Telephone: +86 13120555503
Email: frank@cypump.com
If you’ve ever had to spec or replace septic tank pumps, you know the drill: solids tolerance, reliability in murky conditions, and a motor that doesn’t quit halfway through a storm surge. The WQ Submersible Sewage Pump from Shifo Town, Anguo City, Hebei Province has been popping up in bid lists lately. To be honest, I was skeptical at first—until I looked at how it’s being built and tested, and where it’s landing in the field.
Designed for the tough stuff: chemical and petroleum plants, pharmaceuticals, mining, paper mills, cement and steel, power stations, coal-processing lines, and the messiest municipal wastewater lift stations. Many customers say it’s equally at home in urban sewage networks and construction dewatering. It can also move corrosive media—within material limits—so industrial sump retrofit projects get interesting.
| Model | WQ Submersible Sewage Pump |
| Flow (Q) | ≈ 10–500 m³/h (real-world use may vary) |
| Head (H) | ≈ 6–45 m |
| Power | 0.75–55 kW, 50/60 Hz, 3-phase |
| Solids handling | Up to ≈ 50–80 mm (impeller dependent) |
| Materials | Cast iron FC200; options: 304/316 SS wetted parts |
| Seals | Dual mech. seal: SiC–SiC / TC–TC; NBR/Viton O-rings |
| Protection | IP68, thermal protectors; optional moisture probe |
| Vendor | Origin | Head Range | Cutter Option | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CY Pump WQ | Hebei, China | ≈ 6–45 m | Yes | Cost-effective; broad industrial use |
| Xylem Flygt | Global | ≈ 5–120 m | Yes | Premium price; strong service network |
| Wilo | EU/Global | ≈ 6–80 m | Selective | Efficient motors; smart controls |
| Grundfos SEG | EU/Global | ≈ 6–55 m | Integrated grinder | Compact footprints |
Ranges are approximate based on public data; verify per project duty point.
Municipal lift station (North China): two WQ units on duty/standby moved ≈ 180 m³/h at 22 m head through a 200 mm rising main. Factory bench tests per ISO 9906 showed η ≈ 68% on the duty point; after six months, operators reported zero seal alarms—small sample size, but promising.
Food processing sump (retrofit): cutter impeller reduced callouts from weekly to monthly; energy draw dropped ≈ 9% with VFD trim. Not magic—just better matching of curve to static head plus fewer ragging events.
Final thought: in a market that’s swinging toward cutter-capable septic tank pumps and smarter controls, the WQ is a practical, no-drama option. Just don’t skip your NPSH checks, cable gland inspections, and curve verification—still the fastest way to kill or save a pump.