firefighter26m
Mechanical
- Oct 19, 2002
- 14
As I slowly get back into the engineering field after having been away from it for about 6 yrs or so, I've found a problem that while seems simple enough, the solution simply escapes me (too much rust built up on the brain I think).
I have a pump that will be used to pump relatively small amounts of iron ore slurry into a dewatering cyclone. The pump will be used under two drastically differant flow rates however. During one stage the pump will be flowing 419GPM of slurry at 25% concentration up 59 ft and horizontally about 100ft to a dewatering cyclone requiring 200 ft head....while that's basic enough, it will also be used to pump 210 GPM of slurry at 25% concentration to the same cyclone. I am using a 3" pipe for the 419GPM flow, my concern is that if I use the same pipe for the lower flow, I will sand out the pipe due to the lower flow rate. Short of running a smaller diameter pipe along side the larger pipe and using as valve to control which pipeline to use, is there a simpler solution, or would you recommend just slowing down the pump to match the lower flow rate and use the same system?
Thanks for your help and expertise.
David
I have a pump that will be used to pump relatively small amounts of iron ore slurry into a dewatering cyclone. The pump will be used under two drastically differant flow rates however. During one stage the pump will be flowing 419GPM of slurry at 25% concentration up 59 ft and horizontally about 100ft to a dewatering cyclone requiring 200 ft head....while that's basic enough, it will also be used to pump 210 GPM of slurry at 25% concentration to the same cyclone. I am using a 3" pipe for the 419GPM flow, my concern is that if I use the same pipe for the lower flow, I will sand out the pipe due to the lower flow rate. Short of running a smaller diameter pipe along side the larger pipe and using as valve to control which pipeline to use, is there a simpler solution, or would you recommend just slowing down the pump to match the lower flow rate and use the same system?
Thanks for your help and expertise.
David