ACtrafficengr
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 5, 2002
- 1,641
A village water department suffered a failure of a water service line installed under one of our highway projects roughly 8 years ago. It's a 1" lateral that serves a local diner.
The copper line was heavily pitted and perforated from the inside out. The copper on the inside looks almost silver, as if it was plated with some other metal.
It was backfilled with course sand meeting (or supposedly meeting) NYSDOT specs for select granular fill.
Based on this article, I suppose the first steps might be to test for sulfates, chlorides, stray electric currents, etc.
If anyone has any additional suggestions, I'd really appreciate it. This is, as you might expect from my handle, a bit out of my area of expertise.
Maybe the tyranny of Murphy is the penalty for hubris. -
The copper line was heavily pitted and perforated from the inside out. The copper on the inside looks almost silver, as if it was plated with some other metal.
It was backfilled with course sand meeting (or supposedly meeting) NYSDOT specs for select granular fill.
Based on this article, I suppose the first steps might be to test for sulfates, chlorides, stray electric currents, etc.
If anyone has any additional suggestions, I'd really appreciate it. This is, as you might expect from my handle, a bit out of my area of expertise.
Maybe the tyranny of Murphy is the penalty for hubris. -