Hi ! Supposedly, this is the way to find out what the head pressure is?
Every 1 ft of vertical rise = 1 ft of head pressure
Every 90° elbow fitting = 1 ft of head pressure
Every 45° elbow fitting = 0.5 ft of head pressure
Every 10ft of flat horizontal distance = 1 ft of head pressure
Question is.. say if I know my head pressure total is "6 ft" for example and my flow rate on the return pump is 1600gph. Is there an equation/formula to figure out an estimate on how much is being reduced? On BRS's guide.. they estimated one of the 1600gph would run an estimate of 700gph with a 5.6 head pressure, but don't explain on how they got the 700gph.. it's just a chart showing the curve... but that curve may look different if the head pressure height is different or the pump is weaker/stronger.
Most would just tell me.. as long the head pressure is less than what most manufacturer's return pump max head would be. (example: if ecotech vectra states less than 11 ft)
But.. that still doesn't let us know if we're running at 5x or 8x turnover etc.
Every 1 ft of vertical rise = 1 ft of head pressure
Every 90° elbow fitting = 1 ft of head pressure
Every 45° elbow fitting = 0.5 ft of head pressure
Every 10ft of flat horizontal distance = 1 ft of head pressure
Question is.. say if I know my head pressure total is "6 ft" for example and my flow rate on the return pump is 1600gph. Is there an equation/formula to figure out an estimate on how much is being reduced? On BRS's guide.. they estimated one of the 1600gph would run an estimate of 700gph with a 5.6 head pressure, but don't explain on how they got the 700gph.. it's just a chart showing the curve... but that curve may look different if the head pressure height is different or the pump is weaker/stronger.
Most would just tell me.. as long the head pressure is less than what most manufacturer's return pump max head would be. (example: if ecotech vectra states less than 11 ft)
But.. that still doesn't let us know if we're running at 5x or 8x turnover etc.