• InfoWater Pro

Running a Hydrant Curve Analysis

Set up and run a hydrant curve analysis and view the result graph.


00:04

A fire hydrant rating curve shows the relationship between

00:07

residual pressure and the available flow for any hydrant.

00:11

Hydrant curves are often required by

00:13

fire departments responsible for ensuring that a

00:16

specific hydrant can adequately control a

00:18

potential fire demand and maintain minimum pressure

00:22

to begin.

00:23

Double click the desired project dot APR X file to open

00:27

Agis Pro.

00:29

Once the project starts,

00:30

click the info water pro tab to open the info water pro ribbon

00:34

in the project panel, click initialize

00:38

to set up and run a hydrant curve on the info water pro ribbon

00:42

in the analysis panel. Click run

00:45

in the run manager, click the hydrant curve tab

00:49

to set the start time for this simulation.

00:51

Pick select time and then in the pop-up click and

00:54

drag the slider to set the time to 10 hours.

00:58

Click. OK.

01:00

In the target junction ID field enter J 101 198

01:03

as the identifier of the hydrant to be tested.

01:07

You can also use the browse icon beside the

01:09

field to select the junction directly from the map.

01:14

Set the normal hydrant flow to the hydrant's firef flow demand.

01:18

Click run

01:21

the hydrant curve graph opens automatically in the report manager.

01:25

If you are prompted to switch to the most recent output data. Click yes,

01:30

view the graph.

01:32

Any brakes in the curve are caused by a

01:34

change in operation at the specified flow rate.

01:38

When you are finished reviewing the curve, close the report manager.

Video transcript

00:04

A fire hydrant rating curve shows the relationship between

00:07

residual pressure and the available flow for any hydrant.

00:11

Hydrant curves are often required by

00:13

fire departments responsible for ensuring that a

00:16

specific hydrant can adequately control a

00:18

potential fire demand and maintain minimum pressure

00:22

to begin.

00:23

Double click the desired project dot APR X file to open

00:27

Agis Pro.

00:29

Once the project starts,

00:30

click the info water pro tab to open the info water pro ribbon

00:34

in the project panel, click initialize

00:38

to set up and run a hydrant curve on the info water pro ribbon

00:42

in the analysis panel. Click run

00:45

in the run manager, click the hydrant curve tab

00:49

to set the start time for this simulation.

00:51

Pick select time and then in the pop-up click and

00:54

drag the slider to set the time to 10 hours.

00:58

Click. OK.

01:00

In the target junction ID field enter J 101 198

01:03

as the identifier of the hydrant to be tested.

01:07

You can also use the browse icon beside the

01:09

field to select the junction directly from the map.

01:14

Set the normal hydrant flow to the hydrant's firef flow demand.

01:18

Click run

01:21

the hydrant curve graph opens automatically in the report manager.

01:25

If you are prompted to switch to the most recent output data. Click yes,

01:30

view the graph.

01:32

Any brakes in the curve are caused by a

01:34

change in operation at the specified flow rate.

01:38

When you are finished reviewing the curve, close the report manager.

Step-by-step:

A fire hydrant rating curve shows the relationship between residual pressure and the available flow for any hydrant. Hydrant curves are often required by fire departments responsible for ensuring that a specific hydrant can adequately control a potential fire demand and maintain minimum pressure.

  1. Open the appropriate .aprx file in ArcGIS Pro.
  2. From the ribbon, InfoWater Pro tab, Project panel, click Initialize.

To set up and run a hydrant curve:

  1. On the ribbon, InfoWater Pro tab, Analysis panel, click Run.
  2. In the Run Manager, click the Hydrant Curve
  3. To set the start time for this simulation:
    1. Click Select Time.
    2. In the Select Time popup, click and drag the slider to set the time to 10:00 hrs.
    3. Click OK.
  4. In the Target Junction ID field, enter “J1198” as the identifier of the hydrant to be tested. Or, click Browse beside the field to select the junction directly from the map.
    The Run Manager, Hydrant Curve tab with Target Junction ID highlighted
  5. Set the Normal Hydrant Flow to the hydrant’s fireflow demand.
  6. Click Run.

The Hydrant Curve graph opens automatically in the Report Manager.

  1. If you are prompted to switch to the most recent output data, click Yes.
  2. View the graph.

Any breaks in the curve are caused by a change in operation at the specified flow rate.

The Report Manager displaying a hydrant curve for a selected hydrant and time.

  1. When you are finished reviewing the curve, close the Report Manager.
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