Centrifugal Pump Efficiency — IS 5120 vs Hydraulic Institute HI 14.6 vs ISO 9906
By MEPVAULT Editorial Team · MEP Consultant · HVAC / Plumbing · 11 May 2026
Reading time ~ 8 min · Originally published: 08 May 2026 · Last revised: 11 May 2026
For a 200 kW centrifugal pump, IS 5120 demands 75 % BEP efficiency. Hydraulic Institute HI 14.6 demands 81 %. The 6 pp efficiency spread over 15 years on a chiller-plant primary pump saves ₹5.9 lakh in operating energy on a 7.5-year payback. Five BoQ specifications that actually deliver HI efficiency at site (instead of getting IS 5120 in a HI-branded shell).
Why pump efficiency varies by which standard you specify
For a 200 kW centrifugal pump delivering 1,200 m³/h at 35 m head, IS 5120 (the legacy Indian Standard) and the corresponding IS 9079 specify minimum BEP (Best Efficiency Point) efficiency of 75 %. The Hydraulic Institute HI 14.6 (the international reference for pump efficiency) requires 81 % at BEP for the same hydraulic class. ISO 9906 Grade 1B sits at 80 %.
The 5-6 % efficiency spread is not academic. Over a 15-year life of a 200 kW unit running 4,200 hr/year, the difference between 75 % and 81 % efficiency works out to ~₹8.5 lakh in operating energy cost.
Hydraulic Institute energy rating — what it actually demands
| Parameter | IS 5120 / IS 9079 | HI 14.6 / ANSI 11.6 | ISO 9906 Grade 1B |
|---|---|---|---|
| BEP efficiency target | 75 % typical | 81 % typical | 80 % typical |
| Test tolerance | ±3 % | ±2 % | ±1 % |
| Efficiency at 75 % flow | 68 % | 75 % | 74 % |
| Efficiency at 110 % flow | 67 % | 73 % | 72 % |
| Cavitation margin (NPSHa / NPSHr) | > 1.5 | > 1.5 (HI 9.6.1) | > 1.5 |
| Vibration limit (mm/s RMS) | 7.1 (IS 12075) | 4.5 (HI 9.6.4) | 4.5 |
| Noise at 1 m (dBA) | 85 | 82 | 80 |
When pump efficiency standards matter — and when they don’t
Always specify HI or ISO 9906 Grade 1B when:
- Pump runs > 3,000 hr/year (chiller plant, data centre cooling, hotel domestic supply)
- FM Global insured project (HI mandatory)
- LEED v4.1 or IGBC sustainability target (efficiency feeds the energy model)
- Variable-flow application (VFD-driven; part-load efficiency matters more)
IS 5120 is sufficient for fire pumps (NFPA 20 mandates Hydraulic Institute test method anyway), domestic transfer pumps, irrigation, light commercial.
A 350 kW chiller-plant primary pump — 15-year LCC comparison
| Specification | IS 5120 minimum | HI 14.6 typical | Delta |
|---|---|---|---|
| BEP efficiency | 75 % | 81 % | +6 pp |
| Annual run-hours | 4,200 | 4,200 | — |
| Annual energy (MWh) at 70 % avg load | 862 | 798 | -64 |
| Annual energy cost at ₹8.5/kWh | ₹7.33 lakh | ₹6.78 lakh | -₹54,000/yr |
| Capex premium (HI 14.6 over IS 5120) | — | +₹4 lakh | — |
| Payback | — | 7.5 years | — |
| 15-year LCC | ₹110 lakh | ₹104 lakh | -₹5.9 lakh |
Specifying HI 14.6 instead of IS 5120 on a single 350 kW primary pump saves ₹5.9 lakh over 15 years on a 7.5-year payback. On a typical commercial central plant with 3-4 such pumps + 2-3 secondary pumps, the cumulative LCC benefit is ₹25-35 lakh. Always worth the small capex premium.
What to write in the BoQ to actually get HI efficiency at site
- Reference Hydraulic Institute 14.6 or ISO 9906 Grade 1B explicitly in the technical specification. Don’t leave it to “as per IS standards”.
- Demand the pump curve at delivery — not just efficiency at BEP, but at 75 % and 110 % flow. Indian OEMs (Kirloskar, Grundfos India, KSB, Crompton) all publish these — Indian distributors don’t always pass them on.
- Witness test the prototype at the factory — HI 14.6 mandates this for premium projects. For smaller pumps, accept Type 2 test certificate.
- Specify the VFD efficiency class separately — IE3 minimum, IE4 preferred for > 100 kW. Pump + VFD efficiency multiply, so VFD matters.
- Demand actual measured efficiency at commissioning — use a flow meter + power meter to confirm. Common discrepancy: vendor quoted 82 %, measured at site 76 %. Reject under contractual remedy.
References
- IS 5120:1980 (reaffirmed) — Technical Requirements for Rotodynamic Special Purpose Pumps, Bureau of Indian Standards.
- IS 9079:2018 — Centrifugal Pumps for Clear Cold Water — Performance Requirements, Bureau of Indian Standards.
- Hydraulic Institute Standard HI 14.6 — Rotodynamic Pumps for Hydraulic Performance Acceptance Tests, HI Parsippany NJ 2016.
- Hydraulic Institute Standard HI 9.6.1 — NPSH Margin Guidelines.
- Hydraulic Institute Standard HI 9.6.4 — Allowable Operating Region and Mechanical Vibration.
- ISO 9906:2012 — Rotodynamic Pumps — Hydraulic Performance Acceptance Tests Grades 1, 2 and 3, ISO Geneva.
- IS 12075:2008 — Mechanical Vibration of Centrifugal Pumps, Bureau of Indian Standards.
- NFPA 20: 2025 — Standard for the Installation of Stationary Pumps for Fire Protection (references HI test methods).
// About the Authors
MEPVAULT Editorial Team — A team of practising MEP consultants based in India. ISHRAE-affiliated; FSAI-aligned.
