We use a piece of equipment with an oil system that has two pumps, one is a shaft driven oil pump (IMO C3E3B-143) and the other is a motor driven pump (IMO A3EB-87).
The shaft driven oil pump is a capacity of approx. 8 gpm at 12 psig (we use Mobil 797 oil). Approx. 4 gpm go to the pump bearings and the rest is recirculated back to the oil reservoir set at 12 psig.
Each pump has a check valve.
The procedure for starting the equipment is the motor driven oil pump is started and the equipment is started if the oil system pressure remains above 5 psig. Once the equipment is started, the motor driven oil pump is stopped.
If the oil pressure drops below 5 psig, the motor driven oil pump will cycle.
When both oil pumps are running, the relief valve is assumed to be recirculating everything in excess of 4 gpm.
Here is the question. Assuming both oil pumps are matched in capacity, will the oil system pressure momementarily be cut in half until the relief valve can compensate, when one pump is shut down?
The shaft driven oil pump is a capacity of approx. 8 gpm at 12 psig (we use Mobil 797 oil). Approx. 4 gpm go to the pump bearings and the rest is recirculated back to the oil reservoir set at 12 psig.
Each pump has a check valve.
The procedure for starting the equipment is the motor driven oil pump is started and the equipment is started if the oil system pressure remains above 5 psig. Once the equipment is started, the motor driven oil pump is stopped.
If the oil pressure drops below 5 psig, the motor driven oil pump will cycle.
When both oil pumps are running, the relief valve is assumed to be recirculating everything in excess of 4 gpm.
Here is the question. Assuming both oil pumps are matched in capacity, will the oil system pressure momementarily be cut in half until the relief valve can compensate, when one pump is shut down?