bkallen
Mechanical
- Sep 26, 2003
- 1
This may be difficult to describe without a diagram, but I'll try.
Generally, the "text book" diagrams for a P-S pumping system (chilled water) look as follows: The decoupler tee's into the CHWS prior to the secondary pump header. i.e. The decoupler connection to the CHWS is "upstream" of any tee's to the secondary pump suction.
(reference fig. 7 at
Question is, would the following arrangement be hydraulically similar:
CHWS main comes from chiller(s), tees off to sec. pump #1, then tees off to sec. pump #2, then continues on, effectively becoming the decoupler. i.e. The decoupler connection to the CHWS is "downstream" of the tees to the sec. pumps.
Looking at the same fig. 7 referenced above, this would mean extending the horizontal header pipe past the sec. pump on the right and connecting the common pipe over the "b" in the word "Distribution".
Sorry for the complicated post.
Generally, the "text book" diagrams for a P-S pumping system (chilled water) look as follows: The decoupler tee's into the CHWS prior to the secondary pump header. i.e. The decoupler connection to the CHWS is "upstream" of any tee's to the secondary pump suction.
(reference fig. 7 at
Question is, would the following arrangement be hydraulically similar:
CHWS main comes from chiller(s), tees off to sec. pump #1, then tees off to sec. pump #2, then continues on, effectively becoming the decoupler. i.e. The decoupler connection to the CHWS is "downstream" of the tees to the sec. pumps.
Looking at the same fig. 7 referenced above, this would mean extending the horizontal header pipe past the sec. pump on the right and connecting the common pipe over the "b" in the word "Distribution".
Sorry for the complicated post.