itsleighton
Civil/Environmental
- Jul 13, 2008
- 27
We built a water plant next to an existing standpipe that has an overflow level of 100.75'. We have installed a level indicator at the base of the standpipe converting the pressure to elevation and transmitting the level to a newly installed SCADA system. The high service pumps to the standpipe are programmed to turn off at 100' when the system is being run in auto.
Multiple times, we have witnessed these pumps fill up the standpipe to the programmed cutoff level when in auto and cut off exactly the way they are supposed to. For the last 3 nights, we have left the system in auto only to return in the morning and find the standpipe overflowing and the SCADA system indicating a level below its cutoff level of 100'. (1st time-99.5, 2nd-98.9, 3rd-99.0) To put it simply- the water is obviously higher than what the level indicators are saying it is. But it isnt doing this consistently.
All three times that we got an overflow, we have turned the system off, let the city use the water in the standpipe until the level drops enough to call for the high service pumps to turn on, we then turn the system back into auto and watch it work exactly the way it is intended. (no overflow condition). In other words, we cannot mimic the condition to witness it.
We lowered the cutoff level and all other lead, lag start / stops by 2' across the board and didnt have an overflow today, but I am curious to see if I will get a call in the morning or late tonight.
Information on standpipe: 35' diamater, with the influent pipe entering through the bottom of the standpipe and there is not a fill pipe running to the top (As the head pressure increases, the pumps serving it slow in GPM).
The level indicator is an Ametek
I have two questions.
1) Does the fact the influent pipe enters the bottom of the tank close to where we have the level indicator (on the side of the tank 3' from base) create the risk of turbulence and or "uplift" causing fluctuations in the pressure thus creating a wrong reading in the Level Indicator?
2) We have redundancy in the level indicator and this condition happens regardless of which one we choose to indicate system control. Has anyone had experience with level indicators operating with accuracy levels of less than 99.5%? My controls subcontractor says he has not- I personally have not previously.
Any ideas what is going on here? Ideas on troubleshooting? Solutions? Thanks in advance.
Multiple times, we have witnessed these pumps fill up the standpipe to the programmed cutoff level when in auto and cut off exactly the way they are supposed to. For the last 3 nights, we have left the system in auto only to return in the morning and find the standpipe overflowing and the SCADA system indicating a level below its cutoff level of 100'. (1st time-99.5, 2nd-98.9, 3rd-99.0) To put it simply- the water is obviously higher than what the level indicators are saying it is. But it isnt doing this consistently.
All three times that we got an overflow, we have turned the system off, let the city use the water in the standpipe until the level drops enough to call for the high service pumps to turn on, we then turn the system back into auto and watch it work exactly the way it is intended. (no overflow condition). In other words, we cannot mimic the condition to witness it.
We lowered the cutoff level and all other lead, lag start / stops by 2' across the board and didnt have an overflow today, but I am curious to see if I will get a call in the morning or late tonight.
Information on standpipe: 35' diamater, with the influent pipe entering through the bottom of the standpipe and there is not a fill pipe running to the top (As the head pressure increases, the pumps serving it slow in GPM).
The level indicator is an Ametek
I have two questions.
1) Does the fact the influent pipe enters the bottom of the tank close to where we have the level indicator (on the side of the tank 3' from base) create the risk of turbulence and or "uplift" causing fluctuations in the pressure thus creating a wrong reading in the Level Indicator?
2) We have redundancy in the level indicator and this condition happens regardless of which one we choose to indicate system control. Has anyone had experience with level indicators operating with accuracy levels of less than 99.5%? My controls subcontractor says he has not- I personally have not previously.
Any ideas what is going on here? Ideas on troubleshooting? Solutions? Thanks in advance.