AllAngles
Mechanical
- Oct 31, 2009
- 29
Fluid dynamics is outside my expertise and well outside my normal area of work, so looking for some "rule of thumb" type guidance. The reality of the application is that other restrictions downstream make this component nearly moot, but I want it to be right regardless and hopefully I'll learn something along the way.
I'm working on a small manifold used with gasoline at ~70psi. Two inlets feed the manifold and a single outlet. Right now, the manifold shape is cylindrical with the outlet in the center of the bottom surface and inlets approaching from the sides with about 90 degrees of separation. Cylinder is ~1.25" diameter and 0.4" high.
I'm trying to decide if there is any advantage to connecting the inlets tangent to the cylinder versus radially. Would intentionally "spinning" the fluid within the manifold help flow, reduce cross-talk between the pumps, cause cavitation, or? Or, am I better off just going to a 2-into-1 "Y" type configuration?
Variables I can change are manifold shape (but not height) and the angle between the inlets.
Mikah B.
I'm working on a small manifold used with gasoline at ~70psi. Two inlets feed the manifold and a single outlet. Right now, the manifold shape is cylindrical with the outlet in the center of the bottom surface and inlets approaching from the sides with about 90 degrees of separation. Cylinder is ~1.25" diameter and 0.4" high.
I'm trying to decide if there is any advantage to connecting the inlets tangent to the cylinder versus radially. Would intentionally "spinning" the fluid within the manifold help flow, reduce cross-talk between the pumps, cause cavitation, or? Or, am I better off just going to a 2-into-1 "Y" type configuration?
Variables I can change are manifold shape (but not height) and the angle between the inlets.
Mikah B.