klyph
Well-Known Member
I bought a used pump for 80 bucks. Hope I don't die from all the chemicals and/or sewage it was used for.
I bought a used pump for 80 bucks. Hope I don't die from all the chemicals and/or sewage it was used for.
Temperature ranges are to be taken with a grain of salt. I wouldn't think twice about using it for boiling wort. Often times temperature ratings (or any other rating) are simply made at whatever the highest temperature that the equipment would be expected to be used in the typical application for the piece of equipment.
The housing is made from Ryton, which is a proprietary plastic made by Chevron Phillips. Here is a quote directly from the Chevron Phillips website:
PPS (Ryton) has not been found to dissolve in any solvent at temperatures below about 200°C (392°F).
It's up to you...
Since it is a self-priming pump, it must draw a suction at the inlet of the pump. If it didn't, it couldn't self prime. When you have liquid at close to its boiling point, and drop the pressure, you can drop below saturation pressure and have cavitation. Essentially boiling at the inlet, and those bubbles collapsing at the outlet. I don't know if that is why they are only rated to 200F, but it might be.
Thanks MrH! Not sure why I thought they were self priming, but good to hear from someone who has so much experience with one. I'll chalk it up to trying to consume too much information while enjoying homebrew lately![]()
Isn't there a limit to this? If the tubing to feed the pump is 1/2", then puting a 3/4 to 1/2 reducer won't change anything.Keep the inlet full size at 3/4", any inlet resstriction or fitting reduction size has a big reduction in the pumps performance. Reducing the outlet isn't a problem as with a valve on the outlet to throttle the flow down.
PNW, like in Washington state?
Isn't there a limit to this? If the tubing to feed the pump is 1/2", then puting a 3/4 to 1/2 reducer won't change anything.
I can't think of any pump that like's a smaller intake then what it comes with. The venturie is designed around the flow input. I also think pump placement has a lot to do with the different experiences with said pumps. Some have little, and some have heavy head pressure by comparison. That's right, head pressure goes both ways. A 1/2" drain at 1 foot has much less drainage then a 1/2" drain at 4 feet. This also applies to a single tier vs a double tier stand.
I am a bit confused on the 3/4 inlet to 1/2 out.
I just bought @ of these for my build, and looking for correct disconnects. I bought all 1/2" silicone as all my other ball valves were 1/2.
I understand the restriction of a reducer, but how do you get around it if everything else is 1/2"? (this is my first build)
Now I am not sure what size connects to buy either...