furio2. I think you're over complicating this. If the specifying engineer simply said maximum suction pressure, a pump manufacturer would automatically take it as an "in the process" condition and wouldn't care if it was upset or not. If the pump manufacturer simply said maximum suction pressure, the process engineer would set his relief valves accordingly. Any other definition could easily confuse both the process engineer and the pump manufacturer. If you are intent on making up some "conditional" upset or non-upset" term, I'd suggest you add the word "Operating", such as maximum suction operating pressure, if you simply must.
AND
I will refer to the TenPenny explaination in which he defines the "maximum suction pressure" as the maximum pressure that the pump could see for an upset condition.
That's fine, as long as you include
OFF as an
upset condition.
For example the way you are calculating maximum suction pressure would not give the maximum suction pressure in one of the two most very normal conditions ON, or OFF. In the OFF condition, you would not have suction line losses and, if that was a butane tank, the sum now might easily be enough to put you over the limit of a lot of maximum flange pressure ratings. If you speced the pump max suction pressure in that manner, I can assure you that it is very possible you would get a flange that didn't work when the pump was OFF. Not nice.
I don't see the real use of the term, maximum suction pressure, for anything other than a flange rating anyway. If suction pressure's head equivalent is above NPSHR and below flange ratings, who cares what it is. Change product and a previous suction pressure or discharge pressure doesn't mean any thing at all. Pressures change with specific gravity.
That's why specing a pressure really only means something to pumps when applied to FLANGE RATINGS and other components.
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"Pumping accounts for 20% of the world’s energy used by electric motors and 25-50% of the total electrical energy usage in certain industrial facilities."-DOE statistic (Note: Make that
99% for pipeline companies)