CrazyHorse81
Civil/Environmental
- Jun 18, 2004
- 73
We just installed at PRV Station #2 a 1-1/2" direct acting pressure reducing valve with a label of 80-140 psi on it - that caught my attention because I needed the other one with an adjustment range of 30-90 psi as my outlet pressure required is 40 psi.
This put me in a bit of a panic, so I ran down to the site and took the up and downstream pressures of the PRV. The gauge recorded 81 and 40 psi, respectively.
Unfortunately, I cannot get a flow measurement through the valve, but I could not hear the flow going thru (unlike the other PRV Stations that sometimes roar). I have a tech rep coming in June to look, but there is no way to tell what's in the valve because it is one piece. He said that you have the correct valve but mislabeled if the downstream pressure remains 40 psi in static conditions. He said that this valve should not work anyway because it is outside the adjustment range. ???
Has anyone experienced this before and what did you find out?
This put me in a bit of a panic, so I ran down to the site and took the up and downstream pressures of the PRV. The gauge recorded 81 and 40 psi, respectively.
Unfortunately, I cannot get a flow measurement through the valve, but I could not hear the flow going thru (unlike the other PRV Stations that sometimes roar). I have a tech rep coming in June to look, but there is no way to tell what's in the valve because it is one piece. He said that you have the correct valve but mislabeled if the downstream pressure remains 40 psi in static conditions. He said that this valve should not work anyway because it is outside the adjustment range. ???
Has anyone experienced this before and what did you find out?