Hi Gordon, I never thought of myself as a "pitoter" before, but I guess I am. :O I went back to some of my calibration runs to try to answer your question: "How much do you other pitoters get from your motors?". With a 100CFM calibration plate and a 1.57 inch flow element (nominal 1.5 inch PVC), a single motor gets a max depression of about 6 inches H2O. This is about 44CFM when corrected to 28 inches H2O and at Sea Level on a Standard day. The second motor raises the depression to over 22 inches H2O which is about 84 CFM corrected. I am not able to get 28 inches with this calibration plate. I will be ordering a 50 CFM plate soon. I have run from 2 inches elevation to 7 inches on my variable manometer and the results are pretty consistent (except at 5 inches max inclined - have to figure that one out yet). When I block the entrance, I reach 44+ inches depression on the vertical before I reach 100% on the second motor. I do this to check for leaks and show no flow on the inclined so there are no leaks. I have attached a spread sheet (that has been seen before) with these results (but they don't indicate the single motor limit). The Actual flow values are shown on the spread sheet before correcting to SLS. Hope this helps! -- Doug
Hmmm! It seems that something is blocking the spreadsheet results. If you "Save As", it either disappears or you can close the chart causing the problem. Any computer (Excel) gurus out there?