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malbek
Structural
- May 28, 2009
- 13
Hi All,
I have recently been looking at some jobs involving pumps and electric motors supported on structural steelwork. With regard to vibration of the structure, I know the general requirement is to try to ensure that the fundamental frequency of the structure is not too close to the operating frequency of the machine. However, it would seem logical that for small pumps or motors below a certain size relative to the structure, the dynamic effects will be relatively small enough to say that a dynamic vibration analysis is not required.
So my question is, does anyone know of any guidelines which can be used in this type of situation to indicate that a pump or motor can be considered small enough relative to the supporting steelwork that dynamic analysis would not be needed? Or any other "rules of thumb" which can be used in these types of cases? I know there are guidelines for pumps supported on ground bearing footings which say that performance should be ok as long as the footing is a given multiple of the pump or rotor mass. If there are similar guidelines for pumps supported on suspended steelwork I would be very happy to find these, as I am having to tell clients we need to do dynamic analyses in situations where the pump appears to be quite small relative to the supporting structure, as I don't know of any simple guidelines which would indicate when the pump or motor is small enough not to require this.
Thanks in advance,
Tom
I have recently been looking at some jobs involving pumps and electric motors supported on structural steelwork. With regard to vibration of the structure, I know the general requirement is to try to ensure that the fundamental frequency of the structure is not too close to the operating frequency of the machine. However, it would seem logical that for small pumps or motors below a certain size relative to the structure, the dynamic effects will be relatively small enough to say that a dynamic vibration analysis is not required.
So my question is, does anyone know of any guidelines which can be used in this type of situation to indicate that a pump or motor can be considered small enough relative to the supporting steelwork that dynamic analysis would not be needed? Or any other "rules of thumb" which can be used in these types of cases? I know there are guidelines for pumps supported on ground bearing footings which say that performance should be ok as long as the footing is a given multiple of the pump or rotor mass. If there are similar guidelines for pumps supported on suspended steelwork I would be very happy to find these, as I am having to tell clients we need to do dynamic analyses in situations where the pump appears to be quite small relative to the supporting structure, as I don't know of any simple guidelines which would indicate when the pump or motor is small enough not to require this.
Thanks in advance,
Tom