Safety First: Small Accessories That Prevent Big Chemical Incidents
Most chemical spills and dosing mishaps don’t start with a blown tank. They start with small things: a stuck check, a cracked tube, a crossed line. The right metering pump accessories turn those small failures into non-events.
Relief Valves: Cheap Insurance for the Pump Head
Positive displacement pumps will keep building pressure if a valve is closed or a line plugs. Something will give. A relief valve makes sure it isn’t the pump head or tubing.
- Place it on the discharge line, close to the pump
- Pipe the outlet to a safe return (tank or containment), never to the floor
- Set it 10-15% above normal running pressure, but below the weakest component rating
- Tag the set pressure and test it during routine maintenance
If you have frequent nuisance lifts, find the cause. A relief valve is a seatbelt, not a steering wheel.
Backflow Prevention: Keep Chemistry Where it Belongs
Backflow mixes chemicals that should never meet. It also ruins dose accuracy.
- Use a spring-loaded injection quill with an integral check tip at the injection point.
- Add a back-pressure valve so the pump’s internal checks seal on every stroke.
- If you tie into potable lines, install a code-compliant backflow preventer upstream.
Test check valves and quill tips during shutdowns.
Secondary Containment: Plan for Drips, Not Disasters
Even tight systems seep. Secondary containment keeps little leaks little.
- Put metering pumps on containment trays sized for at least 110% of the largest day tank or line volume at the skid.
- Use raised pump feet or stands so leaked liquid flows under, not into, motors.
- Collect relief valve discharge in a sealed jug or plumbed return, not an open bucket.
- Add absorbent pads and neutralizer appropriate to your chemicals right at the skid.
Label the tray with the chemical name. In an incident, no one should guess.
Leak-Detect Switches: Fast Alerts Beat Fast Feet
- Place a simple conductivity or float switch in the containment tray
- Wire it to alarm and, if appropriate, stop the pump and close a solenoid on the suction
- Test the switch monthly by lifting the float or bridging the probes
- Route alarms to a named person, not a group
If you use cloud alarms, verify the phone list quarterly. People change, and numbers change.
Color-Coded Tubing and Clear Labels: Stop Cross-Connections
Many incidents start with “we grabbed the wrong line”. Make that hard to do.
- Standardize tube colours by chemical family (for example, bleach = white, acid = red, caustic = blue)
- Use printed, chemical-name labels at four points: day tank, suction, discharge, and injection point
- Put flow-direction arrows on tubing runs
- Keep a laminated “chemical map” of the skid on the wall
Do a quick team drill once a year: can a new tech trace every line in two minutes?
Simple Habits That Keep You Out of Trouble
- Inspect and tag relief valve settings during PMs
- Test leak switches and alarms monthly
- Replace quill check tips and soft tubing on a fixed schedule, not when they fail
- Keep a small spares bin: relief valve rebuild kit, quill tips, pressure transducers, gaskets, tubing, and a spare back-pressure valve
- Train to the checklist once per shift rotation; new people need muscle memory too
Want a quick safety review of your dosing setup? We can help you pick the right relief, backflow, containment, and leak-detect pieces – and set up labels and colour standards that stick.
Call Vissers Sales Corp. at 1-800-367-4180 or visit our industrial pump accessories page to get started.
Safety first is also savings first.