UtahWater
Civil/Environmental
- Oct 30, 2003
- 36
I have been called to help troubleshoot some unusually high pressures in a fire line. The fire line experiences intermittent pressures (anectdotally from the client) on the order of 260 psi, which is about 70 psi higher than the storage tank at the top of the system. There is a PRV between the tank and fireline that should keep pressures at the fireline down around 125. If the PRV were to fail, we understand that pressures would rise to the HGL of the tank, which would be about 190 psi. How would pressures increase to a level higher than the tank though (sorry, I'm mixing my HGL and gauge pressure terms, hope it still makes sense)? The fire lines have a check valve in them so no water/pressure can back feed into the system. The fire protection company says the high pressure can be bled off of the fireline, which leads me to think that the high pressure is not (always) present in the distribution system. Has anyone seen a situation where a PRV intermittently works, and further that the surge pressure from such a failure gets locked into a closed system, like a fireline.
The residences also on the system supposedly all have regulators in their lines, and there isn't supposed to be any outside watering with culinary, so we haven't had any residential complaints of high pressures, ostensibly because all 300+ regulators are functioning properly and no one really is using culinary outside.
Any help? Pressures can't 'ratchet' up without outside help, so I'm stumped. I'll attach a little schematic for reference.
Thank you in advance for any ideas!
The residences also on the system supposedly all have regulators in their lines, and there isn't supposed to be any outside watering with culinary, so we haven't had any residential complaints of high pressures, ostensibly because all 300+ regulators are functioning properly and no one really is using culinary outside.
Any help? Pressures can't 'ratchet' up without outside help, so I'm stumped. I'll attach a little schematic for reference.
Thank you in advance for any ideas!