Eveslage
Automotive
- Jun 29, 2004
- 4
I hope somebody can help me with this. I have a little 1" Air operated diaphragm pump that only needs about 5CFM @ 50psi to operate. Our main air compressor makes about 540CFM @ 100psi. There is a hard lined 1” pipe off of our 2” header line that originally fed the pump, but that didn’t get the pump enough air. So the engineer before me ran a 1” hose about 100ft. from the header right next to the compressor. So there is a T in the 2” header. One way goes on and the side has bushings down to 1” then another 1” T with the hose coming out of the side running to our pump. The main compressor can only maintain about 80-90psi by itself so we have a portable compressor that makes about 350CFM for backup. The 2 together still have a hard time getting to 100psi. We need about 90-100psi at the compressor to make the pump work.
So here is my question. Can the 540+CFM of air going through a 2” pipe be moving so fast that it can’t really make the turn to go into the side of the T and it just blows straight through to the rest of the system? Therefore leaving the 1” hose at substantially less than 90psi, more like 30-40.
Thanks for the help
Eric
So here is my question. Can the 540+CFM of air going through a 2” pipe be moving so fast that it can’t really make the turn to go into the side of the T and it just blows straight through to the rest of the system? Therefore leaving the 1” hose at substantially less than 90psi, more like 30-40.
Thanks for the help
Eric