BRIS
Civil/Environmental
- Mar 12, 2003
- 525
In the old days we often used to oversize water supply pumps - and then ended up adding orifice plates to bring them onto their duty curve - over the past 20 years I have instead evaluated worst case hydraulic scenarios (maximum and minimum) and ensured that the selected pumps best meet the duty range. I assumed everyone was doing the same.
I have recently received designs of a pump station from a leading international consultant - the designs include VSD and FS pumps. For the VSD pumps the designer has allowed for pumps to run to 110% speed - this has substantial impacts on power demands, motor cooling etc ( some 25% more power required ) For the Fixed speed pumps the designer has added 10% to the pump sizing. (In addition ambient temperature is 55 degree C so there is a substantial de-rating factor but that is a motor oversizing it does not increase the power or temperature gain). Pumps are between 1 and 2 MW capacity so an extra 25% is a huge excess
My question is - is it still typical to oversize pumps and motors ?
I have recently received designs of a pump station from a leading international consultant - the designs include VSD and FS pumps. For the VSD pumps the designer has allowed for pumps to run to 110% speed - this has substantial impacts on power demands, motor cooling etc ( some 25% more power required ) For the Fixed speed pumps the designer has added 10% to the pump sizing. (In addition ambient temperature is 55 degree C so there is a substantial de-rating factor but that is a motor oversizing it does not increase the power or temperature gain). Pumps are between 1 and 2 MW capacity so an extra 25% is a huge excess
My question is - is it still typical to oversize pumps and motors ?