by Tony » Mon Aug 18, 2008 1:49 am
Probably not.
The full open flow (at zero back pressure) is rated at 95 CFM.
As you place more restriction on airflow, differential pressure rises, and flow falls.
At the full rated maximum pressure, flow will be zero.
At 28" back pressure the flow will be somewhere between zero and 95 CFM, but what it will actually be, cannot even be guessed at. That is unless you have the specific flow curve for that particular blower.
The shape of this curve will vary hugely from one blower type and model number to another.
You will need more than four blowers to reach 350 CFM at 28", but how many is difficult to say.
Best bet is to test one blower all by itself in a test rig. Try loading the blower against various orifice sizes until that blower can manage around 28". Then use the orifice formula to calculate the actual flow through that sized hole at the measured pressure differential. From that you can figure out how many similar blowers working in parallel will be required to reach your target flow.
Realist too, that the blower has to supply not only the test pressure, but the design pressure drop across the measurement orifice. So the blowers will need to develop 350 CFM working against more like 35" to 42" inches of total back pressure, not just 28".
Also known as the infamous "Warpspeed" on some other Forums.