jddj
Mechanical
- Jul 27, 2022
- 5
Hello,
I'm trying to determine the power required to operate the pump at the indicated point on the pump curve. This pump is operated by a VFD. The curve shown is based off of water, the fluid I am working with has a SG of 1.2. I am using the equation
Brake HP = (GPM*Head*SG)/(3960*Efficiency)
I Know the GPM value of 6800 GPM, the head value of 138 feet and the SG of 1.2.
I'm having issues trying to determine what to use for the efficiency, I have been told two different things, one was that I can use the efficiency from the curve (about 78%) based off of water because the SG of 1.2 value accounts for the reduced efficiency, and another person told me I need to use a different efficiency for the fluid I am using.
So my question is which is correct? can I use the the efficiency value directly off the pump curve for water, or do I need to determine a new efficiency and if so How so I go about that?
Thanks for the help.
I'm trying to determine the power required to operate the pump at the indicated point on the pump curve. This pump is operated by a VFD. The curve shown is based off of water, the fluid I am working with has a SG of 1.2. I am using the equation
Brake HP = (GPM*Head*SG)/(3960*Efficiency)
I Know the GPM value of 6800 GPM, the head value of 138 feet and the SG of 1.2.
I'm having issues trying to determine what to use for the efficiency, I have been told two different things, one was that I can use the efficiency from the curve (about 78%) based off of water because the SG of 1.2 value accounts for the reduced efficiency, and another person told me I need to use a different efficiency for the fluid I am using.
So my question is which is correct? can I use the the efficiency value directly off the pump curve for water, or do I need to determine a new efficiency and if so How so I go about that?
Thanks for the help.