TEL: +86 13120555503

English

  • Axial Flow Pump for High Flow, Low Head, Energy Saving

Oct . 23, 2025 15:00 Back to list

Axial Flow Pump for High Flow, Low Head, Energy Saving



Choosing the Right Flow Machine: Real-World Notes on Mixed vs. Axial Designs

If you’re weighing an Axial Flow Pump against a mixed-flow option for flood control, irrigation, or cooling water, I’ve got a few field notes you might appreciate. To be honest, the lines blur in practice: axial-flow wins on sheer volume at low head; mixed-flow (like the HW series) nudges up the pressure without giving away too much flow. Engineers like that middle ground, and operators love the calmer NPSH profile and more forgiving solids handling.

The HW Mixed Flow Pump, made in Shifo Town, Anguo City, Hebei Province, has been popping up in municipal tender lists for a reason—high flow, respectable head, and the ability to move turbid water without getting fussy. Many customers say it “just works” through the rainy season, which, frankly, is the only KPI that matters when the river’s rising.

Axial Flow Pump for High Flow, Low Head, Energy Saving

Industry trend (quick take)

Two tracks I keep seeing: urban flood resilience projects favor large-diameter axial-flow installations for station retrofits, while agricultural and industrial users drift to mixed-flow for flexible duty points and modest head. Surprisingly, lifecycle cost models often show parity—energy wins on axial-flow get offset by wider operating windows on mixed-flow. Your duty curve decides.

HW Mixed Flow Pump – indicative specs

Real-world use may vary; tested per recognized standards (see citations).

Parameter HW Mixed Flow Pump (typical)
Flow rate ≈ 800–12,000 m³/h
Head ≈ 3–25 m
Efficiency at BEP ≈ 80–86% (ISO 9906 Grade 2B)
NPSHr ≈ 2.5–5.0 m
Materials HT200/HT250 cast iron, 304/316 SS wetted parts optional
Solids/Turbidity Clear to turbid; up to ≈ 5% fine solids
Seal Mechanical seal or packed gland
Service life 10–15 years with routine maintenance

Applications and why it fits

  • Urban flood control stations and stormwater lift
  • Irrigation canals where water levels swing a bit
  • Cooling water intake/discharge (power, steel)
  • Fish-friendly velocities with proper vane profiles (ask for rounded leading edges)

Process flow and quality notes

Materials: HT200/HT250 casings; CF8/CF8M impellers if corrosion is a worry. Methods: sand casting with NDT on critical sections, CNC machining, and ISO 1940 G6.3 dynamic balancing on impellers. Tests: hydrostatic at 1.5× design pressure; performance to ISO 9906 or GB/T 3216. Coatings: epoxy primer + abrasion-resistant topcoat for turbid water. Documentation: ISO 9001 QMS, optional CE. Service spares stocked through seasonal peaks (nice touch, I guess).

Vendor snapshot (comparative)

Vendor Origin Flow (m³/h) Head (m) Lead time Certs (typ.)
CYPUMP HW Mixed Flow Shifo Town, Anguo, Hebei ≈ 800–12,000 ≈ 3–25 4–6 weeks ISO 9001, CE
Global Brand A (axial-flow) EU ≈ 2,000–25,000 ≈ 1–8 10–16 weeks ISO 9906, CE
Regional OEM B (mixed-flow) APAC ≈ 1,000–10,000 ≈ 4–20 6–10 weeks ISO 9001

Case notes and feedback

Jiangsu flood station upgrade (two 1,600 mm units): performance test hit 84% efficiency at BEP; NPSHr measured 3.2 m—comfortably below available NPSH. Operators reported easier debris passage than their prior Axial Flow Pump set. Another site—coastal cooling water—opted for duplex SS impellers; corrosion rate dropped noticeably over 12 months.

Customization checklist

  • Impeller pitch/profile tuning for target duty
  • Material upgrades: 316/duplex for chloride service
  • Seal plans (API-style flush) and bearing protection
  • VFD-ready motors; soft-start to tame surge
  • Coating systems for abrasion or biofouling control

Bottom line: if your head is under ~8 m and ultra-high volume is king, a Axial Flow Pump is still the blunt instrument of choice. If you need a little more head with plenty of flow—and better tolerance for turbid water—the HW Mixed Flow Pump lands in the sweet spot.

References

  1. ISO 9906:2012 – Rotodynamic pumps: Hydraulic performance acceptance tests.
  2. GB/T 3216 – Rotodynamic pumps: Hydraulic performance acceptance tests (China).
  3. ANSI/HI 9.6.1 – Rotodynamic Pumps: NPSH Margin (Hydraulic Institute).
  4. ISO 1940-1 – Mechanical vibration: Balance quality of rigid rotors.
Share

If you are interested in our products, you can choose to leave your information here, and we will be in touch with you shortly.