computercameraman
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 30, 2024
- 1
I'm working on a water pump station design where we will use tilting disc check valves on the pump discharge piping. Tilting disc check valves were chosen due to the possibility of transients and their non-slam characteristics.
I'm having difficulty confirming what upstream/downstream length requirements we should use. Here's what major manufacturers state:
- APCO/DeZurik: "Good pump station design encourages at least 3 pipe diameters of straight pipe down stream of a check valve (in some cases the upstream side)." I've spoken
- Val-Matic: "The valve should be installed in water pipelines three diameters downstream of pumps to prevent reverse flow."
- GA Industries: no published requirements
- Flowserve: no published requirements
- Henry Pratt: no published requirements
MSS SP-92 recommends installing a check valve 10 pipe diameters downstream and 5 diameters upstream of tees, fittings, pumps, etc.
I'm arguing in favor of 3 upstream diameters, since that seems to be on the shorter side of recommendations. Even DeZurik has articles that show elbows right after their check valves. However, I've received pushback that we can reduce the requirements further to save space (e.g. put the check valve directly after the reducer on the pump discharge).
What guidelines does everyone follow, if any? Do you defer to the manufacturer or just place the check valve as close as you can?
I'm having difficulty confirming what upstream/downstream length requirements we should use. Here's what major manufacturers state:
- APCO/DeZurik: "Good pump station design encourages at least 3 pipe diameters of straight pipe down stream of a check valve (in some cases the upstream side)." I've spoken
- Val-Matic: "The valve should be installed in water pipelines three diameters downstream of pumps to prevent reverse flow."
- GA Industries: no published requirements
- Flowserve: no published requirements
- Henry Pratt: no published requirements
MSS SP-92 recommends installing a check valve 10 pipe diameters downstream and 5 diameters upstream of tees, fittings, pumps, etc.
I'm arguing in favor of 3 upstream diameters, since that seems to be on the shorter side of recommendations. Even DeZurik has articles that show elbows right after their check valves. However, I've received pushback that we can reduce the requirements further to save space (e.g. put the check valve directly after the reducer on the pump discharge).
What guidelines does everyone follow, if any? Do you defer to the manufacturer or just place the check valve as close as you can?