Utah Admin. Code R309-511-5 - Requirements for the Hydraulic Model
The following minimum requirements must be incorporated into hydraulic models that are constructed to meet these requirements:
(1) include at least 80 percent of the total
pipe lengths in the distribution system affected by the proposed
project;
(2) account for 100
percent of the flow in the distribution system affected by the proposed
project. Water demand allocation must account for at least 80 percent of the
flow delivered by the distribution system affected by the proposed project if
customer usage in the system is metered;
(3) include all 8-inch diameter and larger
pipes. Pipes smaller than 8-inch diameter shall also be included if they
connect pressure zones, storage facilities, major demand areas, pumps, and
control valves, or if they are known or expected to be significant conveyers of
water such as fire suppression demand. Model piping does not need to include
service lateral piping;
(4) include
all pipes serving areas at higher elevations, dead ends, remote areas of a
distribution system, and areas with known under-sized pipelines;
(5) include all storage facilities and
accompanying controls or settings applied to govern the open/closed status of
the facility that reflect standard operations;
(6) if applicable, include all pump stations,
drivers (constant or variable speed), and accompanying controls or settings
applied to govern their on/off/speed status that reflect various operating
conditions and drivers;
(7) include
all control valves or other system features that could significantly affect the
flow of water through the distribution system (e.g., interconnections with
other systems and pressure reducing valves between pressure zones) reflecting
various operating conditions;
(8)
impose peak day and peak instantaneous demands to the water system's
facilities. These demands may be peak day and peak instantaneous demands per
R309-510, the reduced demand approved by the Director per
R309-510-5,
or the demands experienced by the water system that are higher than the values
listed in R309-510. This may require multiple model simulations to account for
the varying water demand conditions. In some cases, extended period simulations
are needed to evaluate changes in operating conditions over time. This will
depend on the complexity of the water system, extent of anticipated fire event
and nature of the new expansion;
(9) calibrate the model to adequately
represent the actual field conditions using field measurements and
observations;
(10) if fire hydrants
are connected to the distribution system, account for fire suppression
requirements specified by local fire authority or use the default values stated
in
R309-510-9(4).
For significant fire suppression demand, extended simulations must contain the
run time for the period of the anticipated fire event. In some cases, a
steady-state model may be sufficient for residential fire suppression demand;
and,
(11) account for outdoor use,
such as irrigation, if the drinking water system supplies water for outdoor
use.
Notes
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