Diagnosing Pump Cavitation - The Informative Brief
Cavitation normally creates random, higher frequency vibration or “noise”.
It is often observed as a “hump” in the vibration spectrum raising the floor from about 15X to 35X.
Cavitation normally indicates insufficient suction pressure or starvation - i.e., low inlet pressure.
The liquid tends to vaporize while coming off the impeller creating vacuum bubbles that implode. The waveform can often sound like gravel in the pump.
Diagnosing Cavitation :
High frequency, random vibration.
Sounds like the pump is pumping gravel.
cavitation causes excessive wear on the impeller and other internal components.
May come and go from one collection to the next as the load varies.
Recommended Actions:
Assess operational parameters (flow rates and pressure).
Actual flow and pressure should be compared to the pump curve and design point of the pump.
Insufficient flows and/or pressures lead to cavitation.
Inspection of the internal components (impeller vanes) for excessive wear.
Academician, Researcher, Mentor, and Consultant || AI/ML || Real Time Fault Diagnosis and Prognosis || Smart Manufacturing|| Cyber Physical Systems || Gold Medalist - NIT Durgapur 2018
1yThanks for sharing Aly Attia
thanks for sharing
VA CAT III, MLA II, CMRP- Rotating Equipment Vibration & Condition Monitoring & Reliability Engineer Kuwait Oil Company
1yVery good article 👍
technician of technical specialist at medco E&P Indonesia south sumatera block western (tpc)
1yThanks sir. this is very useful