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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Water utilities departments throughout the United States face a host of issues these days as water conservation becomes an increasingly important concern in municipal water management. To that end, many are turning to newer technologies, such as automatic meter reading and long-term data capturing, to help ensure accuracy in meter reading.

One such system making its mark is the Datamatic FIREFLY Meter Interface Unit (MIU), which is being used for more accurate readings of water, electric, and gas meters. The system is being deployed to address a number of concerns: settling customer usage disputes; detection of water waste, leaks, and loss; and monitoring and enforcing water conservation measures, long-term master planning, and even meter-reader safety.

The system works as such: The FIREFLY MIU is an integrated automatic meter reader (AMR) that uses radio frequency to transmit current water usage and alert data from the FIREFLY-equipped meter to a Roadrunner handheld unit, a mobile automatic meter reading receiver, or a fixed network. The RouteSTAR meter reading application receives the uploaded data from the Roadrunner receivers, enabling utility departments to manage the data for billing through ProfilePLUS.

The units can be set up to archive usage data at intervals defined by the user. A meter can be set to record at 60-minute intervals for more than 74 days, for example. The AMR units are universally compatible for installation on any type of existing meter.

High-Desert AMR
It had become apparent in Hesperia, CA—a city located in a high-desert area 75 miles northeast of Los Angeles—that the population of 80,000 residents was rapidly increasing, and among the many issues that needed to be addressed to accommodate the growth was streamlining water meter reading. Additionally, Hesperia had been receiving up to 30 complaints per month from water utility customers surprised by their bills.

“We start receiving complaints about high water bills at the onset of winter, after they have had a hot summer and they’ve watered everything they could water,” says Danny Knight, a supervisor for Hesperia.

In addition, as construction ramps up in the city, contractors are building tract homes with lawns that require watering maintenance.

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“This is a desert,” Knight points out. “People moving here come from areas where nice, green, lush lawns exist. They don’t exist very well here without a lot of water. Along with leaks, we’re finding the watering times are excessive. Water is expensive here—it’s our cheapest utility, but it is still real expensive.”

In an effort to address the challenges, city officials reviewed products from five manufacturers before choosing Datamatic. Hesperia deployed a FIREFLY system in 2000 to help monitor its 28,000 meters.  With the company’s technology providing profiling, it enabled the city to track water consumption and check for leaks in the previous 74 days to the reading date, thus aiding the city’s utility department to resolve issues customers had with water bills. Next Page >

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