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Purpose: <\/SPAN>Control valves are a set of valves that operate in special ways. There are three fundamental types of control valves: backflow control, air control, and altitude. A backflow control valve is a control valve designed to prevent water from flowing in the reverse direction. Essentially, backflow control valves allow flow in only one direction\u2014the normal flow dirrection. Backflow control valves are open in the direction of normal flow and closed with the reversal of flow. Backflow control valves are commonly found near pump stations and reservoirs. Air control valves are control valves that are used to either relieve the system of trapped air or vacuums that may develop. Finally, an altitude valve is a control valve that controls water flow into a tower when the water level drops below a threshold. Altitude valves automatically shut off water flow when the water level in an elevated tank (or tower) reaches a preset elevation. A pressure reducing valve is a system valve with a horizontal disk for automatically reducing water pressures to a preset value. A pressure relief valve is a system valve that opens automatically when water pressure reaches a preset limit to relieve stress on a pipeline. Pressure relief valves are used to protect against rapid increases in pressure (i.e., water hammer). A pressure sustaining valve is a system valve that automatically sustains water pressures at a preset value. A pressure sustaining valve is similar to a pressure reducing valve but governs the pressure on the upstream rather than the downstream flow.<\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

Types of control valves represented include AirGap, AirControl, AirRelease, Altitude, BackflowControl, Combination, AtmosphericVacuum, DoubleCheck, PressureVacuum, ReducedPressureBackflow, RPZ, SimpleCheck, Vacuum, VacuumBreaker, and VacuumRelease<\/SPAN>.<\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

Intended Use: <\/SPAN>Currently used for location and informational purpose in the Water Distribution mobile apps, water utility network and Dashboards.<\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

Department: <\/SPAN>Public Utilities Department - Water Distribution Division<\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

Data Source: <\/SPAN>Referenced feature service on Enterprise portal<\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

How was the Data Manipulated: <\/SPAN>Data was added to GIS from as-built information or redlines provided by Public Utilities field workers and Engineering staff.<\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

How the Data is Modified: <\/SPAN>Update will be made if sufficient information is received by GPS Technicians.<\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

Update Frequency: <\/SPAN>As-Needed and new information provided by Engineering, Public Utilities or Water Distribution supervisors.<\/SPAN><\/P>

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Purpose: <\/SPAN>Control valves are a set of valves that operate in special ways. There are three fundamental types of control valves: backflow control, air control, and altitude. A backflow control valve is a control valve designed to prevent water from flowing in the reverse direction. Essentially, backflow control valves allow flow in only one direction\u2014the normal flow dirrection. Backflow control valves are open in the direction of normal flow and closed with the reversal of flow. Backflow control valves are commonly found near pump stations and reservoirs. Air control valves are control valves that are used to either relieve the system of trapped air or vacuums that may develop. Finally, an altitude valve is a control valve that controls water flow into a tower when the water level drops below a threshold. Altitude valves automatically shut off water flow when the water level in an elevated tank (or tower) reaches a preset elevation. A pressure reducing valve is a system valve with a horizontal disk for automatically reducing water pressures to a preset value. A pressure relief valve is a system valve that opens automatically when water pressure reaches a preset limit to relieve stress on a pipeline. Pressure relief valves are used to protect against rapid increases in pressure (i.e., water hammer). A pressure sustaining valve is a system valve that automatically sustains water pressures at a preset value. A pressure sustaining valve is similar to a pressure reducing valve but governs the pressure on the upstream rather than the downstream flow.<\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

Types of control valves represented include AirGap, AirControl, AirRelease, Altitude, BackflowControl, Combination, AtmosphericVacuum, DoubleCheck, PressureVacuum, ReducedPressureBackflow, RPZ, SimpleCheck, Vacuum, VacuumBreaker, and VacuumRelease<\/SPAN>.<\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

Intended Use: <\/SPAN>Currently used for location and informational purpose in the Water Distribution mobile apps, water utility network and Dashboards.<\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

Department: <\/SPAN>Public Utilities Department - Water Distribution Division<\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

Data Source: <\/SPAN>Referenced feature service on Enterprise portal<\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

How was the Data Manipulated: <\/SPAN>Data was added to GIS from as-built information or redlines provided by Public Utilities field workers and Engineering staff.<\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

How the Data is Modified: <\/SPAN>Update will be made if sufficient information is received by GPS Technicians.<\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

Update Frequency: <\/SPAN>As-Needed and new information provided by Engineering, Public Utilities or Water Distribution supervisors.<\/SPAN><\/P>

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