Legoinsaniac
Mechanical
- Apr 18, 2012
- 3
Hi all,
We have an ongoing problem with a relief valve. On the discharge side of a pump (water, ambient temps), we have a relief valve that has repeatedly lifted prematurely. When removed and bench tested, this relief valve will then lift within 1% of the 235psig setpoint. Upon reinstallation in the system, it again lifts early. This indicates a problem with the system - not the relief valve.
We've thoroughly reviewed the calculations for this piping system and components, and we know from local pressure gauges that pressure does not approach 235 psig. Are there any suggestions as to what could be causing this? Could local pressure be higher than system pressure (i.e. a standing wave in the relief valve inlet piping)?
Thanks for the help!
We have an ongoing problem with a relief valve. On the discharge side of a pump (water, ambient temps), we have a relief valve that has repeatedly lifted prematurely. When removed and bench tested, this relief valve will then lift within 1% of the 235psig setpoint. Upon reinstallation in the system, it again lifts early. This indicates a problem with the system - not the relief valve.
We've thoroughly reviewed the calculations for this piping system and components, and we know from local pressure gauges that pressure does not approach 235 psig. Are there any suggestions as to what could be causing this? Could local pressure be higher than system pressure (i.e. a standing wave in the relief valve inlet piping)?
Thanks for the help!