FREQUENCY OF SCRAPING.
The frequency of scraping depends upon the character of the raw water, the thoroughness of the preliminary sedimentation, the grain-size of the filter sand, the rate of filtration, and the maximum loss of head allowed. With suitable conditions the period between scrapings should never be less than one week, and will but rarely exceed two months. Under exceptional conditions, however, periods have been recorded as low as one day and as high as one hundred and ten days. Periods of less than a week’s duration are almost conclusive evidence that something is radically wrong, and the periods of one day mentioned were actually accompanied by very inadequate filtration. In 1892 the average periods at the German works varied from 9.5 days at Stettin (with an excessive rate) to 40 days at Brunswick, the average of all being 25 days.[20]
The quantity of water per acre filtered between scrapings forms the most convenient basis for calculation. The effect of rate (page 49), loss of head (page 65), and size of sand grain (page 32) have already been discussed, and it will suffice to say here that the total quantity filtered between scrapings is apparently independent of the rate of filtration, but varies with the maximum loss of head and with the grain-size of the sand, and apparently nearly in proportion to them. Eleven German filter-works in 1892, drawing their waters from rivers, filtered on an average 51 million gallons of water per acre between scrapings, the single results ranging from 28 at Bremen to 71 at Stuttgart, while Zürich, drawing its water from a lake which is but very rarely turbid, filtered 260 million gallons per acre between scrapings. Unfortunately, the quantities at Berlin, where (in 1892 two thirds and now all) the water is drawn from comparatively large ponds on the rivers, are not available for comparison.
At London, in 1884, the average quantities of water filtered between scrapings varied from 43 to 136 million gallons per acre with the different companies, averaging 85, and in 1892 the quantities ranged from 73 to 157, averaging 90 million gallons per acre. The greater quantity filtered at London may be due to the greater sizes of the sedimentation-basins, which for all the companies together hold a nine days’ supply at London against probably less than one day’s supply for the German works.
There is little information available in regard to the frequency of scraping with water drawn from impounding reservoirs. In some experiments made by Mr. FitzGerald at the Chestnut Hill reservoir, Boston, the results of which are as yet unpublished, a filter with sand of an effective size of only .09 mm. averaged 58 million gallons per acre between scrapings for nine periods, the rate of filtration being 1.50 million gallons per acre daily, while another filter, with sand of an effective size of .18 mm., passed an average of 93 million gallons per acre for ten periods at the same rate. These experiments extended through all seasons of the year, and taking into account the comparative fineness of the sands they show rather high quantities of water filtered between scrapings.
The quantity of water filtered between scrapings is usually greatest in winter, owing to the smaller quantity of sediment in the raw water at this season, and is lowest in times of flood, regardless of season. In summer the quantity is often reduced to a very low figure in waters supporting algæ growths, especially when the filters are not covered. Thus at Stralau in 1893 during the algæ period the quantity was reduced to 14 million gallons per acre for open filters,[21] but this was quite exceptional, the much-polluted, though comparatively clear, Spree water furnishing unusually favorable conditions for the algæ.