Hi All,
Thanks for the reply. The site in located in Delta, BC, Canada. It rains 2/3 of the time here. I've attached a photo of what it was like during construction, lot of water during the Spring, end of summer, fall, and up to mid winter.
Artisi - I hope my attachment help you some more. Alternatively, please let me know what you need so that you can answer properly.
The waterproof chamber was design to allow the user to get a flow rate reading off the 40in dia. pipe. The fan was put in for confined space entry safety requirement; instead of bring a portable fan, the user simply turns the switch at the kiosk. The sump pump system was design to remove any water that may have entered the chamber. The sump pumps have a built-in float sensor and kicks in when the water is higher than the sumps (about 12inches). There's a back up sump pump. There's also a float switch located higher than the sumps that tells the user to check the chamber as this means the sump pumps aren't working properly.
LittleInch
1. Originally there was no water table identified. During construction, it was identified that water was running underneath the 40in dia pipe because it was acting as a flow channel. As we start digging to construct the chamber, we essential created a pool for the water to localized (because the clay was impermeable)
2. For the Chamber, we have design and construct it to be waterproof. Not expecting to have any influx of water.
3. The sump pit is (0.6mx0.6m.0.5m) = 180 liters
Not sure about the void fraction but gravel is typically a void ratio of 0.4. I will take your suggestion for the pre-cast.
I am curious as to why we are getting the 19mm clear crush rocks inside our piping though. Is there back flow pressure because the pumps are over design and it's pushing the rocks inside the pipes?
Thanks,
TK