Fidens
Mechanical
- Dec 9, 2013
- 6
Hi all,
I’m hoping to get some confirmation in my thinking. My current project situation is as follows:
An ash pond will have multiple sump pumps located all around the pond for ground water management over the years. There will be a total of 30 sump pumps, roughly every 300 ft. and the calculated flow rate is very small; 10 gpm (assume continuous operation). The water pumped out by the sumps will all be collected in another pond and the furthest sump pump will be about 3600 ft away. Currently, my set up is to have the each pump (2” outlet) connected to a common header (check valve before each header connection and angled entries downstream to the header and clean outs along the route). I have a 2 part question: Sizing the header to handle the total flow and concern about the pump sizing.
1. For header sizing: I know in rough numbers I will add up the cross-sectional area of each 2” inlet into the header and size the header to handle that volume. So on the longest leg, I’ll have about 12, 2” inlets, at 10 gpm for a total of 120 gpm. Will at 4” pipe handle that? I’ve done the calcs and the answer is yes, easily. Works out to about 1.02 ft head loss per 100 ft. Is this the correct approach? Or is a better approach is to start with a header at 2” (furthest point) and increase up to 4” header when it makes sense pressure wise (about half way)? OR Just make the header 4” and be done with it. I’m aware that economics plays a role and I will run those numbers down myself, I’m more interested on feedback on the proper engineering approach/philosophy. Or maybe economics is the major factor !
2. From the perspective of the furthest sump pump: does the flow rate of the preceding pumps (closer to the discharge pond) have a head loss effect on the ones further away? I’m pretty sure the answer is no, each pump is responsible for pumping their respective 10 gpm per their respective X distance. But I can’t help to think that the volume of the preceding pumps will influence the pressure/head loss. What is wrong with this thinking?. So when sizing the pumps I only have to worry about the individual distance that each pump will “see”? The furthest sump will see X of head loss and the pumping needs will get progressively less as we get closer to the discharge pond? (Even though there is more volume to “push”). I’m aware that the distances are progressively shorter so the pumps will have to be selected to have an “operational range” and it may not be possible to have them all the same.
I would appreciate any insights the community might have to straighten out my thinking.
Thank you in advance.
I’m hoping to get some confirmation in my thinking. My current project situation is as follows:
An ash pond will have multiple sump pumps located all around the pond for ground water management over the years. There will be a total of 30 sump pumps, roughly every 300 ft. and the calculated flow rate is very small; 10 gpm (assume continuous operation). The water pumped out by the sumps will all be collected in another pond and the furthest sump pump will be about 3600 ft away. Currently, my set up is to have the each pump (2” outlet) connected to a common header (check valve before each header connection and angled entries downstream to the header and clean outs along the route). I have a 2 part question: Sizing the header to handle the total flow and concern about the pump sizing.
1. For header sizing: I know in rough numbers I will add up the cross-sectional area of each 2” inlet into the header and size the header to handle that volume. So on the longest leg, I’ll have about 12, 2” inlets, at 10 gpm for a total of 120 gpm. Will at 4” pipe handle that? I’ve done the calcs and the answer is yes, easily. Works out to about 1.02 ft head loss per 100 ft. Is this the correct approach? Or is a better approach is to start with a header at 2” (furthest point) and increase up to 4” header when it makes sense pressure wise (about half way)? OR Just make the header 4” and be done with it. I’m aware that economics plays a role and I will run those numbers down myself, I’m more interested on feedback on the proper engineering approach/philosophy. Or maybe economics is the major factor !
2. From the perspective of the furthest sump pump: does the flow rate of the preceding pumps (closer to the discharge pond) have a head loss effect on the ones further away? I’m pretty sure the answer is no, each pump is responsible for pumping their respective 10 gpm per their respective X distance. But I can’t help to think that the volume of the preceding pumps will influence the pressure/head loss. What is wrong with this thinking?. So when sizing the pumps I only have to worry about the individual distance that each pump will “see”? The furthest sump will see X of head loss and the pumping needs will get progressively less as we get closer to the discharge pond? (Even though there is more volume to “push”). I’m aware that the distances are progressively shorter so the pumps will have to be selected to have an “operational range” and it may not be possible to have them all the same.
I would appreciate any insights the community might have to straighten out my thinking.
Thank you in advance.