Hydraulic Ram Pumps are very old technology that pump water using gravity and 2 valves to generate a repeating water hammer effect. The "hammer" pounds a little of the drive water into a pressure tank then up the delivery hose for your use. Why is it green? Because it's simple, reliable, pumps water without any engine, fuel or electricity or muscle power and can be made from mostly recycled materials.
The one I built has a few novelties that make it more reliable, cheaper and easier to operate than most of the plans you find on the Internet. It developed a steady 28psi pressure at the pump and delivered about 1,000 gallons per day where we wanted it.
last season, it hammered over 145,600 gallons of pond water up a steep hill to our garden over 700 feet away and over 100 feet higher than the pond! In the process, it saved us over 485 liters of diesel fuel we would have normally used to drive our diesel tractor to pump and tow the water around our farm.
The pump was built for about $50 worth of plumbing parts and a bunch of stuff that I had sitting in my scrap pile.
What's the secret? A strong gate valve - period.
Please have a look and enjoy the instructable and don't forget to rate it (and vote on April 20 of course).
Please let me know if I can make it better or easier to follow somehow, and I will be happy to answer any questions that you have so post away!!
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You can use a physically bigger pump 3" or 4" or 6" etc.
You can use multiple pumps if you have enough feed water capacity.
You can shorten the delivery pipe by running it high enough to transfer the flow to an open aquaduct that can ultimately deliver the water to its destination (reduce delivery pipe pressure)
1 gal/min seems trivial until you consider that these pumps run 24/7, in this case providing over 10,000 gal each week. Put another way, it will fill up your average size swimming pool every 2 weeks.
_________5.5"________ pond surface elevation
I }
I } 1'
pump location
Your feed water pipe does not have to be straight. it can follow the contours of the ground from the pond down to the pump. The feed water pipe should be rigid like metal if possible. I used heavy wall ABS plastic because it was much cheaper than metal pipe and it seems to work ok but metal is reported by some to increase pump efficiency.
Thanks in advance.
The discussion was interesting but it has gone to nowere . And why - because we have forgotten that the ramp pump is usung difference in water levels to pump water up the hill . Produsind energy is another story and tryung to use the exghaust energy un this case is absurd. Every gain can be accomplished
only by investing some time/labour and ingenuity and utilising the exaust water of ramp pump will NOT pay the effort. You have enought water to use its energy if you need energy. The ram pump is pumping. Generatirs are generating. And in is fulish to look for "perpetum mobile" arround the ramp pump. It is onli a pump.
For all spelling axperts , english is not my mother tongue.
Regards perah123
Also using the exhaust water do drive a wheel wont change anything on the pump side if you don't create any back pressure.
e.g.. you get free heat in your car in the winter from the waste heat generated by your engine. In the case of this pump, most of the available power is blown by the valve unused, So, if we installed a little Pelton wheel generator externally, the exhaust water might be used to drive it after it exits the valve body and therefore should not affect the efficiency of the water pumping operation. Like a jet engine afterburner, except we are already dumping our "fuel" , the exhaust pressure, so we don't have to add any more fuel to the equation. Maybe regenerative braking is a better example, or better yet... cogeneration, just like my geothermal heating system provides me with free hot water from the waste heat it tries to get rid of during it's operating cycle.
There's really no disagreement here. The hydraulic ram is running right on the edge, efficiency-wise. Any energy you draw *from the ram* will affect the functioning of the ram. If you let the water fall another foot or so, you're not using the energy of the exhaust- you're simply tapping the gravitation gradient between the ram and where you put your turbine, which I think is what you're saying. But that's not tapping into "waste energy" from the ram, which was someone's initial contention.