Not entirely true. A pump produces flow and discharge head (psi). At any given flow there is a discharge pressure. They are inversely related so if flow goes down pressure goes up etc. Those two parameters are a direct function of the system resistance. Resistance goes up, flow goes down, pressure goes up. With the pump discharge blocked (highest system resistance) you will reach the maximum discharge pressure.
You don't really ever want to run the pump there, especially if it's a positive displacement as it will ruin the pump. Testing it like how was advised is fine though.
Not entirely true. A pump produces flow and discharge head (psi). At any given flow there is a discharge pressure. They are inversely related so if flow goes down pressure goes up etc. Those two parameters are a direct function of the system resistance. Resistance goes up, flow goes down, pressure goes up. With the pump discharge blocked (highest system resistance) you will reach the maximum discharge pressure.
You don't really ever want to run the pump there, especially if it's a positive displacement as it will ruin the pump. Testing it like how was advised is fine though.
Dann it, I forget about that because 99% of the pumps I work with are not positive displacement. Thanks for the correction.this is true of a centrifugal pump, but not for a positive displacement pump. Centrifugal, like a water pump, does have a flow versus head pressure curve. Positive displacement moves a constant amount of flow for any given revolution and the pressure is a result of the load resistance that the fliw is being forced through or against.
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