Hydraulics and Friction Loss
20/06/07 07:25 Filed in:
Pool ConstructionThe science of Hydraulics is the study of liquids at rest and in motion. To design an efficient filtration for a swimming pool or spa, we must know hydraulic principles. Poorly designed and installed systems create excessive friction losses, which wast energy and money. In a swimming pool filtration system we are concerned with the movement of water from the pool, through the pump, filter, and heater and back to to the pool. To design a proper filtration system many things must be taken into consideration. Most importantly the Turnover Rate. The turn over rate is the time it takes to filter all the water one time. Ask the salesman you are interviewing what the turnover rate will be for the pool they just designed.
Most pool equipment manufactured today does a good job at meeting the minimum turn over rates. The problem is that many pool builders just turn over a pile of PVC pipe and fittings to the lowest bidder, usually someone with no formal training in hydraulics or plumbing, and he goes about digging trenches and gluing pipe together. Visit a swimming pool jobsite and ask the "plumber" to show you his calculated plumbing schematic. Ask if thought was given to calculating things such as head loss, friction loss, total head curve or the most critical of all "turnover rate". Did you know each 90 degree elbow used on a 2" run will add the equivalent of 5.7 feet of friction loss? Most plumbers don't know this either or just don't care. It is usually left up to the unsupervised sub contractor to wing it. Using too many 90's to make up for poor pre planning will have an impact on turnover rates. Poor turnover rates will have a big impact on how difficult your swimming pool will be to maintain. If you want a green pool all summer ignore this critical information and let your builder just wing it. If your salesman can't explain basic hydraulics to you, you probably have the wrong pool company bidding your job.
Here are some examples of what a swimming pool plumbing installation should NOT look like:
