How to pump water from a well with a diameter of 10 cm and a depth of up to 50 meters while maintaining the pressure in the absence of electricity?
The answer is simple: the engineering solution from Motorcon-diesel hydraulic pump station DGNS-PN 13-60.
The mining industry is an industry with severe and restrictive operating conditions, so the installation of a DGNS must be resistant to mechanical influences and to an aggressive environment.
DGNS-PN-13-60 - this is an Autonomous station, made in a mobile version on skis, with an upper overload system and a weatherproof hood on the engine.
When developing the project, it was necessary to take into account the peculiarity of the location of the customer's facility on the Northern outskirts of the Far East - the distance from transport and urban infrastructure, the lack of power supply at the facility, which is why the diesel engine was chosen as the pump drive. Thanks to an exclusive compact pump with a hydraulic drive, water is pumped out of wells with a diameter of 100 mm while maintaining a flow of 13 m3/h and a head of 60 m. The design of the diesel-hydraulic pumping station provides a special drum for semi-automatic unwinding / reeling of hoses. It is equipped with an emergency warning system and protection in case of engine overheating and clogged air filter, as well as automatic engine shutdown in case of emergency oil pressure.
Description of the station
- compact pump with hydraulic drive,
- compact and robust hoses that can withstand loads when the pump is lowered into a well up to 50 meters deep,
- hydraulic oil station based on the MMZ engine provides not only the pump operation, but also the winding of hoses,
- included weather hood on the engine protects against rain and mechanical damage,
- mobile version-sledge, for moving the station by dragging for a short distance at the place of operation.
It is allowed to manufacture in a stationary version or mobile on a trailer.
This solution will be relevant for pumping water from technological tanks, for draining technological quarries, reservoirs with limited access, for removing water from ship holds, barges, for pumping water from narrow wells where it is impossible to use conventional "dry installation"pumps.