glowing
Mechanical
- Feb 5, 2006
- 61
I was wondering what the best practice is for this...
If I have a pump distributing a liquid reagent, I can determine P1 (upstream) via the pump curve. However, what does one normally do for P2?
I was recently talking to a vendor about a couple valve and had only the upstream pressure. One valve was essentially discharging directly into an open tank, one had a couple hundred feet of pipe with about 30 feat of static head.
I provided max/min/normal flow, temperature, SG, pump discharge pressure, pressure estimate at upstream face of valve (unchoked), line size.... I was asked for downstream pressure. Do you suppose he meant final discharge pressure on the line? I was at a bit of a loss here. It is the 1st time i have ever really had issues sizing out a valve.
Thanks
If I have a pump distributing a liquid reagent, I can determine P1 (upstream) via the pump curve. However, what does one normally do for P2?
I was recently talking to a vendor about a couple valve and had only the upstream pressure. One valve was essentially discharging directly into an open tank, one had a couple hundred feet of pipe with about 30 feat of static head.
I provided max/min/normal flow, temperature, SG, pump discharge pressure, pressure estimate at upstream face of valve (unchoked), line size.... I was asked for downstream pressure. Do you suppose he meant final discharge pressure on the line? I was at a bit of a loss here. It is the 1st time i have ever really had issues sizing out a valve.
Thanks