Ozziecat
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Will a pump motor, say 3 phase 10 hp prematurely need a carbon/ mechanical seal if the motor is not mechanically fixed to the platform it sits on?
Will a pump motor, say 3 phase 10 hp prematurely need a carbon/ mechanical seal if the motor is not mechanically fixed to the platform it sits on?
The few pumps I have been around, running them dry was a killer on those seals.
Good mechanical seal does not have any visible water leakage: water evaporates as soon as it comes out of the seal. Any water leakage in a mechanical seal is a sign of failing seal.Some actually have piped small stream of water to exterior side of seal to keep the seal wet and probably even helps keep it cooled.
Real common on pumps in a dairy processing plant - and probably many other similar applications.
I was not talking about leakage, I was talking about pumps that have running water on the seal, there is water all over the place and it is hard to tell if the seal is in fact leaking if water is the pumped media. In the dairy plant though if the water has a milky color to it then the seal must be leaking, and at a pretty good rate if it turns the water color.Good mechanical seal does not have any visible water leakage: water evaporates as soon as it comes out of the seal. Any water leakage in a mechanical seal is a sign of failing seal.
I was not talking about leakage,.......
Do not disturb the man in his favored past-time......![]()
Maybe your experinece is limited.Good mechanical seal does not have any visible water leakage: water evaporates as soon as it comes out of the seal. Any water leakage in a mechanical seal is a sign of failing seal.
Maybe your experience is limited.
Maybe your experinece is limited.
There are indeed seal systems that are designed to use clean water for the seal and when they are working AS DESIGNED, water flows out of them.
Example: http://www.aurorapump.com/EngineeredProduct_Sewage_WaterSeal_681.aspx
I was not talking about leakage, I was talking about pumps that have running water on the seal,
Yes. You are. My point is lubrication and thereby cooling also is provided in the Mechanical seal by the pumped fluid itself and if extra cooling of seal is required, it is to be taken care by the pump designer by providing, for example, a heat exchanger. Adhoc cooling of mechanical seal of a pump in the field is not mentioned in the pumps maintenance manuals.
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Will a pump motor, say 3 phase 10 hp prematurely need a carbon/ mechanical seal if the motor is not mechanically fixed to the platform it sits on?
Fire pumps are an example of packed type seals that leak on purpose.![]()
Some actually have piped small stream of water to exterior side of seal to keep the seal wet and probably even helps keep it cooled.
Real common on pumps in a dairy processing plant - and probably many other similar applications.
I may be out of date as I have not dealt with a packed seal in many years, but when I did deal with them, a very slow leak was how you knew you had the packing properly compressed. No leak meant too tight.