Reverse engineering the past into the future
Sulzer creates brand new pumps as direct replacements for obsolete assets
In this case, a total of four, two-stage scale pumps are situated in a sump that collects water from the descaling process and transfer it to a filtration process before it is reused. Due to the metal debris in the water, the pumps need to be regularly overhauled approximately every 12 months.
However, these pumps are in constant use and the project needed to deliver spare assets that could be designed quickly and installed during a scheduled maintenance window. None of the operational pumps could be taken out of service in the short-term, so an innovative solution was required.
Finding the best solution
The proposal offered by the OEM meant that changes would need to be made to the pump base and the surrounding infrastructure. The additional time and costs associated with this these changes made the offer unacceptable. In a bid to find a better solution, Arcelor Mittal turned to Sulzer as an expert in pump design.
The company offered to reverse engineer the original pump and create a perfect replica, which would be a direct replacement without any need to change the surrounding infrastructure. The customer was impressed with Sulzer’s proposed solution that would deliver a new pump in the same footprint and with the same performance as the existing assets albeit with improved reliability.
Alvaro Ayuso, Head of Services in Spain for Sulzer, comments:
“Sulzer was able to work with a single-stage version of the scale pumps that had been previously scrapped, using it as the basis for the design of the replacement pump. In-house designers used 3D laser scanning to draw up the complete pump with identical hydraulics and external connections.”
Alvaro Ayuso
Simple installation
Having seen what Sulzer could achieve, the customer decided to request the manufacture of an additional replacement pump, which would mean that the existing spares would continue to be applicable and the time for the changeover process would be an absolute minimum.
From start to finish, the project was completed inside nine months. As soon as the factory testing was complete, the new assets were delivered to the steel plant and installed by the on-site maintenance team.
A member of the mechanical maintenance team at Arcelor Mittal concludes:
A member of the mechanical maintenance team at Arcelor Mittal
“The solution offered by Sulzer has certainly worked for us on several levels. The two brand new pumps have been simple to install during a planned maintenance period and we have also secured the supply of spare parts for the future as well optimizing our operational costs. The support we have received during this project will almost certainly lead to further collaboration in the future.”