News
Articles
Case Histories
Tank Calculators
Buyer's Guide
Career Center
August 2008
August Card Deck
Industry Links
July 2008
Arsenic
Decentralized Wastewater
Filtration
Flow Measurement
Headworks
Membrane Technology
Pumps
Ultraviolet Disinfection
Click here for a subscription to
Water & Wastes Digest
Give us your feedback on our site.
Change your subscription info
Subscribe to our
WQP/WWD Executive NewsSummary e-Newsletter.


LEARNMORE!
RSS: WWD Articles

 Related Articles
"Oklahoma Ranch Installs PE Sewer System for Cub Scout Camp "

"Piece Pipe"

 Editorial Categories
  • Infrastructure Security
  • Infrastructure Security
  • Municipal / Public / Private Water Supply
  • Municipal/Industrial
  • Piping
  • Piping and Metering
  • Public/Private Water Supply
  • Public/Private Water Supply
  • Sanitation
  • Transmission and Storage
  • Wastewater
  • Water
  • Water
  • Water/Wastewater

     Alternate Format
    View article as a PDF
     Share It
    "/popup_app/index.cfm?fuseaction=showEmailPageToAFriendForm&appDirectory=wwd&linkQueryString=fuseaction=showArticle*amp*articleID=2458&linkLabel=Polyethylene Pipe Chosen for Delicate Northwest Estuary/Aquarium" target="_new">   "/popup_app/index.cfm?fuseaction=showEmailPageToAFriendForm&appDirectory=wwd&linkQueryString=fuseaction=showArticle*amp*articleID=2458&linkLabel=Polyethylene Pipe Chosen for Delicate Northwest Estuary/Aquarium" target="_new">Email this Article to a Friend

    Polyethylene Pipe Chosen for Delicate Northwest Estuary/Aquarium

       Terms & Conditions of Use


    Two plants separated by Oregon's Yaquina Bay needed to be connected with two separate pipelines: one line to bring raw sewage to the new plant and one line to carry the finished refuse back to the old plant.

    Recently the coastal city of Newport, Oregon, received a new $20 million wastewater treatment plant. The plant it will replace is located on the opposite side of Yaquina Bay, which the city surrounds. The old plant still is used to pump the treated refuse to its final destination over a mile offshore, so the two plants needed to be connected with two separate pipelines: one line to bring raw sewage to the new plant and one line to carry the finished refuse back to the old plant.

    The biggest concern of the project is the environment of the delicate estuary of Yaquina Bay. Previously the home of Keiko the killer whale, of Disney’s movie Free Willy, the bay is now an aquarium. Tourists are able to view marine life in the bay from under the water in a twelve-foot diameter acrylic tunnel.

    Engineers decided the only environmentally safe way to cross the bay was to make two horizontal directional bores under the bay and pull polyethylene pipe back through, one 24-in. and one 20-in, both HDPE, DR 11. "Once PE pipe is fused you don’t have any joints," said Joe Guedon of Newport Public Works Department. "It is like one solid piece of pipe going all the way underneath the bay floor and it has the flexibility to move and shift without breaking."

    Both bores were just less than 3,000 feet and were performed by Smit Land & Marine Inc. of Houston, Texas. They contracted Mike Phillips of Slayden Construction, based in Stayton, Oregon, to handle their pipe needs. Slayden Construction has done the piping on a number of wastewater plants in the Northwest. Phillips says HDPE pipe is being used more and more in the wastewater business and believes it is more cost effective.

    Once it’s there it doesn’t need repairs and doesn’t corrode," said Phillips. "It’s a lot faster and saves man hours." Phillips contracted Familian Industrial Plastics Inc., based in Washougal, Washington, to fuse the pipe. They laid the pipe out and fused it together before the bore was performed.

    "We used McElroy’s TracStar™ 900 to fuse the pipe because of the DataLogger™ feature," said Familian representative Randy Salsberry. "It was a critical link in quality control on this project. The DataLogger gives an instant reading of each fusion and assures us the weld is perfect. If during the pullback the pipe would break at a weld, it would cost us thousands of dollars to redo the bore."

    For further information, phone McElroy at 918-836-8611.




    Source: Water & Wastes Digest   July 2001   Volume: 41 Number: 7
    Copyright © 2008 Scranton Gillette Communications



    Advertise with us
    Learn about our online marketing opportunities.
    Home   |   Advertising   |   News Search   |   Articles   |   Buyer's Guide   |   Career Center   |   Case Histories   |   Top of Page