bksprinkler
Mechanical
- Feb 9, 2009
- 11
One of the drawbacks of working almost entirely in the office is that I miss out on a lot of the field experience. But I recently had the opportunity to witness the startup of a vertical turbine pump. The startup went well, and the pump seems to be operating correctly, but we ran into some trouble trying to do a flow test.
The pump is a 2500 gpm @ 115 psi vertical turbine taking suction from a wet well in the side of a pond. The test mechanism is just an 8" pipe that extends about 20' out the side of the pump house and discharges back into the pond. There are two 8" butterfly valves and a flow meter in the test pipe. With the pump running and the first valve fully open, the second valve was slowly opened. As the valve is opening, the water begins to shoot out of the test pipe, about 20-30 feet over the pond, but the flow is really low. As the vale opens more, the volume of water getting past the valve fills up the pipe and the discharge at the end transitions from a thin stream shooting out the end to a full stream pouring out the end of the pipe; maybe a 5' arch. At this point the flow meter is reading about 600 gpm. As the valve opens more, the stream comes out with more force, but is still solid and continuous.
Here is where the trouble starts. As the flow exceeds 1000 gpm, we start to hear some noises coming from the butterfly. The discharge is still mostly smooth, but it starts to pulsate. As the flow approaches 1200 gpm, the noise from the valve is so bad we have to shut it down. Several more tests, varying the length of the discharge pipe and checking the butterly for damage, and nobody is comfortable being in the pump room opening the butterfly past 1200 gpm. This is where my lack of field experience comes in. In theory, I have a few ideas of what is causing the problem. But, after all the investigating, all I am left with is that there is a problem with the butterfly valve being used to throttle the test.
So, to those with more extensive pump testing experience, is it possible that the butterlfy is causing some turbulence and/or cavitation? My only solution is to replace the butterfly with a gate valve, thinking that the more I can get the gate out of the path of the water, the less turbelence there will be. Any thoughts? Has anyone encountered a similar problem?
The pump is a 2500 gpm @ 115 psi vertical turbine taking suction from a wet well in the side of a pond. The test mechanism is just an 8" pipe that extends about 20' out the side of the pump house and discharges back into the pond. There are two 8" butterfly valves and a flow meter in the test pipe. With the pump running and the first valve fully open, the second valve was slowly opened. As the valve is opening, the water begins to shoot out of the test pipe, about 20-30 feet over the pond, but the flow is really low. As the vale opens more, the volume of water getting past the valve fills up the pipe and the discharge at the end transitions from a thin stream shooting out the end to a full stream pouring out the end of the pipe; maybe a 5' arch. At this point the flow meter is reading about 600 gpm. As the valve opens more, the stream comes out with more force, but is still solid and continuous.
Here is where the trouble starts. As the flow exceeds 1000 gpm, we start to hear some noises coming from the butterfly. The discharge is still mostly smooth, but it starts to pulsate. As the flow approaches 1200 gpm, the noise from the valve is so bad we have to shut it down. Several more tests, varying the length of the discharge pipe and checking the butterly for damage, and nobody is comfortable being in the pump room opening the butterfly past 1200 gpm. This is where my lack of field experience comes in. In theory, I have a few ideas of what is causing the problem. But, after all the investigating, all I am left with is that there is a problem with the butterfly valve being used to throttle the test.
So, to those with more extensive pump testing experience, is it possible that the butterlfy is causing some turbulence and/or cavitation? My only solution is to replace the butterfly with a gate valve, thinking that the more I can get the gate out of the path of the water, the less turbelence there will be. Any thoughts? Has anyone encountered a similar problem?