BronYrAur
Mechanical
- Nov 2, 2005
- 799
I really have 3 related questions here, so feel free to answer any or all of them.
1. Is there a rule of thumb for how high an end of main drip trap can lift the condensate on a 15 psig system? I know that in theory 15 psig should give me better than 30' of lift (less friction loss), but what is a safe rule of thumb? How high of lift should I actually try to achieve. Trap is a drip on a main so it will always see full pressure and condensate goes back to a vented tank.
2. How does one determine the friction loss on the trap discharge line since it is carrying a 2-phase flow? Aside from the complicated fluid dynamic equations, is there a reliable method? My design guide sizes the line to maintain a flash steam velocity and not a pipe friction loss.
3. As long as a low pressure condensate return main is pitched toward a vented receiver, it the length of the line really important? I may have as much as a 500' run back to the boiler using only the 15 psig steam discharge from the trap as the motive force. Since the line is pitched and the receiver is vented, will I be OK?
1. Is there a rule of thumb for how high an end of main drip trap can lift the condensate on a 15 psig system? I know that in theory 15 psig should give me better than 30' of lift (less friction loss), but what is a safe rule of thumb? How high of lift should I actually try to achieve. Trap is a drip on a main so it will always see full pressure and condensate goes back to a vented tank.
2. How does one determine the friction loss on the trap discharge line since it is carrying a 2-phase flow? Aside from the complicated fluid dynamic equations, is there a reliable method? My design guide sizes the line to maintain a flash steam velocity and not a pipe friction loss.
3. As long as a low pressure condensate return main is pitched toward a vented receiver, it the length of the line really important? I may have as much as a 500' run back to the boiler using only the 15 psig steam discharge from the trap as the motive force. Since the line is pitched and the receiver is vented, will I be OK?