Vikumar
Mechanical
- Mar 29, 2018
- 7
Hi All, Can anyone please list out few non-metallic materials used for Wear Rings in Submersible Multistage pumps (Water Applications)? I saw below post which was discussed on other thread, JJPellin can you please share the material list with comparison
JJPellin (Mechanical)20 Sep 16 12:12
We use at least four different compounds of non-metallic wear rings and bushings in pumps. We probably have 30 or 40 pumps that have been converted to non-metallics. We purchase these materials from at least four different companies that I can think of. We have installed these in multi-stage pumps that were prone to catastrophic failure when operated at too low a flow rate. We use them in vertical pumps in pits where dry running could occur. We have not really focused on the efficiency benefit and have not attempted to quantify the savings. I think that non-metallics are a very good choice for boiler feed water and oily water sewer applications (if abrasives are not a concern). We have a big Naphtha charge pump in the shop now that had polymer wear rings (axial split, API, 8 stages, 800 HP). We believe that the pump was run dry. The wear rings and bushings are all wrecked, but there is no damage to the impellers or the casing. If this pump had metal wear rings and bushings, I would have expected to find the case warped and in need of milling and line-boring. In that regard, the non-metallic wear parts saved us a lot of repair time and cost.
JJPellin (Mechanical)20 Sep 16 12:12
We use at least four different compounds of non-metallic wear rings and bushings in pumps. We probably have 30 or 40 pumps that have been converted to non-metallics. We purchase these materials from at least four different companies that I can think of. We have installed these in multi-stage pumps that were prone to catastrophic failure when operated at too low a flow rate. We use them in vertical pumps in pits where dry running could occur. We have not really focused on the efficiency benefit and have not attempted to quantify the savings. I think that non-metallics are a very good choice for boiler feed water and oily water sewer applications (if abrasives are not a concern). We have a big Naphtha charge pump in the shop now that had polymer wear rings (axial split, API, 8 stages, 800 HP). We believe that the pump was run dry. The wear rings and bushings are all wrecked, but there is no damage to the impellers or the casing. If this pump had metal wear rings and bushings, I would have expected to find the case warped and in need of milling and line-boring. In that regard, the non-metallic wear parts saved us a lot of repair time and cost.