Designing a Twin Screw Pump - Why the Pressure Loss?

AI Thread Summary
Designing a twin screw pump often involves considerations of outlet positioning, which can lead to confusion regarding pressure loss. Many designs feature outlets at a higher level than the input, which may seem counterintuitive but is primarily for practical installation and maintenance reasons. The pressure created by height is not a loss; rather, it is a necessary aspect of pump functionality. Additionally, the layout of the pump in relation to other equipment and space constraints often dictates this design choice. Ultimately, the orientation of the outlet can enhance accessibility and serviceability in operational environments.
steve2510
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I'm having to design a screw pump and I'm a bit confused about things, I've never really seen a screw pump before. I've decided upon a twin screw - screw pump and my first question is why do most examples have an outlet at a higher level than the input, surely that just leads to a pressure loss?

Example http://pimg.tradeindia.com/00110473/b/0/Twin-Screw-Pumps.jpg
 
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Pressure due to height isn't loss, it is the very thing pumps are designed to create (or its twin, static pressure).
 
steve2510 said:
I'm having to design a screw pump and I'm a bit confused about things, I've never really seen a screw pump before. I've decided upon a twin screw - screw pump and my first question is why do most examples have an outlet at a higher level than the input, surely that just leads to a pressure loss?

Example http://pimg.tradeindia.com/00110473/b/0/Twin-Screw-Pumps.jpg

From a purely pragmatic standpoint, remember that in use a compressor, like all equipment, is going to be installed in a room to support some other process. These things can be big, and every square foot of floor space costs money to build, or you might be trying to fit the thing into the same footprint as a compressor being replaced. Also, imagine being in a room with a large cabinet with pipes entering and exiting horizontally. Sort of hard to walk around it, right? That means it's difficult to service, and you can't even move the thing into place without having to move pipework. While the inlet might very well be connected to a large filter element nearby, the outlet pipes are probably going to be overhead simply for reasons of access. So if you have to come out of the compressor and make a 90 degree turn upwards immediately, why not just point the outlet in that direction to begin with?
 
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