Chuck
Senior Member
Gravity alone isn't enough to provide the operating pressures that drive the municipal water system. A better way of saving energy would be to replace older sections of pipe to reduce friction loss, and minimize leaky watermains.
Gravity alone isn't enough to provide the operating pressures that drive the municipal water system. A better way of saving energy would be to replace older sections of pipe to reduce friction loss, and minimize leaky watermains.
Gravity is the sole driving force behind our sanitary and storm systems, however Toronto is ultimately 100% dependant on an external source of power to operate our water distribution system. You can't raise water to a reservoir from Lake Ontario without supplying power, and that obstacle can never be overcome.
In any case, reservoirs and water towers are only tapped into when demand oustrips the supply of freshly treated water from water treatment plants.
the water is pumped up to reservoirs at a higher location in the city from the filtration plant. from there it uses gravity to get to our homes. one of the big issues in the 2003 blackout was that the reservoirs would dry up because there was no power to pump water up to them but my water pressure was still the same during the blackout. maybe in some locations like high rises or certain districts gravity alone isn't enough?
That's more what I was responding to. I believe that even after leaving a reservoir, gravity does not play a role in distributing water, because as I said before, water towers only come into play when demand outstrips supply. All pressure is provided by pumps in the case of Toronto. Remember that it is pressure that drives the flow of water, and while gravity can certainly add some pressure, it doesn't provide anywhere near all of it. Due to topography, Toronto's pipes flow uphill for the most part.
The reason why the water still worked for homes during the blackout was that pumping stations were the first utilities to be brought back online. The pressure supplied by pumping stations is sufficient for houses and lowrises. Apartment buildings did not have water because they have their own pumps for supplying water to upper floors, and these won't work when the building does not have power.
i live south of the 401 and my water probably comes from a reservior located at around steeles ave




