dbrowns
Mechanical
- Mar 14, 2016
- 2
Hi all;
Longtime lurker, now it's time for a question of my own.
Customer Objective: volumetrically measure fluid during a gravity offload/minor pump suction for custody transfer. They do not want power at this site.
Knowns:
Link
- Tanker Truck Size: 16' tall, 6,500 gallons.
- Fluid: jet fuel
- Truck offloads into a manifold, manifold is sloped at down to "receipt" pumps located about 200 ft away and 4' below truck bottom. Pump delivers fuel to tank with a height of 40-45 ft.
- Pumps are centrifugal and rated for 200 GPM
- New 300 GPM Rotoprime pumps are slated to be installed next year per conversations with personnel
- Truck bottom to centerline of manifold is about 8 inches (obviously little head)
- Average offload rate with pumps running is 100 GPM
- Pipe is 4"
- Operators brilliantly vent the air (from hoses, vortices, uneven compartment drop down rate) with an air release valve to a spit can to prevent the pump from air locking.
Design Considerations:
- Check the NPSHr of existing pumps/new pumps. I don't want to starve them and create a cavitation situation.
- Air elimination will be needed. I've thrown out the air eliminator-meter-air block valve combination Liquid Controls sells as there isn't enough head to open that valve. I'm now looking at 50 gallon tanks with a vent line extending above the height of the truck. The customer does not want power at this site, so level switches are out of the picture.
- Verify that there is enough head to deliver fuel through the air elimination tank and meter.
Link
Questions:
- Would the vent line be better suited with a pressure/vacuum vent? Or piped to a spit can with a check valve in the line to prevent air from being pulled in?
-Will this even work?
I'm relatively new to the post-academic engineering world. I've designed a few systems with a meter/air eliminator downstream of a pump or a skid with the large, level-controlled air eliminator upstream of the pump...but I haven't come across a system like this where the only means to move fluid through a meter is via gravity and on the suction side of a pump. Any help or guidance you can provide is appreciated.
Longtime lurker, now it's time for a question of my own.
Customer Objective: volumetrically measure fluid during a gravity offload/minor pump suction for custody transfer. They do not want power at this site.
Knowns:
Link
- Tanker Truck Size: 16' tall, 6,500 gallons.
- Fluid: jet fuel
- Truck offloads into a manifold, manifold is sloped at down to "receipt" pumps located about 200 ft away and 4' below truck bottom. Pump delivers fuel to tank with a height of 40-45 ft.
- Pumps are centrifugal and rated for 200 GPM
- New 300 GPM Rotoprime pumps are slated to be installed next year per conversations with personnel
- Truck bottom to centerline of manifold is about 8 inches (obviously little head)
- Average offload rate with pumps running is 100 GPM
- Pipe is 4"
- Operators brilliantly vent the air (from hoses, vortices, uneven compartment drop down rate) with an air release valve to a spit can to prevent the pump from air locking.
Design Considerations:
- Check the NPSHr of existing pumps/new pumps. I don't want to starve them and create a cavitation situation.
- Air elimination will be needed. I've thrown out the air eliminator-meter-air block valve combination Liquid Controls sells as there isn't enough head to open that valve. I'm now looking at 50 gallon tanks with a vent line extending above the height of the truck. The customer does not want power at this site, so level switches are out of the picture.
- Verify that there is enough head to deliver fuel through the air elimination tank and meter.
Link
Questions:
- Would the vent line be better suited with a pressure/vacuum vent? Or piped to a spit can with a check valve in the line to prevent air from being pulled in?
-Will this even work?
I'm relatively new to the post-academic engineering world. I've designed a few systems with a meter/air eliminator downstream of a pump or a skid with the large, level-controlled air eliminator upstream of the pump...but I haven't come across a system like this where the only means to move fluid through a meter is via gravity and on the suction side of a pump. Any help or guidance you can provide is appreciated.