Here's the situation:
I have an installation with two CHPs, both with emergency coolers installed outside the building.
The cooling circuits are equiped with Heat meters each (volume sensor + temp. in flow and return), this is a regulatory requirement
The volume meters are beam type
The meters give implausible high values, including under conditions when there's no flow
A guy from the manufacuteres of the meters checked the installation and claimed that vibrations from the CHP disturb the signal, this checks out insofar as one error - high measured flow value when there's no flow through the pipe - only occurs when the respective CHP is running.
The first attempt at mitigation was to install more solid mounting for the pipes immedately before and after the flow meters. This did not work.
The pipes are insulated from the CHP with rubber compensators, vibrations is still noticable after the compensator.
The contractor suggested to install compensators before and after the flow meters.
Questions:
Under 'no flow' conditions, the emergency cooling circuit is not totally isolated from the motor cooling circuit. Is it possible that vibrations caused by the pump in the motor cooling circuit transmit are the problem? How to find out?
Are there compensators that are far better at not transmitting vibrations than the rubber compensators we use?
At this point think we need other flow meters that don't have a problem with viberations, I still want to understand if we have other options.
I have an installation with two CHPs, both with emergency coolers installed outside the building.
The cooling circuits are equiped with Heat meters each (volume sensor + temp. in flow and return), this is a regulatory requirement
The volume meters are beam type
The meters give implausible high values, including under conditions when there's no flow
A guy from the manufacuteres of the meters checked the installation and claimed that vibrations from the CHP disturb the signal, this checks out insofar as one error - high measured flow value when there's no flow through the pipe - only occurs when the respective CHP is running.
The first attempt at mitigation was to install more solid mounting for the pipes immedately before and after the flow meters. This did not work.
The pipes are insulated from the CHP with rubber compensators, vibrations is still noticable after the compensator.
The contractor suggested to install compensators before and after the flow meters.
Questions:
Under 'no flow' conditions, the emergency cooling circuit is not totally isolated from the motor cooling circuit. Is it possible that vibrations caused by the pump in the motor cooling circuit transmit are the problem? How to find out?
Are there compensators that are far better at not transmitting vibrations than the rubber compensators we use?
At this point think we need other flow meters that don't have a problem with viberations, I still want to understand if we have other options.