July-August 2007

Meter Interface

As water conservation becomes an increasingly important concern, many districts are turning to AMR and data capturing technology to help ensure accurate meter reading.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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Usually a toilet is the source of a leak because it’s continuous, he notes. "When it is an irrigation leak or people have high usage, it kicks out a code. When people get a high bill, we’re able to look at their historical data to tell them their irrigation system is causing them 300 cubic feet a day. You have the ability to go back 74 days. Or we’re able to tell them when the leak started. Because it was pretty even in the last month and then during the next month there’s a little increase, you’re able to say that is when the leak started. That’s pretty impressive.”

Identifying such leaks saves money for the customer and water for the city. While a typical bill may be $130 a month, a leak can cause that amount to triple.

Santoyo offers an example: “I was recently at a commercial place that did oil changing and their reading was 2,004, and when I went yesterday it was 2,008, so from Monday until yesterday they used 4,000 gallons on a toilet leak.”

Although only 70 of the city’s 30,000 accounts are on FIREFLY units, each one has yielded success, Santoyo notes. Ventura has divided its 30,000 accounts into eight series and will use the FIREFLY units on one series at a time.

The FIREFLY has been especially beneficial in Ventura’s water efficiency goals. The city has been working on a master water plan and needed data about the top 10 water users; the needed information was supplied by FIREFLY and passed on to city engineers.

Ventura also has installed FIREFLY units on 260 city parks meters in order to ascertain how much water the parks system uses as Ventura embarks on an assertive water conservation program.

Trying to get its citizens to buy in to the idea of water conservation can be challenging at times, Santoyo notes. One captive audience has been the city’s future residents: its children. The city has spearheaded a calendar contest for the past eight years called “Conserve Our Water,” inviting students to interpret with art ways in which water can be used more efficiently.

“We hope that by the more buzz we put out there, people are going to say they want one of [the FIREFLY units] at their house,” Santoyo says. “It does good work. It gives us what we want: the information on the profile, whether it’s residential or commercial usage.”

Ventura also plans to utilize Mosaic, Datamatic’s newest product release.

Company spokesman Todd Onsa describes Mosaic as a “mesh” network.

“Within Mosaic, each FIREFLY Meter Interface Unit also acts as a repeater. Data is ‘hopped’ between units as they create multiple, redundant pathways to the gateway. The system automatically circumvents issues and obstacles without human intervention to ensure the data arrives,” he says.

The Mosaic-class FIREFLYs will support complex monitoring functions.

“Users can define conditions that trigger the unit to transmit a packet of detailed usage data over the network for further analysis,” Onsa says.

The technology is especially useful during the implementation of water conservation measures.

“New watering schedules can be ‘pushed’ to each FIREFLY through the mesh,” says Onsa. “If a customer should exceed these new thresholds, the FIREFLY can be set to automatically transmit hour-by-hour usage for the two days preceding and following the event. This functionality eliminates the need to endlessly patrol streets searching for conservation violators and provides the concrete evidence necessary for effective enforcement.”

Other applications include detailed load studies based on geographic or demographic criteria, near real-time leak detection, and flagging usage on inactive accounts, says Onsa.

“This approach allows the utility to focus on specific issues and not on storing ever-growing volumes of data from normally functioning meters—although Mosaic can be configured to do this as well,” he adds.

Mosaic also is the first AMR system able to go from walk-by AMR to mobile AMR to full “mesh” network reading with the same meter interface unit, as opposed to a system of walk-by/mobile with one MIU and fixed network with another.

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Ventura officials anticipate using the Mosaic with success. “You always have that historical data at your PC because it goes to a gateway, which calls it up. Plus, it’s wireless,” says Santoyo. “We’re able to have profiles of every customer in that series and tell them their amount of usage over the phone.” Presently, Ventura employs two full-time meter readers for all of the accounts, which are read bi-monthly.

“They are hoofing it as it is, so this is going to give them more of a cushion,” Santoyo notes of the FIREFLY units.

Author's Bio: Journalist Carol Brzozowski lives in Coral Springs, FL.

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