Although the Cycle Stop Valve was designed to mimic and replace a VFD on a constant pressure system, any valve will have the same effect on the performance of a pump/motor. I am not trying to promote Cycle Stop Valves. However, having started with VFD’s in their infancy, then making and selling valves for 30 years I have some insights that other people may not.
The first misconception most people have is that the big pump, motor, control manufacturers do R&D, promote, and sell devices to be more efficient and more economical. Nothing could be further from the truth. Big manufacturers promote and advertise what makes them the most money. Profit is the number one design characteristic. Efficiency and economy are the misinformation in the advertisements. No profit loving big company is going to mention, much less promote something that would make their equipment last several times longer than the 84 months they build into it.
A “fluid system” is the goal, and that has nothing to do with water. A “fluid system” is one where the products last a predicted amount of time, can’t be repaired, and must be replaced on a regular basis, keeping the cash flowing “fluidly” through the company. The most profitable products usually come at the expense of efficiency and economy, as that is what makes them profitable. They would not have big money to spend on all those advertisements and hiring droves of salespeople if their products really did last longer and save people money. I have been dealing with companies like the ones you mentioned since the early 70’s, and believe me, any changes they make/made where not to make products last longer and save money. Doing just the opposite of what a company like that is promoting is best for the consumer.
VSD/VFD has been a cash cow for the manufacturers. I will say this again. There are many good applications for a VFD, and many will even save energy. But when constant head or pressure is needed, or even when a slight variation in head is possible, a VFD is wasting energy. However, open systems are such a large part of the pump market they can’t keep from trying to get more of that pie. There is no end to the mis-information available about VFD efficiency in open systems. Once they get someone to drink that Kool Aid, they have a VFD warrior for life. Many people are so convinced that VFD’s always save energy they get mad instead of getting educated, lashing out at anyone who says otherwise. I need pretty thick skin to even mention this as you can see.
One thing they are good at is making things more "user friendly". They say you don’t even need to know the flow rates, head, frequency, or anything. Just pick any old pump and touch the “GO” button on a VFD to make it do any job needed and save energy all at the same time. Don’t worry your pretty little head about things like flow, head, efficiency. They have already taken care of that for you.
We finally learned even though the really big company was promoting it as a safe and effective cure all, it is not good to use Opioids for a headache. Now we need to learn a VFD is not the magic pill to save energy on every application.