kwired
Electron manager
- Location
- NE Nebraska
- Occupation
- EC
It is carrying the same media (water). It's feeding a 30 GPM pump that is running around maybe 5,000 psi? It's being used for life cycle testing of a high pressure water nozzle, so it turns on/off at a set interval. I don't know the specifics - I'm not the one that runs the tests.
While I appreciate all the angles, I think some are going down the wrong path. The facts are: this process was working fine for three months, right up until the wiring was changed. While I understand that coincidences do happen, the basics of troubleshooting tell us to identify what changed between when it was working and when it stopped working, and that leads us to wiring. That's literally the only thing that changed.
So it is doing sort of exactly what I had in mind, and that was based off a process I am familiar with. Except in my case there is no VFD on the "feed pump" but the High pressure pump involved does have VFD, but runs at fixed speed and only gets adjusted when running different products that need different pressure or flow rates on the high pressure side of things.
I imagine in my case they could probably increase energy efficiency if they would vary the speed of the feed pump but otherwise the high pressure pump don't really care what incoming pressure is as long as there isn't shortage of available product, but once it is up and running it runs at a steady rate.
When you say this is only thing that changed was wiring I'm presuming you talking about changing from the SO cord to the THHN.
What about changes in loading? Are we still moving same amount of product at same same pressure, rate of flow and of same product consistency?
If this is just plain water then product consistency likely the same, but is pressure and flow rates still same? Process I deal with that I am comparing to there is difference in solids content from one product to another as well as different flow or pressure rates needed for different products, so things change depending on what product they happen to be making.