MPKG
Mechanical
- Apr 6, 2003
- 6
This is probably on another thread somewhere, but I could not readily find the discussion I was looking for with this site's search feature.
Any thoughts on using a relief valve for maintaining minimum pump flow? I am thinking of using a straight spring or pilot operated relief valve -- not an overpressure bypass valve that maintains a constant upstream pressure -- but one that would normally be used as a safety relief. This would be for water from a submersible well pump. The existing system is as follows: submersible motor and pump, air relief at ground surface, a manual bypass valve, and then a PRV/check combination before distribution. The pump's BEP is 250 ft. @ 1200 GPM. I think my best alternative is to use a modulating control valve and a flow meter to maintain minimum pump flow at 50-60% or so of BEP -- but we can't afford all that. Swapping the manual bypass valve with a relief valve is way more economical.
Thanks in advance.
Any thoughts on using a relief valve for maintaining minimum pump flow? I am thinking of using a straight spring or pilot operated relief valve -- not an overpressure bypass valve that maintains a constant upstream pressure -- but one that would normally be used as a safety relief. This would be for water from a submersible well pump. The existing system is as follows: submersible motor and pump, air relief at ground surface, a manual bypass valve, and then a PRV/check combination before distribution. The pump's BEP is 250 ft. @ 1200 GPM. I think my best alternative is to use a modulating control valve and a flow meter to maintain minimum pump flow at 50-60% or so of BEP -- but we can't afford all that. Swapping the manual bypass valve with a relief valve is way more economical.
Thanks in advance.