brs766
Mechanical
- Apr 12, 2013
- 12
Hi all, I have been a long time lurker and I finally have a question of my own. I am having problems with a relief system designed for a positive displacement pump. I have a proportional relief valve that is hooked to my supply tank from the discharge of my external gear pump. We set the relief valve with N2 on our valve shop bench at 130 psig and installed it in the unit. We then ran the test to see if the valve was relieving and our pressure indicator showed a pressure of 175 psig and building. We had to shut it off because we were approaching the maximum DP across the PEEK gears. We then field adjusted the relief valve to the pressure we desired. My question is, what is the difference if any between setting a relief valve for liquid service with a compressible gas? I was under the impression that a gas such as N2 would lift at a higher pressure due to its compressible nature. I have listed all of the flow data needed for the system below. Please let me know if you need any clarification.
1/2" Inlet
1/2" Outlet
Flow: 5.5 GPM
Relief Valve diameter: 5/16"
Setting: 130 psig
Back Pressure: 10 psig
Pipe length before RV: 4ft of 3/4" tubing (Elevation change ~4ft)
Pipe length after RV: 20ft of 3/4" tubing (Elevation change ~8ft)
SG of fluid: 1.94
Viscosity: .67 cp
Temperature is Ambient.
N2 was used at ambient conditions as well.
Thanks for the help!
1/2" Inlet
1/2" Outlet
Flow: 5.5 GPM
Relief Valve diameter: 5/16"
Setting: 130 psig
Back Pressure: 10 psig
Pipe length before RV: 4ft of 3/4" tubing (Elevation change ~4ft)
Pipe length after RV: 20ft of 3/4" tubing (Elevation change ~8ft)
SG of fluid: 1.94
Viscosity: .67 cp
Temperature is Ambient.
N2 was used at ambient conditions as well.
Thanks for the help!