to be in-line with general guidelines for water usage in our region.
In order to determine the peak hour demand, I did the following: (350gpd/house)(224homes)(1.1 to account for losses in the system)(peaking factor of 4). This gives me a peak hour demand of 240gpm (or 14,373gph). For my scenario, is 240gpm a reasonable number to use as the basis for designing a booster pump skid?
Based on what I have been able to find by searching around on-line, this seems like a pretty realistic approach. However, when I step back and think about it, I get a little uneasy. It seems like it would be pretty easy for a 224 home subdivision to have an instantaneous demand that exceeds 240gpm. Is there an additional peaking factor that I should apply to the 240gpm in order to account for instantaneous demand?
This booster pump will supply all of the domestic water to the subdivision, and it provides the necessary pressure for the system. There is a storage tank next to the pump house that will provide adequate supply for the demand, and we will likely be installing a pressure tank to prevent the pumps from having to cycle on and off constantly.
Thanks in advance for any help you can provide. If there are good references that provide guidelines on this, that would be appreciated. Also, if anyone has a good guideline on how to choose a peaking factor based on the size of the population being served, that would also be much appreciated.