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Centrifugal Pumps Design and Application 2nd ed - Val S. Lobanoff, Robert R. Ross (Butterworth-Heinemann, 1992)

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134 <strong>Centrifugal</strong> <strong>Pumps</strong>: <strong>Design</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Application</strong><br />

The Column Assembly<br />

The column assembly consists of three primary components:<br />

• The outer column, which serves as the conduit <strong>and</strong> pressure boundary<br />

for the flow from the bowl assembly.<br />

• The column shaft, or line shaft, which transmits torque from the driver<br />

to the impellers on the pump shaft <strong>and</strong> carries the hydraulic thrust from<br />

the bowl assembly to the thrust bearing in the head/driver assembly.<br />

• The shaft enclosing tube, or inner column, which houses the column<br />

bearings, serves as a conduit for bearing lubrication, <strong>and</strong> protects the<br />

shafting. The liquid pump<strong>ed</strong> determines whether or not a shaft enclosing<br />

tube is requir<strong>ed</strong>.<br />

Outer Column<br />

The simplest outer column construction consists of pipe sections, normally<br />

of 10-feet length, with straight thread on both ends, <strong>and</strong> join<strong>ed</strong><br />

with pipe couplings. This design is commonly us<strong>ed</strong> for 12-inch column<br />

diameters or less. For h<strong>and</strong>ling relatively clean liquids, bearings of a rubber<br />

compound are locat<strong>ed</strong> in housings with a three-legg<strong>ed</strong> or four-legg<strong>ed</strong><br />

spider <strong>and</strong> a mounting ring, which is center<strong>ed</strong> within the column coupling<br />

<strong>and</strong> clamp<strong>ed</strong> between the column pipe ends. Metal to metal contact provides<br />

an adequate liquid seal. This configuration is often referr<strong>ed</strong> to as<br />

open tineshaft construction,<br />

For larger column sizes, or where corrosive or other properties of the<br />

pump<strong>ed</strong> liquid make thread<strong>ed</strong> joints undesirable, flang<strong>ed</strong> column joints<br />

are us<strong>ed</strong>. Register<strong>ed</strong> fits are us<strong>ed</strong> to provide alignment, with "O"-ring<br />

gaskets for sealing because they provide metal-to-metal flange face contact<br />

for alignment. Bearings hous<strong>ed</strong> in spiders can be clamp<strong>ed</strong> between<br />

column faces; however, superior alignment is provid<strong>ed</strong> with a design incorporating<br />

spiders weld<strong>ed</strong> into the outer column, with the flange register<br />

<strong>and</strong> spider bore machin<strong>ed</strong> in the same operation. When a shaft enclosing<br />

tube is requir<strong>ed</strong>, the larger column sizes require a metal stabilizing<br />

spider clamp<strong>ed</strong> or weld<strong>ed</strong> at the column joint with a snug, machin<strong>ed</strong> fit<br />

around the enclosing tube. Again a tensioning device is requir<strong>ed</strong> at the<br />

top end of the thread<strong>ed</strong> enclosing tube,<br />

Column Shaft<br />

Shaft sections with three-inch shaft diameters or less are commonly<br />

join<strong>ed</strong> by thread<strong>ed</strong> couplings, which transmit both torque <strong>and</strong> axial<br />

thrust. For pumps with this construction, it is imperative that drivers be

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