- May 3, 2007
- 18,087
- Pool Size
- 20000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Hayward Aqua Rite (T-15)
repair_guy said:I was involved in that other thread. That guys specs were way out of whack and I'm not sure what he ended up finding. It may have been a bad drive. The pump defaults to 75 degrees. Even if you neglect to correct it, the gpm would not be off by more than a few gallons. There is no flowmeter in the pump. The pump measures resistance as you know and with a preprogrammed system that says water molecules resist at this rate at this temp, it's just an equation at that point.
So are you saying that they are not using a calorimetric flow meter? You mentioned that "the pump measures resistance" but what kind of resistance; mechanical, electrical, thermal, pressure? And how does it measure this resistance? And exactly how does it calculate flow from this measurement?
Technically speaking, no mater what method they are using, it is still a flow meter even if it is not a direct measurement. There are many different ways to measure flow rates some direct but most indirectly as the Intelliflo seems to do. From what you have said and others have said, the calorimetric flow meter makes the most sense. It measures thermal flow rates in the water in a very confined space and requires a reference water temperature to remain accurate.
[EDIT] I reread the gardenweb post, Intelliflo manual and parts lists and came to the following conclusions. The parts list doesn't show any separate sensors for measuring flow. Also, based on users comments, the Intelliflo does not show actual flow rates only set flow rate input by the user. This means that to come up with the proper RPM from a set GPM input value, the only other thing they can possibly use as an input to this equation is power draw (a form of electrical resistance). This can be done solely in the controller and the pump affinity equations would allow you to calculate RPM from a GPM value and power input values assuming that the efficiency is calibrated over the range of values. This would also make sense since they are showing power consumption in the display. I am still not clear why temperature is all that important then. Specific gravity of water only changes 0.7% from 50 to 100 degrees F so the calculations should have very little dependency on temperature and could have been ignored. I think Pentair recognized this in their manual when they said the setting is not all that important.