Dimtec
Mechanical
- Aug 11, 2004
- 12
We are having some problems with an installation we just put in operation a month ago.
We are having some flow restrictions and we don’t know the cause.
We are pumping lime slurry (density 1080 gpl, temp about 60ºC).
The installation consists on a feeding tank, a centrifugal pump, a pipe ring, and 5 feed points with a control valve each one.
The tank is about 10 m3 capacity with an agitator.
The pump is centrifugal, with variable speed drive, 1500 rpm max, and 90 m maximum head. The vsd is controlled by the flow returning to the tank
The pipe ring is about 800 m – 4” to the feeding points, and 3” on the returning to the same feeding tank. We are pumping about 60 m3/h on the 4” line, and returning about 40 m3/h on 3”.
The feeding points have their own control valves and flow meter each one.
We have a pigging system to clean the line. The bends on the line are 10D radius, and the valves are ball valves full pass.
In normal operation the pump is working around 8barG on the impulsion, about 1400 rpm. But sometimes, the speed and the pressure starts to increase slowly, (let says, in 5 hours), and we it reaches the maximum speed (1500rpm, 10 barg) the flow returning to the tank starts to drop, and in a matter of 2-3 hours falls to nearly 0.
We haves some manometers on the feeding points, and with that and the % open of the valves, and the flow meters, we can see that there is no blockage on the 4” inches line.
So we are guessing that there is a blockage on the 3” line.
The thing that annoys me is that we have achieved a partial solution that consists on connecting a ½” hose to the pump suction and feed it with water.
As soon as we connect the hose, the flow stars to increase again, and in a matter of 20 minutes it reaches its normal condition and works properly.
His tends to happen by 2-3 times per week.
If is a matter of blockage on the 3” line, and the water helps to clean the line, why as soon we connect the hose the pump starts to increase the flow? The water would need about 20 minutes to run the 4” line and another 15” to return to the tank, so I suppose the should expected to have to wait about 30 minutes or more to see any improvement on the flow.
I am really lost with this, and any help would be appreciated.
We are having some flow restrictions and we don’t know the cause.
We are pumping lime slurry (density 1080 gpl, temp about 60ºC).
The installation consists on a feeding tank, a centrifugal pump, a pipe ring, and 5 feed points with a control valve each one.
The tank is about 10 m3 capacity with an agitator.
The pump is centrifugal, with variable speed drive, 1500 rpm max, and 90 m maximum head. The vsd is controlled by the flow returning to the tank
The pipe ring is about 800 m – 4” to the feeding points, and 3” on the returning to the same feeding tank. We are pumping about 60 m3/h on the 4” line, and returning about 40 m3/h on 3”.
The feeding points have their own control valves and flow meter each one.
We have a pigging system to clean the line. The bends on the line are 10D radius, and the valves are ball valves full pass.
In normal operation the pump is working around 8barG on the impulsion, about 1400 rpm. But sometimes, the speed and the pressure starts to increase slowly, (let says, in 5 hours), and we it reaches the maximum speed (1500rpm, 10 barg) the flow returning to the tank starts to drop, and in a matter of 2-3 hours falls to nearly 0.
We haves some manometers on the feeding points, and with that and the % open of the valves, and the flow meters, we can see that there is no blockage on the 4” inches line.
So we are guessing that there is a blockage on the 3” line.
The thing that annoys me is that we have achieved a partial solution that consists on connecting a ½” hose to the pump suction and feed it with water.
As soon as we connect the hose, the flow stars to increase again, and in a matter of 20 minutes it reaches its normal condition and works properly.
His tends to happen by 2-3 times per week.
If is a matter of blockage on the 3” line, and the water helps to clean the line, why as soon we connect the hose the pump starts to increase the flow? The water would need about 20 minutes to run the 4” line and another 15” to return to the tank, so I suppose the should expected to have to wait about 30 minutes or more to see any improvement on the flow.
I am really lost with this, and any help would be appreciated.