sskaff
Mechanical
- Jan 6, 2011
- 3
I was recently out at a project site where I saw a setup with a ton of problems. See attached picture ( ). One major issue was a flaw in the piping design that had the discharge of the pump go up for a 10 foot horizontal section then back down below the eye of the impeller to an air eliminator with no high point vent. This line does not stay packed with fuel, and the high section of pipe will be drained of fuel after every loading event. The pump is generating about 42psig and flowing 360gpm through a 4" pipe.
So here is the question that me and my colleagues cannot agree on. What happens to the air in the highpoint? Does the fuel push the air down stream of does it just compress the air at the high point effectively restricting flow. Has anyone ever seen a simulation or video of a similar issue using transparent pipe to demonstrate why this is bad design principle?
So here is the question that me and my colleagues cannot agree on. What happens to the air in the highpoint? Does the fuel push the air down stream of does it just compress the air at the high point effectively restricting flow. Has anyone ever seen a simulation or video of a similar issue using transparent pipe to demonstrate why this is bad design principle?