by finegold » Sun Aug 01, 2010 4:13 pm
Geo,
My memory serves me differently than the 70 psi comment.
D&B Custom dredge from the late seventies had a "killer" pump with amazing tolerances. Their dredge was untouchable for power. They used a "quad" jet in the style of the "crash box". The pump they created, had an operating max of 36 psi, 140 gpm through a tapered, smooth 7/8 oriface (not 4, just one 7/8" orifaces for performance testing).
The Precision pump/VW, operating in 25+ feet of water and with very good performance, was pushing 36 psi (and looking at the pictures I have of their typical precision jet feed size and lengths, they were likely getting about 32 psi at the orifaces - friction loss). Hoser John will remember the rig from the Middle fork of the American, in the Rucka Chuckies, where Fred Nelson was learning the ropes around 1984.
Fred in the 2000 - 2008 seasons, ran a Precision pump, with the Geo-Metro power plant on the South Fork of the American (an 8" reduced at the nozzle to a legal 6") from depths of 4' to maybe 18'(?) at 28 to 30 psi - mostly 28. His setup had all you could want, with power to spare (twin 1.5" oriface eductors) with a single 4" dia hose feed to twin "rams horn" to eductors). Hoser John was there to see that rig.
Last year (until August 6, of course), I ran my 8" with a Precision pump/VW, it a short 5" feed to a quad setup, and in 6 - 15' of water - anything higher than 28 psi was hairy and I like a nozzle with power! Most of the time the rig ran at 26 psi. There is quite a bit of the "unknown variables' in every set up and each has its own sweet spot.
If your eductors are sized and angled properly, and your straight tube length is correct (whether crashbox straight jet or a flare - and the flare angle and length are proper - did I mention there is more to a proper system than gpm and psi?) then 30 - 36 psi is about optimal in my experience for most setups. My 8" quad being the odd ball but I didn't get the chance to work it deep. Might have had to crank it up quite a bit - don't know.
Please note, this is only from my experience and observation and a just something to consider. I am not intending or suggesting that other opinions are wrong. Just because I have being doing this for many years, could just mean I have not been doing it very well for many years.
Hope this is of some value to consider.