Eppur si muove. BTW, katmar's example doesn't negate my statement that "when pressure decreases velocity increases" and viceversa. Whether the flow rate increases, decreases or stays unchanged is wrong, irrelevant, or as katmar says: "it depends".
You are right in that pressure is needed to create, increase or mantain a liquid flow against a given
resistance.
Resistances depend on both the reaction of a "passive",
physically unchanging system, to an increasing flow
(friction), or to the changing properties of an "active" system, for example, a throttling valve, which also means added friction.
If the resistance increases, as by closing a valve in a pipe, the increasing "pushing" pressure may or may not suffice to increase or even keep the previous flow rate. When the resistance becomes extremely high, say, a closed valve, no practical pressure increase will surmount it and zero flow will be the result. "Pressures up and flows down" is the result, confirming katmar's comment and exercise.
BTW, katmar's example, refers to a common fact when opening a household faucet. Water flow increases and static pressure, ahead of the valve, drops.
The centrifugal pump -a dynamic machine- is a good example of a fixture generating velocity in exchange of head. The expanding volute converts the velocity-energy into pressure-energy. At shutoff (maximum flow resistance) we have zero flow and the developed pressure may reach a maximum.
One (myself included) tends to speak of pressures and velocities, and should however, better think in terms of velocity (kinetic)- energy, and pressure-energy.
Thus when we see the characteristic curve of a centrifugal pump with head dropping with increasing flow rates, we should think of the BHP, that may have to increase with flow rates, as the pump loses efficiency.
For compressible fluids, not even the "pressure up, flow up" or "pressure up, velocity down" statements always hold, even for what I call "passive" systems. Examples would be the inlet diffuser of steam vacuum ejector where the velocities are supersonic, or a gas flowing through an orifice under critical flow conditions.
![[pipe] [pipe] [pipe]](/data/assets/smilies/pipe.gif)