burnt2x said:
- generation of air bubbles due to a very negative pressure at the suction eye of the pump
The pressure may not be negative at all, in fact it could well be positive, but if cavitation is present, it indicates that the suction pressure is below the vapor pressure of the fluid being pumped, regardless of the operating pressure. In such a case the operating pressure is not the issue, the vapor pressure is.
But... that said, pumps normally have higher npsh requirements at their higher flow rates rather than lower flows (if properly sized and selected) so the presence of cavitation could well indicate that the pump is running way out on its curve, passing more flow than it was originally designed for, and higher HP draw would be a result of that. The pump/motor set may not have been designed to be non overloading.
So check your pump curve for what the flow was supposed to have been and what the HP required at the design flow was supposed to have been.
The pump may be doing what it is being asked to do, pump it's heart out to the detriment of the motor and the impeller. It will pump as much flow as you have motor to pump it if permitted to do so.
As someone above has suggested, you may want to move the topic (or ask another question - but not a double post - on the Pump Forum or a Mechanical Engineer's forum. The guys and gals that lurk there eat and breath this stuff.
rmw