Mechanisms — hand pump

Recent Blogs

Single Valve Air Pump diagram
Single Valve Air Pump Mechanism Explained: How It Works, Parts, Formula, and Uses
How a single valve air pump works, with formulas, sizing math, and worked examples for inflatables, lab vacuum work, and aquarium aeration applications.
Lift Pump (form 1) diagram
Lift Pump (form 1) Mechanism Explained: How It Works, Diagram, Parts, Uses, and Flow Calculator
Lift pump explained — how the suction-stroke mechanism raises water from wells, sizing math, real applications in farming, mining and heritage restoration.
Hand Pump diagram
Hand Pump Mechanism Explained: How It Works, Parts, Uses, and Flow Rate Formula
How a hand pump works — piston, plunger, and diaphragm types explained with flow rate formulas, real applications, and sizing examples for off-grid water systems.
Lift Pump (form 2) diagram
Lift Pump (form 2) Mechanism Explained: How It Works, Diagram, Parts, Uses & Calculator
Lift pump form 2 explained — how the dual-valve piston design draws water up to 10 m, where it's used in well systems, plus a...
Lift and Force Pump diagram
Lift and Force Pump Mechanism Explained: How It Works, Parts, Diagram, and Uses
Lift and force pumps move water by combining suction and discharge strokes. See how they work, where they're used in fire and farm service, and...
Lift Pump diagram
Lift Pump Mechanism Explained: How It Works, Parts, Diagram, and Hand Pump Uses
Lift Pump explained — how the suction-stroke bucket pump lifts water up to 8 m, sizing formulas, real farm and well applications, and troubleshooting.
Bellows / Double-acting Pump diagram
Bellows / Double-acting Pump Mechanism: How It Works, Parts, Diagram and Uses Explained
How a Bellows / Double-acting Pump moves fluid on both strokes. Sizing formula, worked example, tradeoffs vs piston and diaphragm pumps for industrial use.
Force Pump diagram
Force Pump: Mechanism, How It Works, Diagrams, Videos, Detailed Explanation
Force pump explained — piston, valves, and air vessel working together to push water above suction lift height. Used in fire engines, wells, and oil...