BobPE - Much further back in the discussion you mentioned that you have had experience with irrigation. You are correct to be supsicious of Irrigation, which is a step-child industry where almost anything goes. Original design should always be suspect, as also we should always suspect how the system is operated and how it has been modified. I cannot give definitive answers to those questions. I'm just gonna sit here and wait for the next purchase order and fix it again, perhaps I'll ask for a system survey, which they will refuse to pay for and they will just fix it again. I try to maintain high discipline and really help people, but they refuse most of the time.
I put up the pump curve on the same page:
Pump "should be" running 300-400 gpm.
How did you know it has no flow meter? LOL, ain't in great to know ahead of time how things are?
You made me think of something. I recall visiting the guy who bought it in July, 1995. He looked at me and smiled while he told me the pump never seemed to run out of water, he was thrilled with it. At that moment I immediately knew that could be a problem; flat curve pump, people that figure if the pump gives it up why not take it - bad combination. I told him to stay in limits, but ...
Also I noticed an error on my part, 20 hp not 30 hp as I stated above.
There is some cavitation damage on the impeller, located at the base of what vanes are left, but chemicals still stick in my mind as playing an important part.
PUMPDESIGNER