Main Feed Pumps Parts

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Part Number
NSN
NIIN
116603841 Sleeve Bearing Half
008544130
16300293 Sleeve Bearing Half
008544130
16300388 Sleeve Bearing Half
008544130
16602231 Sleeve Bearing Half
008544130
16603841 Sleeve Bearing Half
008544130
16701708 Sleeve Bearing Half
003432652
21710228 Sleeve Bearing Half
006496549
31364 Sleeve Bearing Half
008544130
A18AFB5PC9 Sleeve Bearing Half
003432652
AFB817A10 Sleeve Bearing Half
008544130
C19AFBDC Sleeve Bearing Half
003432652
C19AFBDCREP198 Sleeve Bearing Half
003432652
C3133135REVA Sleeve Bearing Half
008544130
C3156861PC9 Sleeve Bearing Half
003432652
C3156869XA3162176 Sleeve Bearing Half
003432652
C3156869XA316217H75FM Sleeve Bearing Half
003432652
C817AFBBC Sleeve Bearing Half
008544130
CAFB817E Sleeve Bearing Half
008544130
GB-21710228 Sleeve Bearing Half
006496549
GB80922 Sleeve Bearing Half
006496549
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Main Feed Pumps

Picture of Main Feed Pumps

A deaerating feed tank (DFT), often found in steam plants that propel ships, is located after the main condensate pump and before the main feed booster pump. It has these three purposes:

Based on the relevant theoretical Rankine cycle diagram, there are four main processes, or steps:

In the practical implementation of a Rankine cycle, it is common to break the single pump (process 1 to 2) into three pumps: (in water flow order: condensate pump, feed booster pump and then feedwater pump).

A surge volume allows the plant to change bells (power output level) without running the feed pump dry or flooding the turbines. Consider the plant running in a steady state condition.

The bell is increased, more power output demanded, the rate of feed is increased. This draws more water from the condenser, perhaps to the point of being dry and starving the boiler resulting in a loss of propulsion. This is until the water, converted to steam, provides its energy to the turbine and then is condensed in the condenser.

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