Maintenance – SPX Cooling Technologies MARLEY CLASS 800 User Manual

Page 15

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15

Maintenance

Well maintained equipment gives the best operating results and the least
maintenance cost. A regular inspection schedule is recommended to insure
effective safe operation of the cooling tower. Use the Inspection and
Maintenance Schedule
on page 25 to obtain continuously good performance
with least tower maintenance. See the Inspection Checklist on pages 26
and 27 in this manual. Keep a continuous lubrication and maintenance record
for each cooling tower. Conduct regular inspections, repair personnel safety
items (items 20 and 21 in the table on page 25) and maintain records of
all—this is especially important. For a supply of check list forms, contact your
Marley sales office or representative.

Hot Water Distribution System

Keep the circulating water and distribution system (piping and nozzles) clean
and free of dirt, algae, and scale. Algae and scale may clog nozzles, eliminators,
fill, and piping, and may collect on the equipment served thus reducing its
performance

See Caution note below under Fill.

Access

The optional access door in the fan deck with an optional short ladder to the
top of the fill provides a means for inspection of the plenum area above and
below the eliminators.

Removal of eliminator packs allows access to the spray chamber for inspection
and maintenance of the nozzles and top of fill.

Under no circumstances are the eliminators to be used as a walking
surface.

Provide top surface protection before walking on the fill.

Fill

Clean, free-flowing, unobstructed fill is key to the continued efficient
operation and performance of a cooling tower. The owner/operator
must keep the circulating water clean by treatment, screening, or
filtering to avoid the possibility of fill clogging. Sea water, if used,
will typically present increased clogging problems due to suspended
solids and/or biological growth if the water is not properly filtered
and treated. The dissolved ions do not present unusual clogging
problems.

Contributors to the clogging of fill are trash and debris, algae, slime, and
scale—with the effects of scale often being worsened by the presence of
suspended muds. All of these can be controlled with some combination of
water treatment, screening, and filtration, and it is the owner’s responsibility

Note

Warning

Caution

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