My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
ARCHIVED REPORTS_XR0004420
Environmental Health - Public
>
EHD Program Facility Records by Street Name
>
M
>
MAIN
>
470
>
3500 - Local Oversight Program
>
PR0545485
>
ARCHIVED REPORTS_XR0004420
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
3/11/2020 12:54:16 AM
Creation date
3/10/2020 11:43:41 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
EHD - Public
ProgramCode
3500 - Local Oversight Program
File Section
ARCHIVED REPORTS
FileName_PostFix
XR0004420
RECORD_ID
PR0545485
PE
3528
FACILITY_ID
FA0003604
FACILITY_NAME
BEACON STATION #3492*
STREET_NUMBER
470
Direction
N
STREET_NAME
MAIN
STREET_TYPE
ST
City
MANTECA
Zip
95336
APN
22307101
CURRENT_STATUS
02
SITE_LOCATION
470 N MAIN ST
P_LOCATION
04
P_DISTRICT
003
QC Status
Approved
Scanner
SJGOV\sballwahn
Tags
EHD - Public
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
32
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
AEGIS ENVIRONMENTAL, INC. <br /> STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURE <br /> RE: MEASURING LIQUID LEVELS USING WATER LEVEL OR INTERFACE PROBE <br /> SOP-12 <br /> Field equipment used for liquid-level gauging typically includes the measuring probe <br /> (water-level or interface) and product bailer(s) The field kit also includes cleaning <br /> supplies (buckets, TSP, spray bottles, and deiornzed water) to be used in cleaning the <br /> equipment between wells <br /> Prior to measurement, the probe tip is lowered into the well until it touches bottom Using <br /> the previously established top-of-casing or top-of-box (i e , wellhead vault) point, the <br /> probe cord (or halyard) is marked and a measuring tape (graduated in hundredths of a <br /> foot) is used to determine the distance between the probe end and the marking on the <br /> cord This measurement is then recorded on the liquid-level data sheet as the "Measured <br /> Total Depth" of the well <br /> When necessary in using the interface probe to measure liquid levels, the probe is first <br /> electrically grounded to ether the metal stove pipe or another metal object nearby When <br /> no ground is available, reproducible measurements can be obtained by clipping the <br /> ground lead to the handle of the interface probe case <br /> The probe tip is then lowered into the well and submerged in the groundwater An <br /> oscillating (beeping) tone indicates the probe is in water The probe is slowly rased until <br /> either the oscillating tone ceases or becomes a steady tone In either case, this is the <br /> depth-to-water (DTW) indicator and the DTW measurement is made accordingly The <br /> steady tone indicates floating hydrocarbons In this case, the probe is slowly raised until <br /> the steady tone ceases This is the depth-to-product (DTP) indicator and the DTP <br /> measurement is made accordingly <br /> The process of lowering and raising the probe must be repeated several times to ensure <br /> accurate measurements The DTW and DTP measurements are recorded on the liquid- <br /> level data sheet When floating product is indicated by the probe's response, a product <br /> bailer is lowered partially through the product-water interface to confirm the product on <br /> the water surface, and as further indication of product thickness, particularly in cases <br /> where the product layer is quite thin. This measurement is recorded on the data sheet <br /> as "product thickness." <br /> In order to avoid cross-contamination of wells during the liquid-level measurement <br /> process, wells are measured in the order of "clean" to "dirty" (where such information is <br /> available) In addition, all measurement equipment is cleaned with TSP or similar solution <br /> and thoroughly rinsed with deionized water before use, between measurements in <br /> respective wells, and at the completion of the day's use <br /> ATTACHMENT/SOP-12/MARCH 1993 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.