Utah Admin. Code R309-511-7 - Hydraulic Model Design Elements Report
The public water system or its agent shall prepare a Hydraulic Model Design Elements Report along with, and in support of, the certification stated in R309-511-6(1). The Hydraulic Model Design Elements Report shall contain, but is not limited to, the following elements:
(1) if the
public drinking water system provides water for outdoor use, the report must
describe the criteria used to estimate this demand. If the irrigation demand
map in
R309-510-7(3)
is not used, the report shall provide justification for the alternative demands
used in the model. If the irrigation demands are based on the map in
R309-510-7(3)
the report must identify the irrigation zone number, a statement and/or map of
how the irrigated acreage is spatially distributed, and the total estimated
irrigated acreage. The indicated irrigation demands must be used in the model
simulations;
(2) the total number
of connections served by the water system including existing connections and
anticipated new connections served by the water system after completion of the
construction of the project;
(3)
the total number of equivalent residential connections (ERC) including both
existing connections as well as anticipated new connections associated with the
project. The number of ERCs must include high as well as low- volume water
users. The determination of the ERCs shall be based on flow requirements using
the anticipated demand as outlined in R309-510, or based on alternative sources
of information that are deemed acceptable by the Director;
(4) the methodology used for calculating
demand and allocating it to the model; a summary of pipe length by diameter; a
hydraulic schematic of the distribution piping showing pressure zones, general
pipe connectivity between facilities and pressure zones, storage, elevation and
sources; and a list or ranges of values of the friction coefficient used in the
hydraulic model according to pipe material and condition in the system. All
coefficients of friction used in the hydraulic analysis shall be consistent
with standard practices;
(5) a
statement stating either "yes fire hydrants exist or will exist within the
system" or "there are no fire hydrants connected to the system and there is no
plan to add fire hydrants with this project." Either statement will require the
identification of the local fire authority's name, address, and contact
information, as well as the fire flow quantity and duration if
required;
(6) the locations of the
lowest pressures within the distribution system, and areas identified by the
hydraulic model as not meeting each scenario of the minimum pressure
requirements in
R309-105-9;
and,
(7) calibration method and
quantitative summary of the calibration results (e.g., comparison tables,
graphs).
Notes
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