xjken
Mechanical
- Jul 27, 2005
- 14
I can't figure this out...
Here's the situation:
I have a building that MUST keep its water main active with the normal pressure and volume, while the main is replaced.
The building is long and narrow and there is a 6" water loop that goes through the building lengthwise. In other words, the building is fed from a 6" pipe going into the north and south side of the building. The pressure at the inlet to the building is 115 psig.
The building is 5 stories. There is approx. 680 toilets and lavs and 40 showers.
Heres the problem:
The main can be shut down from one side and still feed the whole building from the other side. However, when several toilets are flushed at once, all the flush valves let loose and all toilets begin flushing. I assume its due to lack of pressure to keep the valve shut.
An idea came up to provide a temporary connection from a fire hydrant. We would shut one side down, connect the temporary line into the main, then begin working on that side.
My task is to figure out if the fire hydrant would provide enough pressure and volume to match the existing conditions, or would a pump and/or tank need to go in this temporary line?
Any ideas or help would be great!
thanks.
Here's the situation:
I have a building that MUST keep its water main active with the normal pressure and volume, while the main is replaced.
The building is long and narrow and there is a 6" water loop that goes through the building lengthwise. In other words, the building is fed from a 6" pipe going into the north and south side of the building. The pressure at the inlet to the building is 115 psig.
The building is 5 stories. There is approx. 680 toilets and lavs and 40 showers.
Heres the problem:
The main can be shut down from one side and still feed the whole building from the other side. However, when several toilets are flushed at once, all the flush valves let loose and all toilets begin flushing. I assume its due to lack of pressure to keep the valve shut.
An idea came up to provide a temporary connection from a fire hydrant. We would shut one side down, connect the temporary line into the main, then begin working on that side.
My task is to figure out if the fire hydrant would provide enough pressure and volume to match the existing conditions, or would a pump and/or tank need to go in this temporary line?
Any ideas or help would be great!
thanks.