My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
COMPLIANCE INFO_2014-2018
Environmental Health - Public
>
EHD Program Facility Records by Street Name
>
P
>
PICCOLI
>
1990
>
2300 - Underground Storage Tank Program
>
PR0231820
>
COMPLIANCE INFO_2014-2018
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
7/2/2020 12:18:05 PM
Creation date
6/23/2020 6:53:02 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
EHD - Public
ProgramCode
2300 - Underground Storage Tank Program
File Section
COMPLIANCE INFO
FileName_PostFix
2014-2018
RECORD_ID
PR0231820
PE
2361
FACILITY_ID
FA0003826
FACILITY_NAME
Supervalu
STREET_NUMBER
1990
Direction
N
STREET_NAME
PICCOLI
STREET_TYPE
RD
City
STOCKTON
Zip
95215
APN
10121001
CURRENT_STATUS
01
SITE_LOCATION
1990 N PICCOLI RD
P_LOCATION
99
P_DISTRICT
004
QC Status
Approved
Scanner
SJGOV\rtan
Supplemental fields
FilePath
\MIGRATIONS\UST\UST_2361_PR0231820_1990 N PICCOLI_2014-2018.tif
Tags
EHD - Public
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
97
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
1140 OM�� <br />From: Erin Langford <elangford@TAIT.COM> <br />Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2016 10:16 AM <br />To: Cindy Vo [EH] <br />Subject: FW: Testing a leak detector through a strainer cap assembly <br />Attachments: Test through Strainer Cap.pdf <br />Good Morning Cindy, <br />It took some time, but please find the attached letter from Vaporless Manufacturing stating that testing the high flow <br />leak detector with the approved strainer cap is an acceptable port for catastrophic line leak detection testing. <br />This was for the Unified Grocers in Stockton. Please let me know if the letter is acceptable to you, and if we can move <br />forward with scheduling the leak detector testing using the strainer cap. <br />Best Regards, <br />Erin <br />From: Gabe Messerly[ma iIto: gmesserly@vaporless.com] <br />Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2016 8:11 AM <br />To: Brian Harmon <br />Cc: Erin Langford <br />Subject: RE: Testing a leak detector through a strainer cap assembly <br />Hi Brian, <br />Very sorry for the late reply. Please see attached. This should satisfy Cindy's concerns. Let me know if you need <br />anything else. <br />Best regards, <br />Gabe Messerly <br />Vaporless Manufacturing, Inc. <br />Phone 928-775-5191 <br />Fax 928-775-5309 <br />www.vaporless.com <br />From: Brian Harmon [mailto:bharmon0TAIT.COM] <br />Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2016 8:46 AM <br />To: 'gmesserly@vaporless.com' <br />Cc: Erin Langford <br />Subject: Testing a leak detector through a strainer cap assembly <br />Hello Gabe. I talked to you on 12/16/2015 about a request we received from Cindy Vo, San Joaquin Environmental <br />Health. <br />We have a client that has an LD3000 leak detector installed on a big flow turbine. The turbine supplies a bottom loaded <br />that does not have an impact valve installed on the product line. In the past Tait has tested the leak detectors with this <br />configuration from the strainer cap that is located before the metering unit. The strainer assembly configuration has a <br />mesh tube and the assembly allows the product to flow into the center of the tube, through the mesh and into the <br />metering unit. Both ends of the strainer have a four bolt cap. When the system is installed, the 4 bolt cap is replaced on <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.