smaug6
Structural
- Apr 10, 2001
- 10
I am analyzing a water system that has intermittent low system pressure. The situation is that this system lies on a lake and experiences periods of very high demand. I am sure the distribution system; which consists of a standpipe elev. 812 ft 37 ft high. and approximately 2.6 miles of unlooped 8" pvc water main with a 50 psi PRV at 650 ft in elevation followed by approximately 2 mi of 6" PVC main to eventual service elevation of 683 ft is inadequate for the job and should be upgraded. The service population varies such that the hydraulic grade line lowers and high areas within my area of interest lose pressure on occasion. My concern is this; if I spec. a VSD pump system to mitigate the intermediate low pressures could cavitation become an issue during times of high demand or I would think it probable I could collapse the line feeding the pump station (elev. 605 ft.). Any feedback would be appreciated.