AlwaysConfused1
Mechanical
- Mar 1, 2013
- 9
I am trying to determine the characteristic curve of a small unknown pump. I have set this up with the large tank of water with piping connected to the pump. I have a pressure gauge directly before the inlet of the pump and also right after the discharge. After the second pressure gauge coming off of the discharge I have a globe valve and then a flow meter.
The globe valve obviously is to control the flow rate which is then read from the flow meter. So my flow points are easily attainable. What I am curious to is lets say I have the flow at (making up numbers) 10 GPM and pressure gauge 1 is reading 5 PSI, and pressure gauge two at the discharge is reading 12 PSI. Differential pressure of 7 PSI. How can I find the head of the pump at this flow rate based on the readings.
The suction and discharge are the same size diameter so velocity head should cancel itself out I believe.
Sorry, I am new to centrifugal pumps etc and not sure what all needs to be considered.
Thanks,
Jason
The globe valve obviously is to control the flow rate which is then read from the flow meter. So my flow points are easily attainable. What I am curious to is lets say I have the flow at (making up numbers) 10 GPM and pressure gauge 1 is reading 5 PSI, and pressure gauge two at the discharge is reading 12 PSI. Differential pressure of 7 PSI. How can I find the head of the pump at this flow rate based on the readings.
The suction and discharge are the same size diameter so velocity head should cancel itself out I believe.
Sorry, I am new to centrifugal pumps etc and not sure what all needs to be considered.
Thanks,
Jason