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Liquid pistons pump up the vacuum

March 4, 2004

Stephen J. Mraz

Vacuum pumps from nash_elmo Industries llc use a liquid-ring design that moves 20 to 23,000 cfm and generates up to 29-in. HgV.

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Vacuum pumps from nash_elmo Industries llc, (formerly Nash Engineering Co.) Trumbull, Conn. (www.nasheng.com), use a liquid-ring design that moves 20 to 23,000 cfm and generates up to 29-in. HgV. They operate safely and reliably in wet and dry environments and require minimal maintenance. Key to their operation is the water ring formed by a whirling rotor offset in a circular housing. Water, the operating fluid in most cases, is forced to the outside of the housing, forming outside walls for chambers created between the rotor blades. A stationary central cone forms the fourth wall. Passages in the inner cone let air or other gas in and out of the chambers. The axis of the water ring is offset from that of the housing, so as the rotor turns, the chambers vary in size, creating compression and suction.

Vacuum pumps

Comments

I agree great illustration,

I agree great illustration, i finally get whats going on.

I agree, the drawing finally

I agree, the drawing finally gets the point accoss about the air entry ports, compression cycle, exhaust ports, eccentric vane and eccentric liquid ring...would have helpped to show only one set of directional arrows, otherwise it is real nice.

Thanks,

Rick

nice

good design. wish there were video on how it works. id like to see it in action at maximum capacity, and then video of some "playing around" with various objects to show just how much vacuum and/or pressure it offers.

that drawing is great. It

that drawing is great. It finally got me to understand how this sort of pump works

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