A general question on hyraulic pressure here. If a pump has an maximum recommended working level of 275 bar how can it generate a greater pressure?
I only ask as this happened at work last week, I checked the pressure on a machine after a breakdown and the 400 bar rated pressure gauge went off the scale, the only thing that stopped it going any further was the pin at zero.
I looked up the pump rating and it was 275 bar, so how could it reach over 400 bar?
Pressure = resistance to flow so I'm assuming that if the outlet port of the pump is say 40mm then the 275 bar rating would be if it were pumping through piping of the same diameter? If the pipe reduced to say 25mm then the fluid moving through it would encounter greater resistance to flow and the pressure would increase, wouldn't it? Or am I barking up the wrong tree?
I know that this is a really wide ranging question but I know some of you may have a definitive answer. (There are some clever buggas on here).
(The engineers at work couldn't explain it by the way!)
I only ask as this happened at work last week, I checked the pressure on a machine after a breakdown and the 400 bar rated pressure gauge went off the scale, the only thing that stopped it going any further was the pin at zero.
I looked up the pump rating and it was 275 bar, so how could it reach over 400 bar?
Pressure = resistance to flow so I'm assuming that if the outlet port of the pump is say 40mm then the 275 bar rating would be if it were pumping through piping of the same diameter? If the pipe reduced to say 25mm then the fluid moving through it would encounter greater resistance to flow and the pressure would increase, wouldn't it? Or am I barking up the wrong tree?
I know that this is a really wide ranging question but I know some of you may have a definitive answer. (There are some clever buggas on here).
(The engineers at work couldn't explain it by the way!)
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