One pound of water one inch.
Yes, definitely too high. It should ideally be 50-80 psi.
How high is the building and what are the GPM /PSI requirements of the fixtures
A lot
75 psi range
super
2.31
You can lift a locomotive or a house with 1 psi, if the pressure is applied over a large enough area.
10 psi.
138.60ft 2.31ft of water= 1 psi
High pressure Steam 15 PSI High pressure water 160 PSI /250 degrees, now you can ask WHY?
High pressure Steam 15 PSI High pressure water 160 PSI /250 degrees, now you can ask WHY?
Yes, definitely too high. It should ideally be 50-80 psi.
The water pressure from a well is controlled by a pressure switch with a low setting of about 20 psi and a high setting of about 40 psi. It is adjustable for both high and low pressure and some wells, depending upon the pump capability will run from 40 psi low to 60 psi high.
To convert psi (pounds per square inch) to feet of water, you can use the conversion factor: 1 psi is equivalent to approximately 2.31 feet of water. This means that if you have a pressure of 1 psi, it would support a column of water approximately 2.31 feet high.
That's really not answerable w/o a lot of assumptions. There's a unit of pressure called PSI, which stands for Pounds-per-Square-Inch. If you have 1 PSI, applied over 8,4 square inches(or more), you will lift one gallon of water.
Hydrocleaning has various levels. "Low-pressure water cleaning" uses water pressure less than 5,000 psi, while "High-pressure water cleaning" uses water pressure between 5,000 to 10,000 psi. Higher still is "High-pressure water jetting" which is between 10,000 to 25,000 psi, and finally "Ultrahigh-pressure water jetting" uses pressures above 25,000 psi.
The lift pump on a 6.7L only runs at around 10 psi. The fuel rail pressure on the other hand can be as high as 20,000 psi.