jobarr
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 7, 2013
- 13
Hello all,
Is there a reliable and predictable way to add headloss to a pipe system so that I can stay on a pump curve?
If there is little to no elevation head, then the TDH relies entirely on headloss in the pipes. In order to generate enough headloss in the pipes to develop a TDH that works for many pumps, I have to increase the pumping rate significantly. Unfortunately, I then end up with a pipe velocity greater than 5 ft/sec which appears to be a recommended limit.
For example, one of my projects requires me to pump stormwater a distance of 600ft at around 350gpm. There is only about 5ft of static head that the pump must overcome to pump the fluids out of the sump (ground surface is essentially flat). If I use a 4in PVC pipe, I can generate enough headloss in the 600ft of pipe to put me on the pump curve (Flyght 2640). However, the pipe velocity is around 9ft/sec. If I try to reduce the pipe velocity by going with a larger pipe (6in PVC), hardly any headloss is generated in the pipe and I am hardly on the pump curve.
Are there any common/reliable ways to add headloss to the system? I would prefer to avoid using a manually adjusted throttling valve because I don't want someone to open it all the way without understanding why it is there.
I would appreciate any comments. Thanks.
Is there a reliable and predictable way to add headloss to a pipe system so that I can stay on a pump curve?
If there is little to no elevation head, then the TDH relies entirely on headloss in the pipes. In order to generate enough headloss in the pipes to develop a TDH that works for many pumps, I have to increase the pumping rate significantly. Unfortunately, I then end up with a pipe velocity greater than 5 ft/sec which appears to be a recommended limit.
For example, one of my projects requires me to pump stormwater a distance of 600ft at around 350gpm. There is only about 5ft of static head that the pump must overcome to pump the fluids out of the sump (ground surface is essentially flat). If I use a 4in PVC pipe, I can generate enough headloss in the 600ft of pipe to put me on the pump curve (Flyght 2640). However, the pipe velocity is around 9ft/sec. If I try to reduce the pipe velocity by going with a larger pipe (6in PVC), hardly any headloss is generated in the pipe and I am hardly on the pump curve.
Are there any common/reliable ways to add headloss to the system? I would prefer to avoid using a manually adjusted throttling valve because I don't want someone to open it all the way without understanding why it is there.
I would appreciate any comments. Thanks.