How is life after 8 years of Obama? What's the murder rate in Chicago

First of all you can not pump water back into an ocean that has flooded the city as you are just pumping water back into the flooding body of water, which creates more water to flood. Second once the ocean enters the damage is done, one tenth of a second is too much time for water to be in a home, so how fast you pump it out will not dry out the wiring or insulation, so the pumps have no purpose except to sucker poor people into buying homes below sea level. It makes no sense.

Do you know where NOLA is?? It isn't on the ocean, river on one side, the lake on the other..

Adding more water to either, even @ these extreme rates makes no difference to either body of water, getting the water out immediately is the primary goal...
 
Do you know where NOLA is?? It isn't on the ocean, river on one side, the lake on the other..

Adding more water to either, even @ these extreme rates makes no difference to either body of water, getting the water out immediately is the primary goal...

Katrina breached levis protecting Louisiana from the Ocean. There is no where to pump the water in a disaster. So get real kid.

katrina-new-orleans_h528.jpg


wateraroundus_floodwall.jpg


Only dumb people allowed this land to be sold for housing.
 
Katrina breached levis protecting Louisiana from the Ocean. There is no where to pump the water in a disaster. So get real kid.

katrina-new-orleans_h528.jpg


wateraroundus_floodwall.jpg


Only dumb people allowed this land to be sold for housing.

It was the 17th street canal which pours into lake Pontchartrain .............

Most of the city is @ or below sea level......... Building houses there?? Here in Nor Cal, in the bay area ppl have houses ON ACTIVE EARTHQUAKE Faults... Many drive over/on them daily..

Life on the edge..........lol
 
It was the 17th street canal which pours into lake Pontchartrain .............

Most of the city is @ or below sea level......... Building houses there?? Here in Nor Cal, in the bay area ppl have houses ON ACTIVE EARTHQUAKE Faults... Many drive over/on them daily..

Life on the edge..........lol

The same here, part of the bluff fell into the inlet in 1964, they wouldn't let them build there for awhile, but pressure from the rich and famous eventually they caved and let people build there, again.
 
It was the 17th street canal which pours into lake Pontchartrain .............

Most of the city is @ or below sea level......... Building houses there?? Here in Nor Cal, in the bay area ppl have houses ON ACTIVE EARTHQUAKE Faults... Many drive over/on them daily..

Life on the edge..........lol

Where are the pumps going to pump this water? https://www.google.com/search?q=kat...GsvOzNAhXEdSYKHRV3BLAQsAQIHQ&biw=1280&bih=649

Again you can not pump water that came from the Ocean back into the Ocean to relieve flooding because you are pumping the water back into the inflow of water, which essentially is retarded. There are people who lived here and left after Katrina, they are the smart ones.
 
Where are the pumps going to pump this water? Again you can not pump water that came from the Ocean back into the Ocean to relieve flooding because you are pumping the water back into the inflow of water, which essentially is retarded. There are people who lived here and left after Katrina, they are the smart ones.

Do you need a picture? :palm:


0823-web-subLEVEE.png


We’re coming up on the 10th anniversary this year of the devastating Hurricane Katrina, which hit the U.S. Gulf Coast in August 2005. It’s the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history, costing almost $125 billion and more than 1,800 lives. Most of that devastation was in New Orleans, where levee failures caused some 80 percent of the city to be flooded.

Since then, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has been working on a flood control system to keep that from happening again. The New Orleans Permanent Canal Closures and Pumps (PCCP) project, designed to handle the next 100-year storm (one that has a 1 percent likelihood of happening in any given year), will manage water levels on three canals in New Orleans through 17 massive pumps from Patterson Pump Co., driven by innovative vertical gearmotors from Baldor Electric.

The Corps of Engineers put a temporary pumping system into place in 2006, then awarded the $615 million permanent project in late 2012. The PCCP project puts pump stations at the mouth of the 17th Street, Orleans Avenue and London Avenue canals. They will be able to pump 11 million gallons per minute (GPM) from the canals into nearby Lake Pontchartrain in the event of hurricane storm surges, keeping water from topping flood walls.

The 17 pumps from Patterson include 10 large and seven smaller pumps. “These are some monster pumps,” says Jack Claxton, vice president of engineering for Patterson, who described the circuitous trek necessary to get the huge pumps from where they’re made in Toccoa, Ga., to New Orleans. “It’s going to take 150 of the largest flatbed trucks to ship this equipment.”

Claxton detailed the pumping system during ABB’s Automation and Power World in Houston this week.

The large pumps are rated at 1,800 cfs (cubic feet per second), which translates to almost 1.2 GPM (gallons per minute). “An Olympic-size swimming pool holds 660,000 gallons,” Claxton says. “So with the 1.2 million GPM pump, you’ve got about 30 seconds to get out of that pool.” The small pumps have half the flow rate—“only” 900 cfs, or about 400,000 GPM, he adds.

“We’ve pushed all kinds of limits with this pump,” Claxton says. “We are at some major limits from a number of perspectives.”

The large pump has a 10x10 ft square discharge, which Claxton says is “a little bit unusual.” Though the discharge is usually round, the square design enables Patterson to transition to a rectangular flow pretty quickly to get the water pumping out.

There are no valves in the pumps, Claxton notes. They instead respond to the head (pressure) that is generated by the difference in the water elevations on the canal side (the suction side) and the lake side (the discharge side). “There are various circumstances that will cause the water levels to vary,” Claxton explains. “There was a full range of water levels that we had to engineer for.”

The pumps use gearmotors from Baldor Electric, which are themselves pretty innovative. Based on horizontal gearmotors typically supplied to the mining industry, Baldor decided it made sense to flip to a vertical design for pumping applications, according to Joe Ribovich, sales engineer for Baldor. Baldor took this idea to Patterson before the PCCP project even started, he says, so when PCCP came along the design really made sense.

Instead of a traditional high-horsepower, high-pole-count, single-speed induction motor or synchronous motor, Baldor’s design uses a relatively low-pole-count motor coupled to a single reduction planetary reducer. “It’s higher efficiency, requires less maintenance, and has a smaller footprint,” Ribovich says.

Each customized motor has a variable-frequency drive (VFD) attached to it. For the smaller motors, the VFD provides flow control that might be useful for the operation of the pump stations, Claxton says. On the larger units, the VFDs enable 10 starts per hour. This contrasts which a typical design, which has to cool down for four hour before it can be started again. “In hurricane conditions, you might have bands 30 minutes apart,” Ribovich notes. “Waiting four hours just wasn’t acceptable.”

Also, although they run off line power under normal conditions, in hurricane conditions, the motors will run off diesel power. The pump stations will have standalone power and enough diesel fuel to power generators for five days in the event of an emergency.

The PCCP project is scheduled for completion in 2017. The Orleans Avenue pump station will use three of the smaller pumps; the London Avenue station will have four large and two small pumps; and the 17th Street station will have six large and two small pumps. The first pump test should be a year or year and a half away, Claxton says, with the last pump text expected around spring 2017.

The delivery dates for motors are spread throughout 2016, from February to September, Ribovich says.




http://www.automationworld.com/monster-pumps-will-protect-new-orleans-flooding
 
What is it you would have him do??

He could start by talking about it. Talking about how BLM ignores black on black crime. Stand up for Law Enforcement.

Instead of inciting violence and saying "trayvon looks like my imaginary son."
 
Thanks for bringing up Katrina, as moving people back into these below sea level areas is unacceptable. They actually installed pumps to pump the water back into the flooding ocean. How does that save lives the next time?

My liberal friends tell me Bush used his weather machine to steer the hurricane into NOLA.
 
He could start by talking about it. Talking about how BLM ignores black on black crime. Stand up for Law Enforcement.

Instead of inciting violence and saying "trayvon looks like my imaginary son."

He has lots to talk about.. He has talked about it, you want him to spend more time on it??

So you believe him talking about it will solve it??
 
Katrina breached levis protecting Louisiana from the Ocean. There is no where to pump the water in a disaster. So get real kid.

katrina-new-orleans_h528.jpg


wateraroundus_floodwall.jpg


Only dumb people allowed this land to be sold for housing.

We have a similar situation here in AZ.
Parts of the valley, west of Phoenix, had monumental floods during the late 70's.
There was what they called a 500 year flood and then later a 1000 year flood.

30 years later they're building subdivisions in areas that were under anywhere between 3 to 15 feet of water, depending on the specific location.
 
We have a similar situation here in AZ.
Parts of the valley, west of Phoenix, had monumental floods during the late 70's.
There was what they called a 500 year flood and then later a 1000 year flood.

30 years later they're building subdivisions in areas that were under anywhere between 3 to 15 feet of water, depending on the specific location.

THey have done the same here in Sacramento... THere is an area adjacent to the Sacramento river that is as much as 20ft below the river & it is now full of houses...

THere was good reason that land has always been vacant..
 
THey have done the same here in Sacramento... THere is an area adjacent to the Sacramento river that is as much as 20ft below the river & it is now full of houses...

THere was good reason that land has always been vacant..

90 percent of the land in this country is vacant, there is no reason for this, nor should the government let these people be taken advantage of.
 
90 percent of the land in this country is vacant, there is no reason for this, nor should the government let these people be taken advantage of.


SO you want da gubment to stop these ppl from buying houses on land they know is in a traditional flood plane??

They have flood insurance options & I think most loans would require it..

Ppl in that area like it as it is close to downtown where most of them work...

The speculators/developers have a real racket here.. THey buy out marginal farm/pasture land, get it reZoned & make a killing...
 
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