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Email: frank@cypump.com
If you’ve been shopping vertical slurry pumps lately, you’ve probably noticed two things: lead times are still spotty, and wear materials have quietly become the differentiator. The ZJL series coming out of Shifo Town, Anguo City, Hebei Province, has been getting word-of-mouth in plant circles—partly because it’s practical engineering, not just glossy brochures.
The pump body uses a double-layer metal structure (inner wear parts backed by an outer casing), which maintenance techs love because swaps are faster and cheaper. The casing is vertically open, and the outlet can rotate in eight positions at 45° intervals—handy during retrofits when the discharge pipe refuses to cooperate. In fact, many customers say the flexibility has saved them a day of rework, which, I guess, is the most honest KPI of all.
| Model (example) | ZJL-65 |
| Flow | ≈ 30–150 m³/h |
| Head | ≈ 10–35 m |
| Speed | 980–1470 rpm |
| Max solids (wt%) | up to ~35% (slurry-dependent) |
| Particle size | to ~12 mm |
| Materials | A05 high chrome (≈27% Cr), A49, natural rubber |
| Shaft length | ≈ 900–2100 mm |
| Outlet orientation | 8 positions, 45° increments |
You’ll find vertical slurry pumps in mill sumps, tailings transfer, FGD recirculation, sand and gravel classification, and steel mill scale pits. The trend? Heavier solids, thinner crews, and more sensors. Remote vibration monitoring and ISO 9906 test curves are becoming standard hand-offs. Also, tougher metallurgy—ASTM A532-compliant high chrome—has moved from “nice-to-have” to default.
Materials: high chrome white iron for impellers/liners (HRC ≈ 58–65), rubber where chemistry demands, and reinforced columns for shaft stiffness. Methods: precision casting, dynamic balancing per ISO 1940, and hydrostatic + performance tests to ISO 9906 (and GB/T 3216 in China). Typical water-efficiency for vertical slurry pumps sits around 55–65%—honest numbers. Service life? I’ve seen 3,000–6,000 hours on abrasive tailings with A05, more with proper sump design.
| Vendor / Model | Max Flow | Max Head | Materials | Notables |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CY Pump ZJL | ≈ 10–1200 m³/h | ≈ 5–60 m | A05, A49, rubber | 8-position outlet; quick liner change |
| Warman SP/SPR | ≈ 15–1500 m³/h | ≈ 6–70 m | Hi-chrome, rubber | Global parts reach; strong legacy |
| Metso Sala VS | ≈ 20–1300 m³/h | ≈ 8–65 m | Hi-chrome, elastomers | Robust shaft; mining-centric |
Options include impeller trims, submergence depth, rubber-lined wetted parts for corrosives, expeller or open-throat configurations (many vertical slurry pumps run happily without a submerged seal), and smart add-ons like bearing RTDs + vibration sensors. Certifications typically available: ISO 9001 for quality systems; performance curves verified to ISO 9906.
A Northern China iron ore concentrator swapped an aging sump unit for a ZJL-100. Flow stabilized around 220 m³/h at 22 m head (solids ≈ 32% w/w, d50 ~1.2 mm). With A05 metal, liner life hit 4,500 hours before planned changeout; vibration stayed below 3.2 mm/s (ISO 10816 guidance). The eight-position outlet shaved two elbows off the discharge—less turbulence, slightly better efficiency. Operators, surprisingly, called out quieter running as the biggest win.
If you need dependable vertical slurry pumps for mill sumps, tailings transfer, or FGD duties—and prefer a serviceable, modular build—the ZJL series is worth shortlisting. To be honest, the best outcome still starts with the sump: keep NPSH margins healthy, avoid vortexing, and give maintenance the clearances they begged for last shutdown.