dosing-pump-technology

Stepper Motor Dosing Pump Technology

Why Traditional Solenoid Technology Falls Short

Advanced stepper motor dosing pump technology delivers accurate chemical dosing from 1% to 100% of flow — eliminating low-flow inaccuracy, reducing chemical waste, and improving system reliability.

A definitive technical guide to why stepper-motor actuation is the engineering

standard for precision chemical dosing — and what it means for your water treatment

process.

Stepper-Motor Dosing, Eliminating the Low-Flow Accuracy Dead Zone

If you’ve managed a water treatment dosing system, you know this problem intimately. 

Your process demands are really small.

Conventional diaphragm dosing technology — driven by a solenoid electromagnet — delivers accurate dosing only down to approximately 15% of its design maximum flow of available dosing pumps. 

Below that threshold, each solenoid stroke still displaces the same fixed minimum volume, making precise low-flow metering physically impossible. 

The minimum dose is determined by a single solenoid stroke, which represents the full diaphragm chamber volume.

Up to now, you may think the only options are to install a timer or to struggle to find a dosing pump that can handle the super-low flow required.

 You shouldn’t have to accept this.  

 You won’t have to accept it with DOSECO.

Stepper Motor Dosing Pump vs Solenoid Dosing Pumps

A direct comparison of performance across the parameters that matter most.

 Why Solenoid Pumps Fail at Low Flows

 

Minimum accurate flow (solenoid)                        ~15% of max

 

Minimum accurate flow (DOSECO stepper)              1% of max

Pressure spikes (solenoid)            Up to 2.5× counter-pressure

 

Pressure behaviour (stepper)        Smooth, controlled build-up

Stroke control (solenoid)              Full-volume snap stroke only

Stroke control (stepper)                 STEP stroke, variable speed

Low-viscosity liquid handling         Inconsistent at low speeds

Viscous liquid handling (stepper)         Anti-cavitation suction                                                                            control

Technical Comparison

Stepper Motor Dosing Pump vs. Conventional Solenoid Diaphragm Technology

A head-to-head comparison of the two dominant diaphragm dosing pump

technologies — across the parameters that matter most to water treatment professionals.

PERFORMANCE PARAMETER CONVENTIONAL SOLENOID TECHNOLOGY DOSECO STEPPER-MOTOR TECHNOLOGY
Minimum accurate flow rate ~15% of design maximum flow 1% of design maximum flow
Operational accuracy range ~7:1 turndown (approximate) 100:1 turndown minimum
Stroke mechanism Fixed volume snap stroke (full chamber volume) Full stroke, infinitely variable speed
Pressure behaviour during stroke Peaks up to 2.5× counter-pressure Controlled build-up to counter-pressure only
Dosing pulsation High — significant pressure surges per stroke Near-zero — smooth continuous delivery
Viscous liquid handling Unreliable at low speeds; air-lock risk Anti-cavitation suction speed control
Flow rate adjustment method Stroke frequency or length — external adjustment Electronic speed control — full range
Suitability for 24/7 continuous service Reduced — solenoid coil heat and wear Designed for continuous operation
Low-flow chemical metering accuracy Compromised — overdosing or no dosing Consistent ±1% across the full range
Chemical waste from inaccuracy Significant — especially at part-load Minimal — dose only what is needed
Pipe fitting and injection point stress High from pressure surges Low — smooth delivery reduces mechanical fatigue
Repairability vs. replacement lifecycle Often treated as consumable/disposable Designed for long-life serviceability

The Engineering

How Stepper-Motor Actuation Delivers Precision

Full Stroke. Variable Speed. Every Time.

A DOSECO stepper-motor dosing pump operates fundamentally differently

to solenoid-driven technology. Instead of a solenoid electromagnet

snapping the diaphragm through a fixed-volume discharge stroke, a precision

stepper motor drives the diaphragm delivery at incremental steps, giving the control system direct, measured authority over the diaphragm throughout the entire discharge cycle.

 

The flow rate is adjusted by varying the step frequency until the full stroke length is reached — meaning the pump always uses 100% of its diaphragm travel. This eliminates the chamber partial-fill and total slug dose of the entire discharge pulse. Problems that cripple solenoid pump accuracy at low flows are resolved with the Stepper-Motor Activation.

 

The Anti-Cavitation Advantage

At low flow rates, the stepper motor slows the suction phase independently — preventing cavitation and ensuring consistent chemical uptake.

This is critical when dosing chlorine, acids, and low vapour pressure liquids.

Pressure Control: Smooth vs. Spike

Solenoid pumps create pressure spikes up to 2.5× system pressure on every stroke.

Stepper motor pumps build pressure gradually — eliminating shock, reducing wear, and improving system longevity.

 

THE TURNDOWN RATIO DIFFERENCE

100:1 vs. ~7:1

Stepper motor dosing pumps achieve a 100:1 turndown ratio — maintaining accuracy across a wide operating range.

Conventional solenoid technology typically achieves approximately 7:1 under ideal conditions — and considerably less in real-world, variable-demand applications.

GLOBAL VOLTAGE COMPATIBILITY

90V – 260V AC Wide-Range Input

DOSECO SM-Series pumps operate across 90–260V AC, handling unstable power conditions common in South Africa. 24V DC models are available for solar and off-grid dosing applications.

Doseco stepper motor dosing pumps are used across South Africa in water treatment, agriculture, and industrial chemical dosing systems.

See This Technology in real Dosing Systems

Explore the DOSECO SM-Series — stepper-motor precision in a complete,

professional installation package for South African water treatment conditions.

  

SEE HOW THIS TECHNOLOGY PERFORMS IN REAL APPLICATION.