Xalii
Mechanical
- Jun 14, 2014
- 21
I have read a few treads about this but I am not yet clear on the following subject:
For a simple water system (1 pump with an electrical motor, 1 check valve, 1 pipe delivering in 1 tank) is there a formula to calculate the time needed by the pump to stop assuming that we have :
RPM: initial rotation
I: inertia of the pump+motor
L: length of the pipe
Q: flow
and what is the curve looking like ? rather linear?
According to my understanding this information is very important to know if the surge might create cavitation/collapse in a high oint in the pipeline.
I have asked my pump seller to give me this information but he was very evasive...
For a simple water system (1 pump with an electrical motor, 1 check valve, 1 pipe delivering in 1 tank) is there a formula to calculate the time needed by the pump to stop assuming that we have :
RPM: initial rotation
I: inertia of the pump+motor
L: length of the pipe
Q: flow
and what is the curve looking like ? rather linear?
According to my understanding this information is very important to know if the surge might create cavitation/collapse in a high oint in the pipeline.
I have asked my pump seller to give me this information but he was very evasive...