A pump controlled by a CSV can safely operate at much lower flow rate than a pump controlled by a VFD. A CSV de-rates the motor enough that it can safely pump hot water, so it takes very little cool water to prevent overheating. A VFD creates a smaller motor from a larger one, so the motor still needs the same flow for cooling as a fully loaded motor.
When controlled by a VFD, a motor in 4” casing needs a minimum of 1.2 GPM, and in 5” casing needs a minimum of 7 GPM to prevent overheating. The same pump controlled by a CSV only needs about 2/10’s of a GPM for proper cooling.
With a 10 GPM pump, that “sweet spot” they are designing the pump to fit, must be between 1.2 GPM and 10 GPM. I’ll bet they haven’t even thought of what happens when you try to run .5 GPM continuously with a VFD controlled pump. But it will burn up the motor if you do that.
Since you deal with VFD’s, you know that they will need to use a fairly sophisticated drive with a sleep mode. Then they will need to know the exact frequency that will deliver a minimum of 1.2 GPM at the total head required. After shutting down at the minimum frequency, a big pressure tank can deliver the .5 GPM while the pressure drops in sleep mode. Then the pump must start and complete the cycle over and over again. How often this is repeated, depends on how large a pressure tank you have.
The regular domestic VFD’s sold by Franklin, Goulds, Grundfos, and Pentair do not have sleep mode, and do not have an adjustable minimum frequency. You certainly won’t be able to run .5 GPM with these units. Your pump guys should know these things, but I can already tell they don’t. Saying that a pump wasn’t meant for low flows and high pressure from a CSV, and that you can run a pump at .5 GPM with a VFD shows a lack of understanding.
Even though a pump can safely operate at 2/10’s of a GPM with a CSV, we have a 1 GPM minimum built in. So the pump would still cycle with a CSV, unless you use two of those .5 GPM emitters at the same time. With only .5 GPM, a CSV working with a 20 gallon pressure tank will only cycle 90 times in 24 hours. With a 44 gallon tank it would only cycle 40 times per day. Either way it would be much better for the pump that being controlled by a VFD.
Now don’t get me wrong. I think the VFD is a wonderful invention. There are many, many good applications for VFD’s. Just that pumping cool water at a constant head or pressure is not one of them.