THICKNESS OF THE SAND LAYER.
The thickness of the sand layer is made so great that when it is repeatedly scraped in cleaning the sand will not become too thin for good filtration for a considerable time. When this occurs the removed sand must be replaced with clean sand. The original thickness of the sand in European filters is usually from 24 to 48 inches, thicknesses between 30 and 40 inches being extremely common, and this is reduced before refilling to from 12 to 24 inches. The Imperial Board of Health of Germany has fixed 12 inches as a limit below which the sand should never be scraped, and a higher limit is recommended wherever possible.
A thick sand layer has the same steadying action as a fine sand, and tends to prevent irregularities in the rate of filtration in proportion to its frictional resistance, and that without increasing the frequency of cleaning; but, on the other hand, it increases the necessary height of the filter, throughout, and consequently the cost of construction.
In addition to the steadying effect of a deep sand layer, some purification takes place in the lower part of the sand even with a good sediment layer on the surface, and the efficiency of deep filters is greater than that of shallow ones.
Layers of finer materials, as fine sand or loam, in the lower part of a filter, which would otherwise give increased efficiency without increasing the operating expenses, cannot be used. Their presence invariably gives rise sooner or later to sub-surface clogging at the point of junction with the coarser sand, as has been found by repeated tests at Lawrence as well as in some of the Dutch filters where such layers were tried; and as there is no object in putting a coarser sand under a finer, the filter sand is best all of the same size and quality from top to bottom.