sofia-safi
Student
- May 3, 2025
- 7
Hello everyone,
I’ve been searching for quite some time for the traditional method of designing a centrifugal pump impeller — the one based on manual hydraulic calculations, not the modern CFD/CFX-based approach that starts with a meridional surface.
I’m specifically looking for a method that allows:
I’ve contacted several professionals, but unfortunately haven’t received a clear reference yet. This methodology seems to be less known nowadays, so I’m hoping someone here — maybe with experience in older design techniques or academic knowledge — could share:
I would be extremely grateful for any help or direction you can offer.
Thank you in advance for your time and support!
Best regards,
I’ve been searching for quite some time for the traditional method of designing a centrifugal pump impeller — the one based on manual hydraulic calculations, not the modern CFD/CFX-based approach that starts with a meridional surface.
I’m specifically looking for a method that allows:
- Calculating all the main geometric dimensions of the impeller (inlet/outlet diameters, blade angles, widths, etc.) based on known operating conditions (Q, H, N, etc.)
- Drawing the traditional cross-section step-by-step based on those calculated dimensions
- Designing the blades using the "method of arcs" or any classical graphical construction technique
I’ve contacted several professionals, but unfortunately haven’t received a clear reference yet. This methodology seems to be less known nowadays, so I’m hoping someone here — maybe with experience in older design techniques or academic knowledge — could share:
- A reference (book, article, thesis…)
- Example designs
- Personal experience or guidance

Thank you in advance for your time and support!
Best regards,