

Pump
Power Platitudes
In PrP 18’s Did You Know,
where we often bust common misbeliefs, our technical staff
asserted the following: Restricting the output of a centrifugal
pump by partially closing a valve - which causes the
pump’s output pressure to rise substantially - will not make
the pump work harder; it makes
the pump work less. Most folks believe the former,
since it seems logical that forcing a pump to “push”
into a greater and greater restriction will make the
pump motor “work harder”, therefore draw more current.
Since work is loosely defined as “moving a mass through
a distance”, the opposite is true as less mass (water)
is moved.
Dennis Berkshire, engineer for Aquatic Design Group in Seaside, California, sent
us some pump curves and detail substantiating our assertion. Look at the descriptions
and the table below, taken from the data of a typical pump…
At design flows, dictated by the Total Dynamic Head (flow
resistance) values created by the plumbing system’s design,
a 6.5 horsepower pump will produce “design flow” in the
plumbing - in this case, about 336 gpm. The motor operates
warm, at an appropriate operating temperature.
On the other hand, imagine the filter is loading up, the heater bypass is closed,
or valve settings for some reason have reduced the system’s ability to pass water
freely. The 80%, 60% and 40% flow figures below show clearly that when the flow
is substantially reduced, the efficiency goes way down, and the pump draws much less power.
The motor actually runs cool.
Even more important, what if the pump were looking at LESS resistance: A 6.5
HP pump, designed for 336 gpm at 65 feet of head, was operated at 120% of that
output by reducing the head to 57 feet TDH (less resistance). The result is a
draw of 7.3 HP and a flow of 403 gpm. That’s 60 GPM more than we bargained for!
This could occur with a freshly backwashed filter, the heater bypass wide open,
and/or flow-trimming valves fully opened… any or all in a generously sized plumbing
system. The extra flow is not for free, however: the electric bill went
up with the horsepower and the pump’s motor is running plenty hot. Plan on replacing
the motor; you will eventually burn it up.
|
Flow |
TDH |
Efficiency |
HP |
120% |
403 gpm |
57 ft. |
80% |
7.3 |
100% |
336 gpm |
65 ft. |
83% |
6.5 |
80% |
268 gpm |
70 ft |
77% |
6.2 |
60% |
201 gpm |
75 ft. |
70% |
5.3 |
40% |
134 gpm |
78 ft. |
57% |
4.6 |
It makes sense to operate your pump at
design values, only. ~ kw
© 2008
Professional Pool Operators of America |