buyamericaniron…
I am ashamed to say that I have professionally "whacked" three hydrants for the City of Houston. Here's my story:
Several years ago I got a call from American AVK, which has a fire hydrant and valve manufacturing plant here in Fresno, CA. They were trying to get their hydrants certified in Houston, and had pulled our firm (Boyle Engineering) out of the phone book.
At first, AVK was told that only hydraulic testing was required. A licensed civil engineer (non-Texas OK) had to witness the tests and write a short report. AVK arranged to do the hydraulic tests at the Center for Irrigation Technology on the campus of California State University, Fresno. I witnessed the tests, took some photos, did some calcs, and wrote a short report.
When AVK submitted the report to Houston, they were told "by the way, we now also require traffic impact tests" (or something like that). Houston provided the test criteria: whack hydrants at three different kinetic energies and prove that the repairs will be less than $100 and that leakage will be less than the specified amount. AVK had never performed traffic impact tests and neither had I. We batted around a bunch of ideas, including the lab where the crash test dummies live. In the end, AVK arranged with the City of Fresno to perform the tests at Leaky Acres [sic], which is a groundwater recharge facility consisting of several hundred acres of ponds. Leaky Acres had the advantage of being close to AVK's plant and being unpopulated and secure. The City of Fresno was intrigued and had several representatives present.
AVK hired a contractor to construct a hydrant assembly on the widest berm at Leaky Acres. The assembly consisted of the hydrant head, bury, and about 20 feet of lateral piping. At the far end of the lateral was a riser with a tap for pressurizing the system. AVK supplied a large flatbed truck (nicknamed "Snowball"), to which they had welded a "whack bar" at the correct height. We then proceded to run over the hydrant at three different speeds that resulted in kinetic energies meeting or exceeding the required values. Speeds were measured with both a radar gun and a GPS. More damage was done to Snowball than to the hydrant, and the amount of leakage was minimal. Success!
Fred
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"Is it the only lesson of history that mankind is unteachable?" Winston S. Churchill