CarlaRyan
Mechanical
- Jul 22, 2007
- 3
I have a problem. We have to pump 20 gals of a
diesel fuel additive with a flash point of -20 celcius (low flashpoint) from a 55 gal metal drum using a chemically resistant plastic hand operated drum pump into a 12,000 gal diesel fuel storage tank every day. The drum pump is attached to the 12,000 gal diesel fuel storage tank via a chemically resistive rubber hose that uses brass threaded hose nipples. (The end of the hose is attached to the plastic pump via a threaded brass hose nipple. The other end of the hose is attached to the 12,000 gal diesel fuel storage tank via a threaded brass hose nipple thats threaded into a stainless "T" fitting on top of the 15 ft high fuel storage tank. My concern is twofold. First Problem: we are splash filling 20 gals of a -20 celcius flashpoint liquid into a 12,000 gal tank that already has about 1000 gals of diesel fuel in it by the time we pump the 20 gals every day. The hand pump is capable of pumping 32oz per revolution about 32oz every 2 secs). I'm terrified to do this wrong and I know splash filling low flashpoint liquids is typically wrong but is it probable that an issue
will occur pumping such a small amount (20 gals) into that large a tank (12,000 gal) when about 1000 gals of diesel is already in the tank? Will an unsafe amount of vapor be likely to build up? and, Second Problem: This
problem is easier. Where on earth do I ground this setup? My plan was to make certain the diesel fuel storage tank is properly (earth) grounded, then ground the 55 gal metal drum to earth ground, then bond the plastic pump to the 55
gal metal drum. The proplem is what about the hose? The hose is rubber with brass threaded fittings so the fitting is attached to the tank but there's rubber between that fitting and the drum pump, the hose is NOT metal lined
and the drum pump is plastic anyway so it seems to me there's a ton of room for unequal potential. I'm lost with the second problem as well now that I'm typing it. Any help would be greatly appreciated. I want to be as safe as
possible and definitely within requirements.
Carla
diesel fuel additive with a flash point of -20 celcius (low flashpoint) from a 55 gal metal drum using a chemically resistant plastic hand operated drum pump into a 12,000 gal diesel fuel storage tank every day. The drum pump is attached to the 12,000 gal diesel fuel storage tank via a chemically resistive rubber hose that uses brass threaded hose nipples. (The end of the hose is attached to the plastic pump via a threaded brass hose nipple. The other end of the hose is attached to the 12,000 gal diesel fuel storage tank via a threaded brass hose nipple thats threaded into a stainless "T" fitting on top of the 15 ft high fuel storage tank. My concern is twofold. First Problem: we are splash filling 20 gals of a -20 celcius flashpoint liquid into a 12,000 gal tank that already has about 1000 gals of diesel fuel in it by the time we pump the 20 gals every day. The hand pump is capable of pumping 32oz per revolution about 32oz every 2 secs). I'm terrified to do this wrong and I know splash filling low flashpoint liquids is typically wrong but is it probable that an issue
will occur pumping such a small amount (20 gals) into that large a tank (12,000 gal) when about 1000 gals of diesel is already in the tank? Will an unsafe amount of vapor be likely to build up? and, Second Problem: This
problem is easier. Where on earth do I ground this setup? My plan was to make certain the diesel fuel storage tank is properly (earth) grounded, then ground the 55 gal metal drum to earth ground, then bond the plastic pump to the 55
gal metal drum. The proplem is what about the hose? The hose is rubber with brass threaded fittings so the fitting is attached to the tank but there's rubber between that fitting and the drum pump, the hose is NOT metal lined
and the drum pump is plastic anyway so it seems to me there's a ton of room for unequal potential. I'm lost with the second problem as well now that I'm typing it. Any help would be greatly appreciated. I want to be as safe as
possible and definitely within requirements.
Carla