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Description: Book cover
GETTING MORE FROM FLOW MONITORING - INTERPRETING SEWER FLOW DATA TO YIELD THE MAXIMUM BENEFIT
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Description: Book cover
GETTING MORE FROM FLOW MONITORING - INTERPRETING SEWER FLOW DATA TO YIELD THE MAXIMUM BENEFIT

GETTING MORE FROM FLOW MONITORING - INTERPRETING SEWER FLOW DATA TO YIELD THE MAXIMUM BENEFIT

GETTING MORE FROM FLOW MONITORING - INTERPRETING SEWER FLOW DATA TO YIELD THE MAXIMUM BENEFIT

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Description: Book cover
GETTING MORE FROM FLOW MONITORING - INTERPRETING SEWER FLOW DATA TO YIELD THE MAXIMUM BENEFIT
Abstract
Recent years have brought increasing pressure from Federal and State Regulators for more comprehensive management of collection systems in an effort to significantly reduce releases of untreated sewage to the environment. This has created a need to understand what the flows in the collections systems are doing at all times and during each season. In turn, this has created an increase in reliance on flow monitoring to understand actual system performance and increase reliability in predicting future wet weather performance and bottlenecks. Numerous flowmetering technologies are available, each with their own set of advantages and disadvantages.When due care is taken to implement flow monitoring studies, numerous benefits are realized including: 1) Determining all the flow components including Average Dry Daily Flow, wastewater production, base Inflow & Infiltration (I/I); 2) Quantifying areas of excessive I/I and verification of post rehabilitation I/I reduction; 3) Use of the flow data to generate powerful scattergraphs that “tell the complete story” about system capacity at each monitored location; 4) Improving O&M through defensible wastewater billing, real-time surcharge detection and alarming; and 5) Reducing O&M and capital projects costs through the quantification of backwater caused by flow throttling.
Recent years have brought increasing pressure from Federal and State Regulators for more comprehensive management of collection systems in an effort to significantly reduce releases of untreated sewage to the environment. This has created a need to understand what the flows in the collections systems are doing at all times and during each season. In turn, this has created an increase in reliance...
Author(s)
Paul S. MitchellPatrick L. Stevens
SourceProceedings of the Water Environment Federation
SubjectSession 8: Operations & Maintenance – Going with the Flow
Document typeConference Paper
PublisherWater Environment Federation
Print publication date Jan, 2005
ISSN1938-6478
SICI1938-6478(20050101)2005:4L.488;1-
DOI10.2175/193864705784291673
Volume / Issue2005 / 4
Content sourceCollection Systems Conference
First / last page(s)488 - 500
Copyright2005
Word count207

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Description: Book cover
GETTING MORE FROM FLOW MONITORING - INTERPRETING SEWER FLOW DATA TO YIELD THE MAXIMUM BENEFIT
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Description: Book cover
GETTING MORE FROM FLOW MONITORING - INTERPRETING SEWER FLOW DATA TO YIELD THE MAXIMUM BENEFIT
Abstract
Recent years have brought increasing pressure from Federal and State Regulators for more comprehensive management of collection systems in an effort to significantly reduce releases of untreated sewage to the environment. This has created a need to understand what the flows in the collections systems are doing at all times and during each season. In turn, this has created an increase in reliance on flow monitoring to understand actual system performance and increase reliability in predicting future wet weather performance and bottlenecks. Numerous flowmetering technologies are available, each with their own set of advantages and disadvantages.When due care is taken to implement flow monitoring studies, numerous benefits are realized including: 1) Determining all the flow components including Average Dry Daily Flow, wastewater production, base Inflow & Infiltration (I/I); 2) Quantifying areas of excessive I/I and verification of post rehabilitation I/I reduction; 3) Use of the flow data to generate powerful scattergraphs that “tell the complete story” about system capacity at each monitored location; 4) Improving O&M through defensible wastewater billing, real-time surcharge detection and alarming; and 5) Reducing O&M and capital projects costs through the quantification of backwater caused by flow throttling.
Recent years have brought increasing pressure from Federal and State Regulators for more comprehensive management of collection systems in an effort to significantly reduce releases of untreated sewage to the environment. This has created a need to understand what the flows in the collections systems are doing at all times and during each season. In turn, this has created an increase in reliance...
Author(s)
Paul S. MitchellPatrick L. Stevens
SourceProceedings of the Water Environment Federation
SubjectSession 8: Operations & Maintenance – Going with the Flow
Document typeConference Paper
PublisherWater Environment Federation
Print publication date Jan, 2005
ISSN1938-6478
SICI1938-6478(20050101)2005:4L.488;1-
DOI10.2175/193864705784291673
Volume / Issue2005 / 4
Content sourceCollection Systems Conference
First / last page(s)488 - 500
Copyright2005
Word count207

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Paul S. Mitchell# Patrick L. Stevens. GETTING MORE FROM FLOW MONITORING - INTERPRETING SEWER FLOW DATA TO YIELD THE MAXIMUM BENEFIT. Alexandria, VA 22314-1994, USA: Water Environment Federation, 2018. Web. 7 Jun. 2025. <https://www.accesswater.org?id=-292424CITANCHOR>.
Paul S. Mitchell# Patrick L. Stevens. GETTING MORE FROM FLOW MONITORING - INTERPRETING SEWER FLOW DATA TO YIELD THE MAXIMUM BENEFIT. Alexandria, VA 22314-1994, USA: Water Environment Federation, 2018. Accessed June 7, 2025. https://www.accesswater.org/?id=-292424CITANCHOR.
Paul S. Mitchell# Patrick L. Stevens
GETTING MORE FROM FLOW MONITORING - INTERPRETING SEWER FLOW DATA TO YIELD THE MAXIMUM BENEFIT
Access Water
Water Environment Federation
December 22, 2018
June 7, 2025
https://www.accesswater.org/?id=-292424CITANCHOR