Boiler1
Mechanical
- Jun 3, 2004
- 40
Hi,
I have got a skid with 4No vacuum pumps connected in parallel operating on duty stand-by basis. All the pumps are being rotated between duty & stand by. Under the normal atmospheric pressure all the pumps operate at more or less same RPM’s, however at the lower atmospheric pressure one of the pumps ramps up 20% more than the other 3 when on duty.
The pumps are identical, the system load is constant, the only variable appears to be the atmospheric pressure. The piping is nearly identical, bar the slight differences in lengths which doesn’t affect the other pumps
I’ve been thinking a leak very local to the pump in question could be the cause, but would that not be apparent regardless of the atmospheric pressure? Any thoughts?
This was noticed well into the pump’s lifecycle, not at the start.
Regards
I have got a skid with 4No vacuum pumps connected in parallel operating on duty stand-by basis. All the pumps are being rotated between duty & stand by. Under the normal atmospheric pressure all the pumps operate at more or less same RPM’s, however at the lower atmospheric pressure one of the pumps ramps up 20% more than the other 3 when on duty.
The pumps are identical, the system load is constant, the only variable appears to be the atmospheric pressure. The piping is nearly identical, bar the slight differences in lengths which doesn’t affect the other pumps
I’ve been thinking a leak very local to the pump in question could be the cause, but would that not be apparent regardless of the atmospheric pressure? Any thoughts?
This was noticed well into the pump’s lifecycle, not at the start.
Regards