drdoom
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 16, 2003
- 3
Hi Folks,
I am hoping someone can give me a "down to earth" answer regarding a problem i am experiencing in a newly constructed water treatment facility.
I have two seperate applications that are giving me problems.
A) Two 3 hp centrifugal recycle water pumps; operating in conjunction with a VFD for flow control(one as lead the other as standby) are used to lift waste water from a membrane filter unit to a membrane filter dedicated to treating this water. The water is "dumped" into a feed tank from which the skid mounted pump then provides the energy to put the water through the filter. The recycle pumps can serve double duty in that in the event when the dedicated filter is down, the water in the recycle tank can be pumped directly to the waste tank for disposal.
These pumps therefore, can see two different head conditions, in the recycle mode +/- 19.5 ft and in the waste mode +/- 10 ft.
B) Three centrifugal raw water pumps operating in conjunction with VFD for flow control. There can be any configuration of pumps running , from one to all three, depending on demand. These pumps take water from the reservoir , under flooded suction of an average head of 19 feet, then pump it to the feed tanks on the filter skids. The centerline elev. of the pump inlet is 690.00, however the reservoir water elev. average is 707.00 and the feed tank inlet centerline is 749.00. i calculate the total head to be 749.00 - 707.00 = 42 feet give or take and the pipe is 12" X 900 feet.
Ok now the problem; in both of these cases when a pump is operated at 100% of speed the amperage draw exceeds the maximum allowed by nameplate specs. In the case of the recycle pumps (maximum output = 300 GPM @ 20FT) the rated amps are 3.71 and the 100% demand is 4.3.
In the case of the raw water pumps (maximum output = 900 GPM @91 FT of head)the rated amp draw is 44 amp and the 100% demand is 46+. Also i want to mention in the case of these pumps i have to limit the upper limit to 90% of speed or the pump goes into very noticable cavitation.
In both cases, when it becomes necessary to operate the pumps at 100% of speed or slightly less the excessive amp draw causes the VFD to go into overload and shut down. The design parameters say it should work but the reality is they don't. Has anyone any experience with this situation? what is happening and why do the raw water pumps show excessive amp draw (a condition i would normally attribute to a pump working too hard) when it is cavitating (a condition i would normally attribute to not enough suply or "whirlpooling" niether of which is occuring and since the pump is not moving as much water as it should I would expect less amp draw).
I know this is a looooong question but i would really appreciate some suggestions.
thanks
I am hoping someone can give me a "down to earth" answer regarding a problem i am experiencing in a newly constructed water treatment facility.
I have two seperate applications that are giving me problems.
A) Two 3 hp centrifugal recycle water pumps; operating in conjunction with a VFD for flow control(one as lead the other as standby) are used to lift waste water from a membrane filter unit to a membrane filter dedicated to treating this water. The water is "dumped" into a feed tank from which the skid mounted pump then provides the energy to put the water through the filter. The recycle pumps can serve double duty in that in the event when the dedicated filter is down, the water in the recycle tank can be pumped directly to the waste tank for disposal.
These pumps therefore, can see two different head conditions, in the recycle mode +/- 19.5 ft and in the waste mode +/- 10 ft.
B) Three centrifugal raw water pumps operating in conjunction with VFD for flow control. There can be any configuration of pumps running , from one to all three, depending on demand. These pumps take water from the reservoir , under flooded suction of an average head of 19 feet, then pump it to the feed tanks on the filter skids. The centerline elev. of the pump inlet is 690.00, however the reservoir water elev. average is 707.00 and the feed tank inlet centerline is 749.00. i calculate the total head to be 749.00 - 707.00 = 42 feet give or take and the pipe is 12" X 900 feet.
Ok now the problem; in both of these cases when a pump is operated at 100% of speed the amperage draw exceeds the maximum allowed by nameplate specs. In the case of the recycle pumps (maximum output = 300 GPM @ 20FT) the rated amps are 3.71 and the 100% demand is 4.3.
In the case of the raw water pumps (maximum output = 900 GPM @91 FT of head)the rated amp draw is 44 amp and the 100% demand is 46+. Also i want to mention in the case of these pumps i have to limit the upper limit to 90% of speed or the pump goes into very noticable cavitation.
In both cases, when it becomes necessary to operate the pumps at 100% of speed or slightly less the excessive amp draw causes the VFD to go into overload and shut down. The design parameters say it should work but the reality is they don't. Has anyone any experience with this situation? what is happening and why do the raw water pumps show excessive amp draw (a condition i would normally attribute to a pump working too hard) when it is cavitating (a condition i would normally attribute to not enough suply or "whirlpooling" niether of which is occuring and since the pump is not moving as much water as it should I would expect less amp draw).
I know this is a looooong question but i would really appreciate some suggestions.
thanks