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-   -   negative head pump (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/144824-negative-head-pump.html)

simon beer February 15th 06 08:26 AM

negative head pump
 
Would someone be able to tell me please what a negative head pump does over
a so called ordinary pump or I suppose what is negative head. Is it just
when the pump is positioned lower than where you are pumping to? many thanks

--

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Bob Mannix February 15th 06 09:01 AM

negative head pump
 

"simon beer" wrote in message
...
Would someone be able to tell me please what a negative head pump does
over
a so called ordinary pump or I suppose what is negative head. Is it just
when the pump is positioned lower than where you are pumping to? many
thanks


I believe it means, in an open system, that the pump may be situated above
the level of the water in the header tank. It sucks, in other words, rather
than just circulating. The head referred to in "negative head" is that
presented to the pump at the inlet, not what it develops on the outlet.


--
Bob Mannix
(anti-spam is as easy as 1-2-3 - not)



Christian McArdle February 15th 06 11:59 AM

negative head pump
 
Would someone be able to tell me please what a negative head pump does
over
a so called ordinary pump or I suppose what is negative head. Is it just
when the pump is positioned lower than where you are pumping to? many

thanks

It is nothing to do with the position of the pump or hot water cylinder. It
is to do with the position of the highest outlet compared to the position of
the cold water tank.

Basically, a standard pump uses a flow switch to turn itself on. That means
that when you open a tap or turn on a shower, a small amount of water flows.
This is sensed by the switch which starts the pump up. It relies on the fact
that the cold tank is above the outlet.

If the outlet is close to the tank position (but below), you have a low head
situation. There might not be enough flow for the switch to sense. If the
outlet is above the tank position (common with loft conversions) there will
be no flow at all, so the pump doesn't start.

The solutions to get the pump started a

1. Blip the lower down bath tap to get the shower started (assuming the bath
tap is low enough for reliable gravity flow). The cheapest solution.

2. Use a negative head switch, which is a pull switch that just kick starts
the pump. Fairly cheap solution.

3. Use pressure switches. These maintain pressure even after the pump stops,
so there is a brief flow of water even from negative head outlets, enough to
kick start the pump. The best, but most expensive solution.

Once the pump has started, the standard flow switch will keep the pump
running, as the flow will continue.

Christian.



simon beer February 15th 06 02:21 PM

negative head pump
 



"Bob Mannix" wrote in message
...

"simon beer" wrote in message
...
Would someone be able to tell me please what a negative head pump does
over
a so called ordinary pump or I suppose what is negative head. Is it just
when the pump is positioned lower than where you are pumping to? many
thanks


I believe it means, in an open system, that the pump may be situated above
the level of the water in the header tank. It sucks, in other words,

rather
than just circulating. The head referred to in "negative head" is that
presented to the pump at the inlet, not what it develops on the outlet.


--
Bob Mannix
(anti-spam is as easy as 1-2-3 - not)



Thank you for that.



Roger Mills \(aka Set Square\) February 15th 06 03:37 PM

negative head pump
 
In an earlier contribution to this discussion,
Christian McArdle wrote:

Would someone be able to tell me please what a negative head pump
does over a so called ordinary pump or I suppose what is negative
head. Is it just when the pump is positioned lower than where you
are pumping to? many thanks


It is nothing to do with the position of the pump or hot water
cylinder. It is to do with the position of the highest outlet
compared to the position of the cold water tank.

Basically, a standard pump uses a flow switch to turn itself on. That
means that when you open a tap or turn on a shower, a small amount of
water flows. This is sensed by the switch which starts the pump up.
It relies on the fact that the cold tank is above the outlet.

If the outlet is close to the tank position (but below), you have a
low head situation. There might not be enough flow for the switch to
sense. If the outlet is above the tank position (common with loft
conversions) there will be no flow at all, so the pump doesn't start.

The solutions to get the pump started a

1. Blip the lower down bath tap to get the shower started (assuming
the bath tap is low enough for reliable gravity flow). The cheapest
solution.

2. Use a negative head switch, which is a pull switch that just kick
starts the pump. Fairly cheap solution.

3. Use pressure switches. These maintain pressure even after the pump
stops, so there is a brief flow of water even from negative head
outlets, enough to kick start the pump. The best, but most expensive
solution.

Once the pump has started, the standard flow switch will keep the pump
running, as the flow will continue.

Christian.


Doesn't negative head also imply that the pump needs to be able to suck
water into its inlet from a lower level, without cavitating?
--
Cheers,
Roger
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Reply address IS valid, but is disposable in the event of excessive
spam.



Christian McArdle February 15th 06 04:06 PM

negative head pump
 
Doesn't negative head also imply that the pump needs to be able to suck
water into its inlet from a lower level, without cavitating?


No. Negative head pumps should be installed below the level of the cold
tank, ideally adjacent to the hot water cylinder. The negative head applies
to the outlet, not the pump location. It would be quite difficult to design
a shower pump that could prime itself by sucking water up by a column of
air, as the impellors required to pump water are quite different to those
used to provide high pressure air suction. Also, the lubrication and cooling
behaviour is very different.

It is also usually unnecessary and provides a strict limit on the pressure
possible, in that it could only provide a maximum of 1 bar at zero head pump
installation level, reducing with altitude.

Christian.



Bob Mannix February 15th 06 04:23 PM

negative head pump
 

"Christian McArdle" wrote in message
.. .
Doesn't negative head also imply that the pump needs to be able to suck
water into its inlet from a lower level, without cavitating?


No. Negative head pumps should be installed below the level of the cold
tank, ideally adjacent to the hot water cylinder. The negative head
applies
to the outlet, not the pump location. It would be quite difficult to
design
a shower pump that could prime itself by sucking water up by a column of
air, as the impellors required to pump water are quite different to those
used to provide high pressure air suction. Also, the lubrication and
cooling
behaviour is very different.

It is also usually unnecessary and provides a strict limit on the pressure
possible, in that it could only provide a maximum of 1 bar at zero head
pump
installation level, reducing with altitude.


Ah yes he's right, I realise. Damn Christians - always right :o). Apologies
for any misleading from my first post.


--
Bob Mannix
(anti-spam is as easy as 1-2-3 - not)



Chris Bacon February 15th 06 04:45 PM

negative head pump
 
Christian McArdle wrote:
It would be quite difficult to design
a shower pump that could prime itself by sucking water up by a column of
air, as the impellors required to pump water are quite different to those
used to provide high pressure air suction.


Why? Many pumps do exactly this.

Christian McArdle February 15th 06 05:10 PM

negative head pump
 
It would be quite difficult to design a shower pump that could
prime itself by sucking water up by a column of air, as the
impellors required to pump water are quite different to those
used to provide high pressure air suction.


Why? Many pumps do exactly this.


I said it was difficult, not impossible. I don't doubt that some pumps are
designed to do this, but it is a bit of a compromise for a shower pump. Even
standard non-submerged well pumps, such as venturi jet designs usually need
priming with water. I suspect you could run a standard shower pump above
water level with a separate manual or automatic priming system and check
valves to prevent priming loss.

BTW, for future reference do you know which manufacturers do a negative head
shower pump suitable for suction priming?

Christian.



John February 16th 06 01:51 PM

negative head pump
 

"simon beer" wrote in message
...
Would someone be able to tell me please what a negative head pump does
over
a so called ordinary pump or I suppose what is negative head. Is it just
when the pump is positioned lower than where you are pumping to? many
thanks

--

take off your trousers to e-mail me


I suspect you may be referring to a negative head shower pump unit?
If so this is capable of being used with a shower with the shower head
higher than the water storage tank. Operation is achieved by the pump
responding to a pressure switch at the outlet of the unit. When first
connected the pump will run until the downstream pipework is up to a preset
pressure when an inbuilt pressure switch will stop the motor. A non return
valve built into the unit holds the pipework "full" and retains the pressure
therein. Opening a valve (turning the shower on) releases this pressure so
the pump starts up in response to the pressure switch and runs until the
valve is closed when the pressure builds up aginst the shut valve and the
pump stops again.
Dripping taps cause pulsing of the motor which can be very annoying
Ordinary shower pumps are used where a trickle of water will flow when a
shower valve opens. This trickle operates a flow detector and the pump cuts
in. Shutting the valve stops the flow and the motor stops.

HTH




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