We have a number of hydraulic recovery turbines in our refinery. They are all Flowserve machines, though some were originally nameplated as Ingersoll-Rand, Pacific or Byron Jackson. Most of them run very well. The main problem we have are mechanical seals. The seal support systems for a recovery turbine should be very different from a pump. If you let your seal supplier put an API plan 11 or 21 set up the same way as it would be on a pump, you will likely have problems. Most of our RT's are on the outlet of a hydrotreater reactor. Some are Naphtha, some are fuel oil. We also have two on the outlet amine stream from an amine contactor. In all cases, the fluid is saturated with gas. If you drop pressure across an orifice for a plan 11 or 21, gas will flash out of solution and you will gas up the seal. We have had better luck with dead-ended primary seals or unusual plans. In one machine, there is a flush line from the inboard seal to the outboard with no other interconnections. This actually works quite well. If you can get the seals to last, a Recovery Turbine is a machine that prints money. The horsepower savings can be very great relative to the installed cost.