How does a horiziontal flanged pump produce
pressure
Fluid particles enter the pump at the suction flange or connection.
They then turn 90 degrees into the plane of the impeller and fill
up the volume between each impeller vane. A horizontal pump is a
device whose purpose is to produce pressure by accelerating fluid
particles to a high velocity providing them with velocity energy.
What is velocity energy? It's a way to express how the velocity
of objects can affect other objects, you for example. Have you ever
been tackled in a football match? The velocity at which the other
player comes at you determines how hard you are hit. The mass of
the player is also an important factor. The combination of mass
and velocity produces velocity energy. Another example is catching
a hard baseball pitch, ouch, there can be allot of velocity in a
small fast moving baseball. Fluid particles that move at high speed
have velocity energy, just put your hand on the open end of a garden
hose.
The fluid particles in the pump are expelled from the tips of the
impeller vanes at high velocity, they then hit the inner casing
of the pump and are decelerated lowering the velocity energy and
raising the pressure energy. Unlike friction that wastes energy,
the decrease in velocity energy serves to increase pressure energy;
this is the principal of energy conservation in action. The same
thing happens to a cyclist that starts at the top of a hill, his
speed gradually increases as he looses elevation. The cyclist's
elevation energy is transformed into velocity energy; in the pump's
case the velocity energy is transformed into pressure energy.
Flanged pumps for diesel engines "F"
Horizontal, with rigid connection to the engine flywheel for
single-stage pumps and with a rubber element connection for
multistage pumps. Suitable for engines equipped with SAE5 -
SAE4 - SAE3 - SAE2 flywheel housings.
Hydraulic components are common to series SQ - S, SP - SPK,
SK - SRK with many evident advantages of compatibility.
- available in EUROPA
series

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