Rural Water

Cedar River Watershed: Turbidity Monitoring

Case Study »  Cedar River Watershed: Turbidity Monitoring

Project Summary

Application Type:
Monitoring the purity of Seattle's water supply during a construction project

Location:
Washington State, USA

Products Used:
CR10X 

Contracting Agencies:
Bonneville Power Authority, Seattle Public Utility

Measured Parameters:
Turbidity

Consultants / Integrators:
Electronic Data Solutions

The Cedar River Watershed provides a major portion of the culinary water to Seattle, WA and several nearby cities. The watershed produces high quality water that does not require a sand filter. To maintain that high quality, the city monitors and controls all uses within the watershed. When the Bonneville Power Authority (BPA) needed to install a second major transmission line across the watershed (with all attendant soil disturbing activities associated with a job of this scope), they agreed to install an alarm system which would allow the city to turn off the water supply intakes in the event of a high turbidity condition in the river or in a selected tributary stream.

BPA contracted with Electronic Data Solutions to provide that alarm system. The system uses an FTS DTS-12 turbidity sensor, a Campbell Scientific, Inc. CR10X datalogger with a custom program written by Electronic Data Solutions, a low band radio from Meteor Communications Corp. (MCC), and solar charged batteries for power.

A special challenge of this project was to get the alarm notification to Seattle Public Utility (SPU) rapidly so that action could be taken before the low quality water could reach the intakes. The area is mountainous and heavily timbered. Cellular coverage was spotty and deemed unreliable for this purpose. Standard satellite communication was judged too slow for this requirement and an on-site receiving station was too expensive for the project’s budget. Typical radio communication was hampered by terrain and the heavy timber. The solution was found by using an existing low band radio network already installed using repeaters on a series of high peaks throughout the area. The system was installed to track the locations of locomotives for the Burlington Northern Railroad. It has plenty of bandwidth for?additional users and the low frequency has a large enough wave form to weave its way though the timber. The data is transmitted to a server in Kent, WA and the server automatically calls BPA and SPU when an alarm occurs.


Sites with Additional Information

MeteorComm Low-band radios




Additional Photos

 
Rock Creek instrumentation stand w/ antenna & solar panel Face of the sensor stand insert showing DTS-12 and CS547 Sensor stand at Rock Creek tributary Mounting the antenna on a topped cedar Custom box for deep cycle batteries Enclosure w/ CR10X and MCC low band radio Sensor stand in the Cedar River Instrumentation shed beneath Barneston Bridge Solar panel had to be mounted below the rail on the bridge
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