How To Find The Best Efficiency Point For Your Pump - All Pumps Blog
How To Find The Best Efficiency Point For Your Pump - All Pumps Blog
How To Find The Best Efficiency Point For Your Pump - All Pumps Blog
PUMP
Learning Centre Pump Knowledge 6 Jul 2015
If the pump is forced to do what it cannot do, then it fails frequently and prematurely.
The industrial pump is a slave to the pumping system. The system governs the pump. The system is composed of the
suction and discharge vessels plus all pipes, elbows, valves, lters, ttings, and instrumentation. The pump reacts
when the system changes.
If the pump is forced to do what it cannot do, then it fails frequently and prematurely. We call it mysterious pump
failure, reactive maintenance, or unscheduled downtime. So, how do you know what your pump can do within the
system?
The answer is simple, but not always realistic. The pump curve should be available and understood by everyone
involved with the pump, although it rarely is.
You can get some good information off the pump and motor ID plates. The motor ID plate indicates the speed. The
pump ID plate normally indicates the impeller diameter in inches.
With the pump speed and the impeller diameter, you can approach it in 2 ways.
Approach 1
At 1,800 RPM, the impeller diameter in inches, multiplied by itself, is the approximate shutoff head of the pump in
Close
feet. This means that a standard centrifugal pump with a six-inch impeller on a four-pole motor will generate 34 to 38
ft. of shutoff head (6 x 6 = 36).
Likewise, a nine-inch impeller on a four-pole motor would generate about 80 ft. of shutoff head (9 x 9 = 81). And a 13-
inch impeller would generate about 170 ft. of shutoff head (13 x 13 = 169). These numbers are accurate within about
5 percent.
Approach 2
The best ef ciency point (BEP) is about 85 percent of the shutoff head. The pump should be operated at, or close to,
the best ef ciency point.
The key word here is “about.” This method has exceptions, depending on the pump design, application, and liquid.
However, this covers about 90 percent of all centrifugal pumps. If the pump speed or impeller diameter changes, the
pump performance varies by what are commonly referred to as the af nity laws.
When full, the level in the discharge vessel is 52 ft. above the level in the suction vessel. The system has two feet of
friction losses with the pipe runs, the elbows, valves, andLog in
instrumentation.
The important elements of a typical centrifugal pump curve plotted on a graph. The vertical axis reads head or
elevation in feet starting at 0. The horizontal axis reads ow in GPM starting at 0.
The BEP for a typical centrifugal pump is noted on the curve in the gure provided above with coordinates drawn to
point C (best ef ciency head in feet) and point D (best ef ciency ow in GPM).
Ambient water at 54 ft. would convert into 23 PSI differential on the pump’s pressure gauges. If the suction gauge
reads zero PSI, the discharge gauge should read 23 PSI. A owmeter might report a velocity that converts to 600
GPM. It’s that easy. It also shows the importance of the instrumentation tech to pump reliability. Pumps need working
gauges. Equipment operators need training to properly interpret them.
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