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Applications16
WORLD PUMPS April 2013
www.worldpumps.com
Deluge pumps for fi re
training at airport
Fire fi ghting
fi t the four pumps into the space occupied by
one larger pump.
“The existing pumping arrangement was
using one pump and a 110 kw motor,” said
Richard Maher at AxFlow Windsor. “This ran
at full speed regardless of the demand on the
system, which could vary between fi lling the
fi re tenders’ on-board tanks to a full deluge
of the training rig itself. The new system uses
one 18.5 kw pump when fi lling the tenders
and three 18.5 kW pumps to fully cool the rig,
so there is a considerable saving in power
consumption. Also the pumps are controlled
At London’s Heathrow Airport,
training fire crews is an almost
constant activity, which is why it
has a purpose-designed fi re training rig
constructed from steel to the same size as
a Boeing 747. Packed full of safety sensor
devices it is a pretty expensive piece of kit
with a replacement price tag of around
£10 million. So when it is set on fi re during
training exercises, putting out the fi re has
to be fast and eff ective in order to ensure
safety for the fi re crews undergoing training
and preserving the integrity and fabric of the
rig (Figure 1).
In the interests of ensuring optimum perform-
ance and attaining greater energy effi ciency,
BAA Heathrow has recently replaced its
existing deluge pump system with a state-of-
the-art pump system designed and fabricated
by AxFlow Windsor. The new unit comprises
four Lowara 92SV3/2AG185T Vertical multi-
stage pumps with 18.5 kW motors. The pumps
have been sized for a duty of 1746 lts/min @
46.2 m/hd giving a total fl ow rate of 5,238 lts/
min with three pumps running (one being
used as a spare) (Figure 2). AxFlow Windsor
selected these pumps due to their high effi -
ciency and compact footprint as they had to
BAA Heathrow has recently replaced its existing deluge pump system with a state-of-the-art
pump system designed and fabricated by AxFlow Windsor. The new unit comprises four Lowara
92SV3/2AG185T Vertical multistage pumps with 18.5 kW motors. AxFlow Windsor selected these
pumps due to their high effi ciency and compact footprint as they had to fi t the four pumps into
the space occupied by one larger pump.
Figure 1: The purpose-designed fi re training rig constructed from steel to the same size as a Boeing 747.
WOPU0413_App_AxFlow 16 27-03-13 09:47:43
Applications 17
WORLD PUMPS April 2013
www.worldpumps.com
valves were opened to produce a full deluge
and the pumps succeeded in sending water
to all parts of the rig. “Under test the pumps
were slowly ramped down from full speed
to try and see at which point the head could
not be achieved,” Jolly said. “With three
pumps running the deluge was achieved,
but with two the head was not reached. This
gave a redundancy of 25% and still met the
requirements of the rig. With all four pumps
running the fi lling boom was also opened.
The fl ow was maintained to the rig with the
required head, enabling a tender to be fi lled
at the same time as the rig was being
used.
For the test, each pump was left running at
a full speed of 50 Hz and at this speed each
pump was pulling 33 amps at 17.5 kW. In
total the pumps are pulling 132 amps, 70 kW.
Limiting the current keeps the pumps below
the 200 amp threshold of the supply fuses,
with each pump set at 48 amps.
The current draw is just over half of the
previous installation with the power reduced
by the same factor. The use of variable speed
drives mean that the pumps pull no more
than the full load current on start up. The
redundancy of 25% means that servicing or
a breakdown can be attended to without loss
of service to the facility. The redundancy also
means that the rig and boom can be used in
conjunction with each other.
www.axfl ow.co.uk
by ABB ACH550 inverters so the running
speed can be set to match the duty exactly.”
Fire training is held on a regular basis with
each session ranging between one and two
hours. The rig is set on fi re internally and
externally with LPG, and the fi res last for
around three minutes. The purpose of the
deluge pumps is to cool the rig and to control
the overhead water fi ll on the fi re training
ground. The deluge starts before the scenario
and works through the period of the fi re and
then for about one minute after the fi re has
stopped.
Ian Jolly, BAA Water Services, says that when
the full test of the new pump system was
carried out at the fi re training rig all the
Figure 2: The new deluge pump unit comprises four Lowara 92SV3/2AG185T Vertical multistage pumps with 18.5 kW motors.
WOPU0413_App_AxFlow 17 27-03-13 09:47:43