Cooling Tower and Condenser Water Design Part 10: How Counterflow and Crossflow Towers Differ

Most commercial HVAC professionals are probably already aware that there are two different types of cooling towers – crossflow and counterflow. While both operate on the principle of evaporative cooling by blowing air across water, the physical configuration of these two types of cooling towers differs quite a bit. Read more....
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Cooling Tower and Condenser Water Design Part 9: Controlling Cycles of Concentration

Successful cooling tower operation and performance involves a delicate balance between (1) keeping the dissolved solids (such as calcium, magnesium, chloride, and silica) in the water from causing too much scale and/or corrosion and (2) conserving make-up water. It’s expensive, inefficient, and environmentally irresponsible to continuously dilute cooling tower water with an abundance of make-up water just to keep the ratio of minerals down. But how do you decide how much make-up water is needed to keep minerals within a tolerable range?
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Cooling Tower and Condenser Water Design Part 8: Pump Suction and Discharge Piping

Correctly piping the suction and discharge of your cooling tower/condenser water pump is critical. Some fairly catastrophic events can occur if either is improperly installed. Here are some best practices for piping cooling tower/condenser water systems....
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Cooling Tower and Condenser Water Design Part 7: Staging Cooling Towers and Chillers

Want to make sure the cooling towers in the systems you design operate as intended? If you are a design engineer, you are responsible for outlining the staging sequences of the cooling tower systems you design. This means putting together a list of the acceptable operational sequences, outlining what every piece of equipment will be doing at each and every stage. Here's how you develop that list which the controls vendor will use to program the system...
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Cooling Tower and Condenser Water Design Part 6: Multiple Cooling Towers and Condenser Piping

Larger facilities often have multiple cooling towers serving multiple chillers, enabling them to more closely match demand. Piping such systems can be a challenge, depending on the amount of flexibility desired. Here we describe the three most common approaches to piping multiple cooling towers and chillers.
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