jwsutto
Civil/Environmental
- Feb 8, 2024
- 3
I am working on an investment plan for a number of small scale water supply systems. The technical capacity for O&M is currently relatively low.
My question is about the need for pressure tanks.
Some of the systems have pressure tanks (hydropneumatic tanks) to manage pressure fluctuations, water hammer, and pump run times. Some of the systems don't. If we specify modern VFD controlled pumping setups is there a need for pressure tanks across all of these systems?
Background about the systems:
- supply 50 to 1000 residential customers, plus some commercial customers.
- daily demand of 10k to 1000k gallons
- raw water storage tanks upstream of the pumping station.
- chlorine treatment at the pumping station
- 2 or 3 centrifugal pumps at the pumping station - size dependent on demand, pressure requirement, and system hydraulics.
- there is limited elevation change in the systems (the land is flat) and the systems are not extensive, with customers generally within a few KM of the pumping station.
- pressure requirement is for residential / commercial use so maybe 40-70PSI
- size of the pressure tanks is determined based on system parameters but would range from roughly 500 gallon up to 30,000 gallon
Up front investment in pressure tanks now is ok based on the financing situation so I would rather specify pressure tanks now if it will reduce leakage and pump repairs/replacements, and therefore the cost of water in the future. There is a recommendation for installing pressure tanks across the systems in a previous plan but I'm not sure the cost is necessary with modern pumping controls/technology? Obviously don't want to be chucking money away on unnecessary investments if pressure tanks have essentially become redundant based on modern pumping technology.
I have been looking at a few threads on this but the advice seems inconsistent.
Thanks in advance for any thoughts.
My question is about the need for pressure tanks.
Some of the systems have pressure tanks (hydropneumatic tanks) to manage pressure fluctuations, water hammer, and pump run times. Some of the systems don't. If we specify modern VFD controlled pumping setups is there a need for pressure tanks across all of these systems?
Background about the systems:
- supply 50 to 1000 residential customers, plus some commercial customers.
- daily demand of 10k to 1000k gallons
- raw water storage tanks upstream of the pumping station.
- chlorine treatment at the pumping station
- 2 or 3 centrifugal pumps at the pumping station - size dependent on demand, pressure requirement, and system hydraulics.
- there is limited elevation change in the systems (the land is flat) and the systems are not extensive, with customers generally within a few KM of the pumping station.
- pressure requirement is for residential / commercial use so maybe 40-70PSI
- size of the pressure tanks is determined based on system parameters but would range from roughly 500 gallon up to 30,000 gallon
Up front investment in pressure tanks now is ok based on the financing situation so I would rather specify pressure tanks now if it will reduce leakage and pump repairs/replacements, and therefore the cost of water in the future. There is a recommendation for installing pressure tanks across the systems in a previous plan but I'm not sure the cost is necessary with modern pumping controls/technology? Obviously don't want to be chucking money away on unnecessary investments if pressure tanks have essentially become redundant based on modern pumping technology.
I have been looking at a few threads on this but the advice seems inconsistent.
Thanks in advance for any thoughts.