mdsupabro
Mechanical
- Jun 1, 2007
- 5
Hello,
I have been in heated discussion with a vendor who recently tested overhauled and tested a boiler feedpump for me. I attempted to explain that you can not measure the performance of an individual pump performance (head and flow) when the pump in parallel. Because if the discharge head of one pump is higher then the other, the stronger pump's discharge head will be what is actually measuring. Even if the dishcharge pressure is measured after before the the discharge lines combine to a common header. I certaint this to is true, however I cannot remember what physics law this falls under. Can any one help.
I have been in heated discussion with a vendor who recently tested overhauled and tested a boiler feedpump for me. I attempted to explain that you can not measure the performance of an individual pump performance (head and flow) when the pump in parallel. Because if the discharge head of one pump is higher then the other, the stronger pump's discharge head will be what is actually measuring. Even if the dishcharge pressure is measured after before the the discharge lines combine to a common header. I certaint this to is true, however I cannot remember what physics law this falls under. Can any one help.