Tag: Plant superintendents

Mar 17
Valves – Construction Service Maintenance: Common Failure Modes and Field Repairs

INTRODUCTION In municipal and industrial water and wastewater treatment plants, valves represent the most numerous moving assets within the process train. Despite their ubiquity, improper valve selection and neglected lifecycle maintenance contribute to an estimated 20% to 30% of system downtime events. For utility directors, plant superintendents, and design engineers, mastering the principles of Valves […]

Feb 15
Commissioning Centrifugal Pumps: Startup Checklist and Acceptance Tests

Introduction In municipal water and wastewater treatment, the centrifugal pump is the workhorse of the hydraulic process. However, industry data suggests that nearly 40% of rotating equipment failures can be traced back to errors committed during installation and initial startup. For consulting engineers and plant superintendents, the phase between physical installation and operational turnover is […]

Jan 18
JWC Environmental vs Lakesideoration for Screenings: Pros/Cons & Best-Fit Applications

Introduction One of the most persistent operational headaches in modern wastewater treatment is the management of rags, wipes, and non-dispersibles. For municipal engineers and plant superintendents, the failure of headworks equipment does not just mean manual cleaning; it results in deragging pumps downstream, compromised biological processes, and significant unscheduled overtime. In the U.S. market, two […]

Jan 17
JWC Environmental vs Parksonoration for Screenings: Pros/Cons & Best-Fit Applications

INTRODUCTION One of the most persistent operational headaches in modern wastewater treatment is the management of non-dispersibles—specifically wipes, rags, and plastics. For municipal design engineers and plant superintendents, the failure to effectively manage these solids at the headworks or pump station results in “ragging,” a phenomenon that costs utilities millions annually in deragging labor, reduced […]

Jan 08
USA vs Auma Actuators for Valve Actuators: Pros/Cons & Best-Fit Applications

Introduction In the municipal water and wastewater sector, the failure of a critical valve actuator is rarely a minor inconvenience; it is often a precursor to permit violations, process upsets, or catastrophic flooding. For decades, design engineers and plant superintendents have faced a polarized choice when specifying electric actuation: adhere to traditional domestic manufacturing philosophies […]