Originally posted by robert graham
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But I don't believe that anyone really knows how they work. The Yamaha description and picture is absolutely hopeless. If I am allowed to have a further comment on it, what happens after the vanes pass the outlet? What is in the spaces and what is happening to the volume? The more you look into it the less is understood. Why don't design engineers write and draw the description, why are these tasks given to zombies that haven't got a clue??
Interestingly I recently spoke with a pump engineer wanting to buy my mother in law's car. Taking the opportunity to question him about an issue with a diesel injection engine on our Prado, he had no clue.
I love Physics, and often resort to the simplicity of the subject to prompt thought. So I purport all pumps employ centrifugal force, no matter what the design.
What is centrifugal force? It is very simple: all mass moves, and moves in a straight line. That is the basis of Physics. There is only mass (OK it's energy but we will leave Einsteins Theory aside), and it travels (all of it) at constant speed (at great speed) forever. This is a concept that most of the human race does not know! There is no force required to maintain this speed. Force is required to alter this speed. (F=MA) This change is + or - acceleration. Centrfugal force is just a term we use to describe when this force direction is constantly altered around 360 degrees. A centrifugal pump simply accelerates the water mass which is then constantly deflected by the pump walls, then finding an outlet where it can continue to travel in a STRAIGHT line.
There is no pressure involved with a pump! Pressure simply is a mathematical invention; something to do with force over an area, stupid really, force can only apply to mass.
So the more we learn the harder we understand, or what we believed is not really how things work. Pumps hah!
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