Rputvin
Mechanical
- Oct 31, 2017
- 186
The company I work for has a line of Chinese pumps that we buy as parts and assemble in the US to use in our equipment. They are the generic end-suction, close coupled, cast iron cases and impellers, simple type 21 seals, being put into water/glycol loops in industrial applications, 1hp to about 40hp NEMA frame, that just about everyone makes their own little flavor of.
There are occasions where equipment is shipped and ends up sitting for long durations - sometimes up to years as projects are delayed or whatever reason. We ship with corrosion inhibitor glycol in the pump cases as water is used as test fluid at our shop and can't be 100% drained, to prevent the pumps from freezing and cracking in shipping/storage. Going through a drying step instead is not something we can implement.
The main issue that pops up from these instances is that the impeller will rust in place and the pump needs to be broken free before it will run - usually a wrench on the motor shaft is all that's needed, but it generates a service call every time. We're considering using brass wear rings as they'll be somewhat immune to the rust issue at the nose of the impeller where it seizes up, but I'm mildly concerned we're introducing a new variable into what is otherwise a bulletproof design that will last the life of the system (10-20 years) as long as the motor is kept healthy and the pump isn't abused running outside its happy zone.
I'd love to hear some feedback and help with the decision on whether we want to use these in limited capacity when we know a prolonged storage is in the pump's future, or if it would be wise to move our entire product line over to brass to help protect against variables we can't control. Or if this is a bad idea wholesale and we should just deal with the infrequent issue of stuck impellers.
There are occasions where equipment is shipped and ends up sitting for long durations - sometimes up to years as projects are delayed or whatever reason. We ship with corrosion inhibitor glycol in the pump cases as water is used as test fluid at our shop and can't be 100% drained, to prevent the pumps from freezing and cracking in shipping/storage. Going through a drying step instead is not something we can implement.
The main issue that pops up from these instances is that the impeller will rust in place and the pump needs to be broken free before it will run - usually a wrench on the motor shaft is all that's needed, but it generates a service call every time. We're considering using brass wear rings as they'll be somewhat immune to the rust issue at the nose of the impeller where it seizes up, but I'm mildly concerned we're introducing a new variable into what is otherwise a bulletproof design that will last the life of the system (10-20 years) as long as the motor is kept healthy and the pump isn't abused running outside its happy zone.
I'd love to hear some feedback and help with the decision on whether we want to use these in limited capacity when we know a prolonged storage is in the pump's future, or if it would be wise to move our entire product line over to brass to help protect against variables we can't control. Or if this is a bad idea wholesale and we should just deal with the infrequent issue of stuck impellers.