mucour
Mechanical
- Aug 2, 2002
- 98
Hello,
Thank you for the explanations given in the thread: thread124-196619.
However, Doug and BigInch should clarify a conflicting statement concerning that the heat exhanger cannot be regarded as doing the work of a suction stabilizer. According to BigInch, the heat exchanger breaks the velocity variations but Doug did not feel so.
I am confused to say the least, because I am reviewing a design where a long length of pipe of about 50m is used to connect a tank to 4 pumps, which are in parallel arrangement. In between the parallel pumps and the 50m pipe length from the tank is a large sized suction header/manifold of 16". The 16" suction header feeds the 4 pump suction, which are 8" diameter short length lines. According to the designer, the acceleration head loss is calculated without including the 50m length in the API 674 formula because it is assumed that the 16" main suction header/manifold that is before the parallel pumps will act as a reservoir and it will neutralize the velocity change variation caused by the action of the plunger.
Can someone confirm this assertion, because a pulsation dampener or suction stabilizer has a compressible inert gas (e.g. nitrogen) in the bottle that is used for smoothening the pumped liquid during the reciprocating action, whereas the 16" suction header does not have this compressible gas.
So is it correct not to include the 50m length 16" pipe in the acceleration head loss calculation?
Thanks.
Thank you for the explanations given in the thread: thread124-196619.
However, Doug and BigInch should clarify a conflicting statement concerning that the heat exhanger cannot be regarded as doing the work of a suction stabilizer. According to BigInch, the heat exchanger breaks the velocity variations but Doug did not feel so.
I am confused to say the least, because I am reviewing a design where a long length of pipe of about 50m is used to connect a tank to 4 pumps, which are in parallel arrangement. In between the parallel pumps and the 50m pipe length from the tank is a large sized suction header/manifold of 16". The 16" suction header feeds the 4 pump suction, which are 8" diameter short length lines. According to the designer, the acceleration head loss is calculated without including the 50m length in the API 674 formula because it is assumed that the 16" main suction header/manifold that is before the parallel pumps will act as a reservoir and it will neutralize the velocity change variation caused by the action of the plunger.
Can someone confirm this assertion, because a pulsation dampener or suction stabilizer has a compressible inert gas (e.g. nitrogen) in the bottle that is used for smoothening the pumped liquid during the reciprocating action, whereas the 16" suction header does not have this compressible gas.
So is it correct not to include the 50m length 16" pipe in the acceleration head loss calculation?
Thanks.