Hi Lanse
I will be happy to post your comments on our web page. I will post them on the forum, which will give you the opportunity to reply and apologize for your lack of understanding on how pumps work.
It would have helped for you to show a pump curve or give some kind of basis for your incorrect assumptions. I have plenty of pump curves and proof posted on my web page for you to study.
“Proper sizing of pumps is more important” is the only thing you said that was factual. You can go to my other articles and look at pump curves to see the math that proves everything I say. But I will give you a little overview here as well.
Well, as you said, lets “look at the facts”. If you knew how to read a pump curve it would be obvious there is no way for a “properly sized pump” to be slowed down by 50% and draw only 10% as much energy.
When using a VFD, head is lost by the square of the pump speed. The pump must always spin fast enough to lift the water to the top of the well or building, and still produce 50 PSI on top of that. Maintaining this certain amount of head greatly limits the minimum speed the pump can spin and still push water out the faucets.
There is no way this static head could ever be reduced by 50%. Even if you could reduce the head by 20%, because head is lost by the square of the speed, a 10% reduction in pump speed is the most the pump could be slowed down. Even though energy required is reduced by the cube of the pump speed, a 10% reduction in speed only reduces the energy consumption by about 28%, not 90% as you suggested.
Now even though the Affinity Law shows a 10% reduction in pump speed creates a 28% reduction in energy use, the actual energy required will still be regulated by the amount of water being used. In other words even though the pump still has to spin at 90% of full speed to produce the head or pressure required, which would only decrease the energy consumption by 28%, the actual energy used can still be reduced to about 50% of full load. This is because when the pump is at it minimum speed, the horsepower curve still moves to the left as the flow rate is restricted and moves to the left, which is how a pump works normally.
When slowing a 1HP pump/motor to its minimum possible speed of 90%, restricting the flow to 1 GPM will still require ½ HP energy. This means a 1HP pump that can produce 10 GPM at the design point will only drop to about 1/2HP load when slowed down with a VFD to produce 1 GPM. Producing 10 GPM with 1HP is 10 GPM per horsepower. Producing only 1 GPM while still using 1/2HP energy means the VFD is using 500% more energy per gallon.
I know this is confusing for those who do not know how to read a pump curve. Pump and VFD manufactures are using this confusion to make you think a VFD can save energy. This way they con you into buying the most expensive, least reliable product, because VFD’s are very profitable for the manufacturers.
“The VFD makes the amps go down by 90% and saves 90% in energy costs.” Yeah right! They don’t want you to pay any attention to the flow meter “behind the curtain” that shows only a 50% amp drop that only happens when the flow is reduced by 90%. Then you would understand that anytime you reduce the pump speed with a VFD the energy used per gallon increases dramatically like 500% or so.
Why are you letting the pump/motor and VFD manufacturers keep you in the dark? Look at the flow meter and learn how to read a pump curve. Then learn how to read a multi-rpm pump curve and you will discover the error in your thinking.
Cycle Stop Valves are actually much newer than VFD’s. I had been through Electrical Engineering, built computers, and had lots of experience with VFD’s many years before you started working with pumps in 1984. I would never subject any of my customers to all the problems and expense of a VFD.
Even though I haven’t installed a VFD for anyone since about 1991, I still play with the news ones that come out every 18 months or so. I try to keep up to see if anybody ever figures out how to change the laws of physics. In the 25+ years I have been dealing with VFD’s they have gotten smaller, lighter, faster, and cheaper. But no one will ever be able to change the laws of physics. So no one will ever be able to make them save energy, make pumps last longer, eliminate harmonics, voltage spikes, bearing currents, and all the other negative side effects that are naturally inherent with VFD’s.
There are still LOTS of dinosaurs alive today. Dinosaurs are the ones still using VFD’s. CSV’s are much better and a much more modern way of getting pumps to do the multiple jobs you need them to do.
There are about 40 more articles with pump curves that you can read at these two links.
http://www.cyclestopvalves.com/vfd-energy.htmlhttp://www.cyclestopvalves.com/csv-vs-vfd.htmlAsk yourself why in all these years, none of the pump, motor, or VFD manufacturers have taken me to court and tried to shut me down for the things I say? It is because anyone who understands pump curves and VFD’s knows I am telling the truth. I would not be able to say, “VFD’s for centrifugal type pumps are a scam” if it were not true.
I will take it one step further and say that anyone who sells VFD’s for these types of applications is either a “scam artist”, or completely ignorant of how pumps work.
If you can show proof that ANYTHING I say is incorrect, please post it here. This is not my first rodeo. I have had this argument with some of the top engineers for the major pump companies over decades. If you will notice they never come back to argue with the facts that I present.
Example;
http://www.cyclestopvalves.com/pdf/pumpman_3.pdf Some of my best friends and customers started out accusing me like you did. I hope you and I will become friends and you will start asking some intelligent questions. But you can’t just call me a “Dinosaur”, “ridiculous”, say nana nana boo boo, and tell me to stop “spreading misinformation”.
If you want to prove what you are saying post a curve of a pump that will produce the head required at 50% of speed and only use 10% energy. When you realize that is not possible, I will be here to answer your questions. It is the pump and VFD companies that are lying to you, not me.
Thanks
Cary