salukikev
Mechanical
- May 14, 2008
- 110
Hi all!
So I'm stuck working on a really unusual engineering product- don't ask why- but this device inverts a 5 gallon water bottle, and at the end of the cycle, I want this water bottle to be dispensing hot & cold water from two separate conditioned reservoirs.
The challenge I'm trying to resolve with this post has to do with a gravity feed (or pump fed- if that works better) system which is typical on a water dispenser.
As we know- if you invert a container of fluid, and submerge the end- you have defined your water level, and the water is contained by the vacuum in the container. Allowing air into the system via breather tube or otherwise allows for gravity to drive water into your dispense system.
Troubles I'm having include the balance of air/water pressure to allow free flow, and the necessity to keep any reservoirs below the water line at the tip of the bottle. Any water that enters the air breather tube also tends to create a stop-flow situation.
Anyway- so fast forward to now-- I'm essentially giving up on the natural approach due to limitations observed and the inverting complication, and a limited available length of breather tube/tip. I do have both a hot and cold reservoir in this thing and it is important that each is filled as completely as possible with water and not air. I'd like to do this is as cost-effectively as possible, and so one pump with no solenoid switching or valving is preferred. Since I have two containers, I'm thinking I'll put an air pump to bubble into the bottle and thereby pressurize each reservoir and fill to wherever that pressure dictates. I will put the dispense line at the top of each so that any fluid arriving through the taps will already mean the reservoirs are devoid of air.
Is that the best solution or should I be pumping water instead of air, or is there a gravity/valve approach I could use without any components required?
Sorry if this is difficult to visualize, I may make a diagram if anyone is interested in helping me solve this. I'm off to the lab to test my air pump theory now, but I'd appreciate any feedback from anyone with ideas.
Thanks!
-k
So I'm stuck working on a really unusual engineering product- don't ask why- but this device inverts a 5 gallon water bottle, and at the end of the cycle, I want this water bottle to be dispensing hot & cold water from two separate conditioned reservoirs.
The challenge I'm trying to resolve with this post has to do with a gravity feed (or pump fed- if that works better) system which is typical on a water dispenser.
As we know- if you invert a container of fluid, and submerge the end- you have defined your water level, and the water is contained by the vacuum in the container. Allowing air into the system via breather tube or otherwise allows for gravity to drive water into your dispense system.
Troubles I'm having include the balance of air/water pressure to allow free flow, and the necessity to keep any reservoirs below the water line at the tip of the bottle. Any water that enters the air breather tube also tends to create a stop-flow situation.
Anyway- so fast forward to now-- I'm essentially giving up on the natural approach due to limitations observed and the inverting complication, and a limited available length of breather tube/tip. I do have both a hot and cold reservoir in this thing and it is important that each is filled as completely as possible with water and not air. I'd like to do this is as cost-effectively as possible, and so one pump with no solenoid switching or valving is preferred. Since I have two containers, I'm thinking I'll put an air pump to bubble into the bottle and thereby pressurize each reservoir and fill to wherever that pressure dictates. I will put the dispense line at the top of each so that any fluid arriving through the taps will already mean the reservoirs are devoid of air.
Is that the best solution or should I be pumping water instead of air, or is there a gravity/valve approach I could use without any components required?
Sorry if this is difficult to visualize, I may make a diagram if anyone is interested in helping me solve this. I'm off to the lab to test my air pump theory now, but I'd appreciate any feedback from anyone with ideas.
Thanks!
-k