edwards1800
Civil/Environmental
- Jul 26, 2006
- 31
I am designing a community water supply for a small community (about 30 homes). In the past, we have used two or more wells with hydropneumatic storage, and put all the controls (and water treatment, if necessary) in a pumphouse. Recently, the pumphouse part has become an expensive part of the project (it depends on the construction style chosen, of course). I am wondering about using a simple VFD, with smaller tanks, and then put the controls in a small enclosure (without water treatment).
I have looked at the residential VFD's, like the Grundfos SQE
and the Goulds Balanced Flow. However, I want the reliability of two wells, and I don't think that those residential controllers work in multiple pump applications.
I have also looked at the Aquavar CPC. That looks cool. I think I can use one or two of these, using a small pressure tank and small enclosure, and meet my requirements.
Can anyone give me advice about this? How does the price of these controllers compare with a larger pressure tank?
In the past, I have sized the tank to minimize start/stops of the pump motor. How does the VFD controller protect the pump motor from excessive starts/stops?
I have looked at the residential VFD's, like the Grundfos SQE
and the Goulds Balanced Flow. However, I want the reliability of two wells, and I don't think that those residential controllers work in multiple pump applications.
I have also looked at the Aquavar CPC. That looks cool. I think I can use one or two of these, using a small pressure tank and small enclosure, and meet my requirements.
Can anyone give me advice about this? How does the price of these controllers compare with a larger pressure tank?
In the past, I have sized the tank to minimize start/stops of the pump motor. How does the VFD controller protect the pump motor from excessive starts/stops?