24-7 Offsite Structural/Nonstructural Exterior Fire Detection Protection And Method
20210121721 · 2021-04-29
Inventors
Cpc classification
A62C3/0292
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A62C3/02
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A62C37/36
HUMAN NECESSITIES
G08B17/12
PHYSICS
Abstract
This invention embodies a 24-7 fire protection system for fires originating outside of a structure. The invention integrates stand-alone, facility-based fire protection systems, control module and video and thermal sensors with offsite control functionality at the offsite Fire Defense Center (FDC). through multiple, redundant communications systems. Trained operators use sensor input and additional data streams to monitor fire threat in real time and deploy onsite optimized structure defense systems at the optimum time. System can be deployed onsite, remotely by an authorized facility owner/manager (via mobile application or Internet connection) or, by an autonomous control system in pre-set specified emergencies. This invention embodies the mapping, pipe and valve layout, and devices to cover the structure and, if desired, surrounding defensible spaces with a gel-water mix. The invention's gel-water mix provides protection for 48 hours, depending on humidity, more than enough for a fire front to pass the structure.
Claims
1. A system to provide 24 hour-a-day, 7 day-a-week, offsite site, wireless communicating, monitoring system by a trained operator to detect and evaluate threats of fire offsite and when deemed appropriate, initiate a gel-based fire protection system.
2. A self-contained exterior modular fire sprinkler system for residential, moderate commercial, and light industrial use, said system comprising: (a) A skid-mounted packaged, generally rectangular, system containing such pumps, mixing tanks, independent water and electricity supply as needed to deploy the water-gel mix to the structure and defensible spaces as needed. (b) A central circuit board control panel (“OCC”) to receive wireless signals from the trained system operator to deploy, purge, and redeploy as and when needed. (c) Cameras equipped with thermal and video imaging to alert the system operator and for the system operator to monitor the site and neighboring areas for threat of fire via said wireless communication system. (d) A combination of water inlet/outlets manifold attached to said skid, said manifolds consisting of an assembly providing for the opening and closing of valves to release the gel-water mixture, maintain pressure, and shut down said gel-water based fire suppression mix, purge the system once deployed, and redeploy additional gel-water as and if needed. (e) A set of fluid storage tanks to contain an independent supply of water, purge water, gel, and a mixing tank. (f) A set of 6-volt DC, AGM Deep Cycle Sealed Lead Acid batteries to provide independent back-up electricity supply. Another embodiment, where appropriate, applies a standard diesel or gasoline powered auto-start electric generator; another embodiment, as an option to the site owner, is to provide back-up power for the structure itself; (g) “Trickle charge” battery charger to keep the batteries charged while grid-based electricity supply is available; (h) A pump to transmit the gel-water mix to the exterior sprinklers to provide 4-8 hours of protection to the structure(s) and defensible spaces as and if this embodiment has been included in the system; (i) A sensor to detect when and if the grid-based electricity supply is cut-off and automatically switch to the battery pack.
3. A communication system that enables both wireline and wireless communication between the site systems and sensors, the FDC, 1.sup.st responders, and other sources of important information about threats facing the site (e.g., weather services).
4. The system of claim 1 wherein the system OCC shuts off onsite fuel supplies (e.g., propane) through valves connected via wireless to the OCC and when so commanded by the FDC, onsite operator, or through the system autonomous function (see also claims 25, 26, and 27)
5. Sprinkler heads with sizing to accommodate the gel-water mix with minimum friction losses, minimum potential for clogging, and maximum capability to be purged after use.
6. Use of a gel-water mix that has been approved by the appropriate authorities for use in structural and vegetative fires and is environmentally certified as a “green technology.
7. The FDC monitoring system of claim 1, including: (a) An interconnected system of devices disposed at different locations throughout a monitored facility, each device being adapted to generate a condition signal that varies in response to changing conditions proximate the device to alternatively indicate at least two different states; (b) A computer-based CPU for storing facility mapping information, location information and device image information; (c) Said FDC having an image generator adapted to produce a visible image including a map depicting the monitored facility and device images displayed on the map to depict the location of the devices; (d) A communication circuit to link the devices and the FDC to provide status/condition signals as inputs to an image generator programmed to selectively adjust the device images in response to the condition signals, and to provide instantaneous visual reports regarding the device's state with respect to that associated device.
8. The system of claim 1 whereby the condition signal instantaneously changes on the computer screen at least one of the following characteristics of the device: its color, shape, or flashing.
9. The system of claim 2 wherein the computer screen depicts the present operating state and condition of each component of the system whether: (a) idle and functional, (b) idle with fault detected, (c) operating, (d) purging.
10. The system of claim 2 wherein the representation on the computer screen depicts whether the overall system is in a standby state, a fault state, and or alarm state.
11. The system of claim 1 through which the OCC is communicating with the FDC and others, as needed, whether such communication pathway is operating properly and, if not, a warning signal is generated.
12. The system of claim 1 such that the FDC is coupled to the OCC in a manner to receive device information from each device coupled to the OCC and thereby added to a circuit governed by the OCC, and based on the information received, generate a list of devices in the circuit and their present status (see claim 8).
13. The system of claim 6 such that the computer screen image generator displays a site map of the structure(s) and associated layout of the pipelines and sprinklers.
14. The system of claim 7 through which the computer screen image generates the device images standardized shapes such that the FDC operator and site personnel are able to identify readily and quickly what component of the system that specific device is without having to refer to a “code book”.
15. The system of claim 5 through which the FDC facility receives textual descriptive information in a standard format regarding operating standards, faults, procedures, and protocols for deploying or purging the system.
16. The system of claim 1 though which the present condition of the system at the FDC and onsite is continuously stored in graphic and textural forms on a permanent storage device such as a computer hard drive.
17. The system of claim 10 through which the FDC is advised visually and texturally that control of the system at the site has been assumed by someone at the site by activating the requisite code in the OCC.
18. The system of claim 10 through which the operating history and commands from either the FDC operator or onsite are collected and stored in a permanent storage device such as a computer hard drive.
19. The system of claim 12 through which the image display(s) and maps may be adapted to display any changes to the system that occur after installation
20. The system of claim 1 through which a completely redundant monitoring and control back-up system works in the event that the primary monitoring and control system goes off-line for any reason, and such that the data from claim 17 stores the record of any such switch from primary to secondary.
21. The system of claim 18 through which the FDC operator makes appropriate changes to the display images and maps to reflect the changes that occur pursuant to claim 18.
22. The system of claim 15 through which the permanent storage includes a systematic textural and visual master list of all of the information in the permanent storage device that is readily accessible and readable in a standardized, easy-to-read, format.
23. The system of claim 19 including a means for selecting from and retrieving from the master list only that information that the FDC operator desires at that specific time.
24. The system of claim 18 through which images are displayed in a readily and quickly understood standardized format of visible images.
25. A system of the OCC by which an authorized owner/occupant/manager of the site may, in specified emergency situations (e.g. wireless communication is lost and the threat of fire is imminent), unlock the OCC control system and manually operate the system.
26. A system of claim 25 through which if no one is on site and certain emergency conditions exist, an authorized person may control the system offsite through a preset cellphone APP.
27. A system of claim 25 through which if no one is on site and certain emergency conditions exist, an autonomous operating system is initiated at the OCC to operate the system through those emergency conditions.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
[0028] For a further understanding of the above and other features and advantages, reference is made to the detailed description and to the drawings, in which:
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0032] Prior art systems utilize existing water supplies which are plumbed into the residence. These systems are often powered by the domestic power supply. Reliance on public utilities offers little or no protection in the event of catastrophic failure of either (or both) the water or power supply.
[0033] Further, prior art systems use water, foams, or gels that provide only limited, short duration, protection of the structure(s) and, as a result, cannot be redeployed unless someone has remained at the site during dangerous conditions (e.g., after an evacuate order has been given).
[0034] The prior art systems that use foams or other gels for protection do not provide for means to purge the system after use such that the foam or gel may clog the dispersal equipment and render it unusable and potentially difficult and expensive to clean up after use.
[0035] Some of the prior art systems have not been approved by the relevant authorities for such use or, may contain chemicals that create a significant clean-up problem when used.
[0036] Some prior art systems utilize physical barriers such as drop-down shields to protect structures. Unfortunately, such barriers may also limit the ability of the occupants to evacuate when necessary.
[0037] Further, some prior art systems require the owner/occupant to: (a) design the specific application for that site, (b) order the component parts, (c) install the parts somewhere, (d) maintain the readiness of the system, (e) evaluate the nature of the threat and decide when to deploy the system, (f) operate the system on-site, and (g) clean up a contaminated site after deployment. This invention does not require the owner/occupant to do any of those things except, in emergency conditions, item (f).
[0038] It is therefore, a principal object of this invention to provide a new, useful and uncomplicated method and apparatus for selecting and installing the corresponding pumping and controlling means for a highly effective gel-water mixture to be supplied to a fire sprinkler grid in a residence or other building.
[0039] It is a further object of the invention to provide interconnected communication between onsite systems, the FDC, the site owner, 1.sup.st responders, and other sources of information to monitor the situation, determine the presence and degree of threat, and respond as-and-when appropriate (not too early and not too late) with the gel-water mix to the structure(s) and surrounding defensible space(s) as required.
[0040] It is a further object of the invention to provide completely packaged compact and interconnected systems mounted on a skid consisting of, for example, pump/motor, controller, manifold assembly all mounted on a polyethylene base, pre-wired and piped.
[0041] It is a further object of the invention to provide a range of system sizes and components tailored to the specific requirements of large and small structures.
[0042] It is a further object of the invention to provide off-site monitoring and control of the systems so that the owner(s)/occupants of the structures will be able to evacuate when and if an evacuation order is given by local authorities without sacrificing structure protection. Similarly, if the order to “shelter-in-place” is made, the object of the invention is to make the structures “survivable space” through a fire, as compared for example, to other art that effectively locks the occupants into the structure whether it is safe or not.
[0043] The present invention achieves these objectives. It provides for FDC off-site fire monitoring, threat assessment, and suppression apparatus suitable for, but not limited to, residential, condominium, apartment, mobile home, small-to-medium size schools, portable buildings, barns, warehouses, offices, trailers and other applications where the potential of fire threatens safety and structures. This is particularly relevant where: (a) water is scarce, (b) where wells and domestic water may have insufficient flow or are powered by an electric grid that could go down, (c) where organized fire protection is limited, overwhelmed, or non-existent, or (d) where ingress and egress access is limited and constrains movement of 1.sup.st responders and the occupants.
[0044] The invention offers back-up supply of both power and water sources, including, but not limited to, the emergency condition where such a supply is catastrophically interrupted using a battery bank back-up capable of taking electric control over the system in milliseconds. The latter system is designed to provide an instantaneous and secure supply of electricity to the controller and fire pump managed by the FDC. If wireless communication is also lost, the system can be operated on an emergency basis through a manual switch or a mobile APP, or, if communications are completely compromised, by an onsite autonomous control system.
[0045] The invention operates from the electric grid as long as possible to keep the batteries charged, water supplies full, and to do 24-7 monitoring and reporting to the FDC. An auto charging “trickle charger” is standard, the power system is automatically protected against overdischarging, overload or over-charging with reset capabilities. The skid-mounted package is installed with all wiring and plumbing included.
[0046] The invention provides for a hydraulic pump having a casing, impeller and shaft of stainless steel construction and rated for the liquid handling of the gel-water mix for corrosion resistance and long life.
[0047] The invention's OCC/controller component is mounted in a strong, steel U.L. Listed NEMA-3R enclosure with a locking door. The OCC provides integrated management of all system components and is the system interface for external management by the FDC or, in emergencies, by an onsite operator, APP, or autonomous system controller. The control panel has, among other devices: (a) power on monitoring lights (“power and readiness light indicators”, (b) voltage line meters, (c) manual start emergency mechanical run and associated valves, (d) pressure switches, (e) wireless communications to onsite sensor/camera(s), and (f) support for direct cellular connectivity. As an integral part of the skid, the controller is supplied ready to be connected to a utility power source and the power back-up system.
[0048] The invention pump/manifold assembly is constructed using all brass fittings and includes a dual check valve with a U.L. water pressure gauge, U.L. Listed pressure and water flow switches, a U.L. brass full port ball valve with a locking handle for security. The invention pump manifold assembly is supplied ready to be connected to the sprinkler.
[0049] The invention's skid mounted multiple water tanks range in size from a 50 gallon up to 1,500 gallon tanks (which could be either above or below ground, in which case they would not be mounted on the skid).
OBJECTIVES AND FEATURES OF THIS INVENTION AND DETAILED DISCUSSION OF THE FIGURES
[0050] The present invention relates to a 24-7 real-time interconnected system enabling an offsite Fire Defense Center (“FDC”) to monitor a structure or structures such as a building or complex of several buildings and when threats are detected, deploy a gel-water based fire protection and suppression system as needed. More particularly the FDC (
[0051] The “Fire Defense Center” (FDC),
[0052] The FDC receives inputs communicated via wireless connection direct from an onsite camera system that is capable of thermal imaging, video imaging, and relaying said information to the FDC. The FDC, in turn, has wireless communication to the onsite command center (OCC,
[0053] FDC operators can control the orientation of the onsite camera(s) system, sprinkler valve opening/closing order, filling tanks, mixing the gel-water mix, and deploying the mix.
[0054] Once triggered, the fire suppression system deploys a gel-water mix that was prepared at the OCC automatically when such signal is sent by the FDC through a series of valve-controlled high-pressure high-capacity multi-nozzle sprinkler emitters located strategically around the structure(s) in order to cover the structure(s)—from the roof down and from the ground up—so that all surfaces and niches that might trap hot embers are treated.
[0055] Prior to mixing, the gel and the water are stored separately in their own respective tanks (
[0056] Stand-alone independent water supply for the system is maintained in a large water tank sized for the particular application. That, in turn, is supported by another tank containing the gel. Both are transmitted through a manifold to a 3.sup.rd tank—the mixing tank to mix the gel and water in the proportions to maximize the effective use of the mixture and to maximize its longevity once deployed (
[0057] Stand-alone independent electricity supply for the system is first provided by the electric grid to run the system if possible and to maintain the state of charge in the back-up system through a “trickle charger” (
[0058] Control for the onsite monitoring and operation of the system is performed through the OCC mother board circuit
[0059] Therefore, it is an object of the present invention to provide the FDC messages from a variety of sensors and control panels through the mother board are presented to the FDC in a consistent, uniform format that in turn relates to the site maps of the structure, the invention, and surrounding area. To handle the constant stream of data, the FDC computers will have 3 related alarms: (1) system not operating within specifications, (2) thermal energy detected in the specified temperature ranges, and (3) time to switch to video monitoring and possible deployment of the system.
[0060] Further, the FDC will be equipped with a facility monitoring system with graphic capabilities for displaying a site map in combination with images representing the various system devices as to type, state (or condition) and location. Thus, the FDC will be able to communicate to the site owner, 1.sup.st responders, and others as needed in order to assist with fire protection, fighting, and post-fire threats or other requirements.
[0061] To achieve these and other objectives, the control panels that support detectors and other devices are integrated with one another. While these circuits differ from one another as to certain specific data reported, the communication language will be common to all. That is, prestored operating protocols/standards, and presets are real-time compared to the data provided by all of the circuits, with the result being a uniform presentation of matched information and performance. If the reported data does not fall within the preset protocols, an alarm is sent to the FDC. Similarly, in deployment mode, the preset standards monitor when, how much, and how often the gel-water mix is deployed. As such, the system operator is not confused by a blizzard of different formats, words for specific devices, phrases for messages related to certain alarm conditions, etc. The operator is more likely to respond to an emergency condition more rapidly and more appropriately when receiving information in a common language and standard format.
[0062] Thus, in accordance with the present invention, the facility monitoring system (OCC and FDC) can receive information from different types of control circuits and manage the system appropriately whether inactive or in deployment modes. The present invention also uses that common language to detect whether any particular component of the system needs maintenance or replacement. As a result, repair personnel can visit the site with the knowledge of what they need to do and what equipment/supplies they should bring. This will greatly reduce “down” time as well as the costs associated with ongoing maintenance, repairs, and replacements.
[0063] The following detailed description of the present invention is given for explanatory purposes. It may be apparent that changes and modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the invention. Accordingly, the whole of the following description is to be considered in an illustrative and not a limiting sense, the scope of the invention being defined by claims.
[0064] Shown in
[0065] Box (1) The Fire Defense Center (FDC) receives input data from the site (thermal and video) and from 1.sup.st responders and others where useful information about the specific location, size, pattern(s), direction and rate of movement, fuel sources and conditions, wind speeds, weather forecasts, and movements of personnel on the ground (e.g., fire fighters). Based on this information the FDC can monitor 5 conditions: (a) system operating normal and no threats detected, (b) a thermal threat has been detected, time to switch to video monitoring, (c) time to deploy the gel-water mix, (d) time to purge the system, and (e) time to re-deploy the system (e.g., if too much time has elapsed since the first deployment and the gel-water mix may be losing some of its effectiveness: typically at least 4 hours—usually enough time for the fire front to have passed the site. Then repeat steps (c) and (d).
[0066] Box (2) The OCC unit at the structure(s) monitors the system through the 5 conditions described above and reports same through a wireless communication with the FDC as transmitted from the SCP.
[0067] Box (3) The thermal/video wireless camera system is mounted on the structure(s) to monitor and report conditions and threats at and around the site (up to ½ mile) through the OCC to the FDC.
[0068] Box (4) Represents the pipelines and emitting valves to distribute the gel-water mix and cover the structure as designed for the specific site.
[0069] Box (5) Represents the potential emergency situation where wireless communication is compromised (such that the FDC cannot communicate with the site) and where, under specified emergency conditions an authorized operator may enter by keypad the requisite code to unlock the local OCC and operate the system either onsite or via a cellphone APP from offsite. Further, this invention provides that, in specified emergency conditions and when communications have been compromised, an autonomous system within the OCC will detect same and initiate an autonomous operating function within the OCC.
[0070] Box (6) First responders all communicate with each other through wireless and report to their respective command posts. The FDC also receives those inputs and matches those with the structure(s) for which this invention has been installed. The information helps the FDC to monitor fire patterns and trends, and the level of threat faced by the structures from distances outside the range of the camera in (3). The FDC can then determine whether, when, and how much to deploy the invention.
[0071] Box (7) The weather agencies have global, regional, and local conditions (temperatures, humidity, wind direction, etc.) that can help to evaluate the level of threat and nature of any deployment that might be required at the FDC.
[0072] Box (8) In advance of any evacuation order that might be coming, there are almost always people on the ground (residents, utility personnel, media, etc.) who can give firsthand accounting of the situation. Based on the site and neighborhood information being received by the FDC and the maps at the FDC, the FDC may be able to identify a safe exit route for occupants if an evacuation order is given by authorities.
[0073]
[0074] Following is a description of each of the boxes in the illustration. Minimal floor space is required and the pre-package pump/controller of the invention are assembled on a skid prior to delivery to the site. [0075] 1. Grid connection from electric utility. [0076] a. Technology: simple standard utility-approved grounded interconnect to 110 AC (e.g., as used in solar energy applications) [0077] b. Specifications/work being done. Electric grid interconnect. [0078] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment. Standard interconnect device. [0079] 2. Grid OFF sensor: detect if the electric grid goes down and to maintain uninterrupted power, automatically start back-up power. [0080] a. Technology: simple tester with auto-start for generator [0081] b. Specifications/work being done: switch to back-up power. [0082] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment: standard interconnect sensor and switching device to switch to battery back-up in milliseconds, together with a standard UL approved inverter to convert the AC to DC. [0083] 3. Circuit breaker: simple circuit breaker or fuse box for the utility connection [0084] a. Technology: simple circuit breaker box [0085] b. Specifications/work being done. 30 amp circuit breaker box [0086] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment. 30 amp circuit breaker box [0087] 4. 6-volt AGM back-up battery pack. [0088] a. Technology: dedicated diesel or gas fueled generator [0089] b. Specifications/work being done: when activated, supply electric power to the OCC's functions. [0090] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment: deep cycle AGM lead-acid batteries [0091] 5. Emergency Bypass System On/off switch [0092] a. Technology: standard breaker switch equipped with a locking door that can only be opened with a predetermined code. [0093] b. Specifications/work being done. Provide for emergency operation of the system if communication with the FDC is disrupted. [0094] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment. Standard simple “lock-off” switch that can be manually switched in an emergency by an authorized person with the requisite security code. [0095] 6. Onsite Command center (OCC) [0096] a. Technology: Customized standard thermal/video camera with wireless capability. [0097] b. Specifications/work being done: direct satellite wireless connection to/from site to FDC. [0098] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment: The controller enclosure is a strong, steel, U.L. Listed, NEMA-3R, with a locking door for security. Controls are designed to provide complete automatic operation. All components are pre-wired including a terminal strip. The control panel is clearly marked with a digital meter display for volts and amps. The OCC is fitted with operator displays such as: manual run light, power stop/reset, circuit breaker disconnecting mechanism, phase error light, gauges, etc. [0099] 7. Thermal camera [0100] a. Technology: For demonstrative purposes, the FLIR C3 Pocket Thermal Camera with WiFi. [0101] b. Specifications/work being done. Thermal/video/wifi all-in-one camera. [0102] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment. For demonstrative purposes, internal memory, at least 500 sets of images. Peer-to-peer (ad hoc) or infrastructure (network). [0103] MSX: Adds visual details to full resolution thermal image. Thermal Image: Yes. Visual Image: Yes. Visual Video Streaming: Yes. Object Temperature Range: −10° C. to 150° C. (14° F. to 302° F.). Battery: 3.7 V Rechargeable Li-ion polymer battery. Battery operating time: 2 hours. Charging system: Charged inside camera. Charging Time: 1.5 hours. External Power Operation: AC adapter, 90-260 VAC input—5 V output to camera (so we'll need some kind of continuous charging system). Image File Format: Standard JPEG with 14-bit measurement data included. [0104] 8. Video camera (same as #8) [0105] a. Technology: see #8 [0106] b. Specifications/work being done. On signal from FDC, switch from thermal camera to video. [0107] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment. For demonstrative purposes, the FLIR C3 Pocket Thermal Camera with WiFi. [0108] 9. Propane Tank shut-off valve [0109] a. Technology: Wireless shut-off operated either by the FDC or, in emergency, the owner/operator (see #6 above). [0110] b. Specifications/work being done. Closing the propane tank valve at the tank. [0111] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment. Standard wireless connector and valve. [0112] 10. Propane line @ structure shut-off valve [0113] a. Technology: Wireless shut-off operated either by the FDC or, in emergency, the owner/operator (see #6 above). [0114] b. Specifications/work being done. Standard brass-wireless equipped valve to close the propane valve at the house. [0115] d. Equipment and specifications of the equipment. Standard wireless connector & valve. [0116] 11. Water Supply Tank [0117] a. Technology: 1,500 gal poly tank, ANSI/NSF Certified Standard 61 [0118] b. Specifications/work being done. Water storage [0119] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment. For demonstrative purposes, a 1500 Gallon Poly vertical Storage Tank. With an electric valve to purge the water line after use. Water feed from tank to mixing tank via a 12V DC micro-pump. The tank will be filled and levels maintained by the water source external to the system and managed with an automatic water fill valve and float assembly and other options. If the external water supply is lost, the tank already has enough water for two deploy-purge cycles. [0120] 12. Gel Reservoir [0121] a. Technology: 40 gal poly tank, ANSI/NSF Certified Standard 61 [0122] b. Specifications/work being done. Gel storage [0123] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment. For demonstrative purposes, a 50 gal poly tank approved for storing chemicals that is used for gel only. With a reversible valve to purge the gel line after use. [0124] 13. Gel pump [0125] a. Technology: UL approved standard DC powered electric micro-pump [0126] b. Specifications/work being done. Pump Gel from its dedicated storage tank to the mixing tank. [0127] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment. Standard brass valve(s) with pressure controls specific to the site and structure(s). [0128] 14. Gel-water mix eductor [0129] a. Technology: Standard 12V DC timer to control the mixing equipment in a 50+ gallon poly tank ANSI/NSF Certified Standard approved for chemicals. [0130] b. Specifications/work being done. Periodic stirring of the gel to maintain proper consistency and avoid stratifying. [0131] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment. Electric auto control of a mixing apparatus similar to the paddle-type mixers used for paints (the gel is of approximately the same consistency/density). [0132] 15. Water Pump [0133] a. Technology: standard high volume, high pressure, hydraulic pump. [0134] b. Specifications/work being done. Pumping water through a (1½″ to 2″) pipeline to sprinklers to be mixed with gel at the sprinkler. The design pressure will be the pressure in P.S.I. that will be required by the sprinkler head at the furthermost point, as adjusted for elevation and friction loss in the pipe for the final total pressure requirement. [0135] b. Equipment and specifications of the equipment: For demonstrative purposes, a Hydrel Double Diaphragm Air Pump, 153 gpm. [0136] 16. Water flush-purge water tank/line (see #9) [0137] a. Technology: 40+ gallon poly tank to store fresh water for line purging. [0138] b. Specifications/work being done. Valve to purge water line after use. [0139] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment. Standard fresh water storage tank fitted with a micro-pump to pump the purge water to the hydraulic pump #14. [0140] 17. Water Pressure Regulating Valve [0141] a. Technology: Standard brass valve(s) with pressure controls specific to the site. [0142] b. Specifications/work being done. Maintain the proper water pressure at the sprinklers and their respective zones. [0143] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment. Electric valve to increase/decrease pressure. [0144] 18. Sprinkler(s) [0145] a. Technology: standard [0146] b. Specifications/work being done. Dispense with the gel-water mix to the structure(s) in each zone according to design location, intensity, horizontal/vertical pattern, and length of time. [0147] c. Equipment and specifications of the equipment: For demonstrative purposes, the Strongway Sprinkler—1¼ in. Sprinkler Head with multi-nozzles, 150′ range, 63 gpm, RainCloud, R3000 Rotator, Sime Senior Impact Drive Sprinkler, 2″, 160 gpm, 260 ft diameter.
[0148] In
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