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Pumps and Hydraulics, Part 1 (of 2)

Chapter 49: CONDITIONS OF SERVICE REQUIRED OF A PUMP.
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About This Book

A practical manual that begins with a historical survey and the principles of hydro-mechanics, hydrostatics and pneumatics, then examines flow under pressure, gravity, and friction. It surveys water-pressure machines, water wheels and turbine types, and hydraulic apparatus including jacks, presses, accumulators and rams. The work classifies pumps and provides detailed, illustrated treatments of hand, belted, electric, steam (single, duplex and compound), centrifugal, rotary, jet and injector types, plus compressors, pulsometers and fire and mining applications. Practical guidance on valves, management, calculations, rules, tables and a glossary round out the text.

CONDITIONS OF SERVICE REQUIRED OF A PUMP.

It is especially important that the makers and also the sellers of pumps and pumping machinery should be informed regarding the proper type, size, pattern and proportion of parts for any peculiar service, as well as to the plan of their connections and the kind of material to be used in their construction.

This information regarding the conditions of the service under which the pump is to be worked is quite pertinent to the foregoing pages regarding the parts of pumps. The following questions are extracted from the catalogue of an extensive manufacturer.

First—To what service is it to be applied?

Second—The quality of the liquid to be pumped, whether salt, fresh, acid, clear or gritty, and whether cold or hot?

Third—To what height is the water to be lifted by suction, and what are the length and diameter of the suction and discharge pipes?

Fourth—Of what material is the suction pipe, and what is its general arrangement as regards other pipes leading into it, etc.?

Fifth—Will the supply be taken from a driven well? If not, from what source?

Sixth—To what height, or against what pressure, is the water to be pumped?

Seventh—What is the greatest quantity of water to be delivered per hour?

Eighth—What boiler pressure of steam is carried?

Ninth—Will the pump exhaust into the atmosphere, into a condenser, or against a back pressure? If the latter, how much?