Water is deposited there , a part of it goes to the pump, then the flowmeter to the ECats. The pipe used for this full with water, the flowmeter was working properly. The half full legend was created by Murray- if not can you ask a photo of the plant and of the open flowmeter he says he has seen it, with rust stains? Except you who swallows this hal full tale? You have not answered some of my questions but can do it now, e.g. to whom except you have complained IH re the plant in 2015? you can answer in private. Or the ERV report- we have the average for 10 months- but what was the maximum and the minimum hourly flow value for water? Actually, do you have the diagram of the plant? Were there filters/sieves in the circuit and where? Was it a steam trap? What has happened with the stories of Rossi tearing out the steam trap and taking the flowmeter home? peter
On Fri, Sep 2, 2016 at 6:00 PM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]> wrote: > Peter Gluck <[email protected]> wrote: > > Jed, you also do not understand the function of the reservoir. >> > > I do understand it. It eliminates the need for a constant flow of tapwater. > > The reservoir holds a large volume of water. Rather dirty water, as it > happens. The temperature of the water in the reservoir is around 60°C. > Water is pumped from the reservoir through the reactors, and from there > through the customer site heat exchanger. It then flows back into the > reservoir. The water level in the reservoir does not change much from day > to day, so all of the water is returned. It is a closed loop. > > If they did not have a reservoir, they would have to use a flow tapwater I > suppose. How else could they do it? Using tapwater would be expensive. > > Eyewitnesses told me this is how it works. Has Rossi or someone else told > you something else? Is there some other purpose for the reservoir, other > than reducing the need for tapwater? > > - Jed > > -- Dr. Peter Gluck Cluj, Romania http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com

