
Andrews AFB 'Torospherical Tank'
Posted by:
tiki-4
N 38° 49.332 W 076° 53.032
18S E 336458 N 4298732
Torospherical Tanks & Water Spheroids AKA "Big Mamas and Motherships" We haven't come across any literature using the term "mothership" but we have heard variations of Big Mama used by staff members. Clyde Burns of Huntsville, Texas, a man who has erected, dismantled and reassembled tanks for forty years, informs us that larger water spheres are more correctly called water spheroids. These usually hold 200,000 gallons and up. Within this group are the Torospherical Tanks.
Waymark Code: WM3JQ
Location: Maryland, United States
Date Posted: 11/09/2005
Views: 94
A water tower is an incredibly simple device. Although water towers come in all shapes and sizes, they all do the same thing: A water tower is simply a large, elevated tank of water. Water towers are tall to provide pressure. Each foot of height provides 0.43 PSI (pounds per square Inch) of pressure. A typical municipal water supply runs at between 50 and 100 PSI (major appliances require at least 20 to 30 PSI). The water tower must be tall enough to supply that level of pressure to all of the houses and businesses in the area of the tower. So water towers are typically located on high ground, and they are tall enough to provide the necessary pressure. In hilly regions, a tower can sometimes be replaced by a simple tank located on the highest hill in the area. A water tower's tank is normally quite large. A normal in-ground swimming pool in someone's backyard might hold something like 20,000 or 30,000 gallons (that's a lot of water!), and a typical water tower might hold 50 times that amount! Typically, a water tower's tank is sized to hold about a day's worth of water for the community served by the tower. If the pumps fail (for example, during a power failure), the water tower holds enough water to keep things flowing for about a day.
