Extremely informative and extremely accurate. Ive been working on water and wastewater plants for the last 5 years doing electrical and control systems. This video depicted it perfectly. Ive seen older systems and newer systems at this point.
Very cool video. Very similar to the plant I work at. Our trickler media isn't plastic, but special rocks. And we don't have a belt press for sludge, but a centrifuge. We also introduce bisulfite to eliminate residual chlorine.
I have a question I've always been curious about, in my town, there is a place just called Water Treatment Plant, not waste water. And outside there is a small resevoire of water that looks similar to a swimming pool, it's not like those big round ones and this is in a residential area, so I assume the water is clean, or at least not waste water. Do you have any clue what an operation t like THAT is? I'm assuming it's where maybe the opposite of a waste water plant, and maybe it's where the water is pulled in from the rivers and purified to be sent out.... But I've always been curious
@@jonnaking3054 could be a treatment process, although if there is just one it seems unlikely. Could be a sludge holding tank (stores the muck taken out of treated water) or a dirty backwash tank. Dirty backwash is the water used to clean filter media. Filters get clogged with dirt over time and the flow through them in reversed to clean the dirt off them, this is sometimes stored in a tank and then pumped to the front of the treatment works. Its hard to say., let me know the address of the works and ill have a look on google earth.
@@dwall2 sorry for late response, but the address is 200 Bell Street McMinnville TN, it was close to my house growing up and it always looked like a swimming pool complete with life preservers , underwater lights, and a "fountain"!!!! I always thought they just needed picnic tables 😆 and it's right in a residential area There is a waste water plant in town too but it's off in a more secluded area,
This video is SO good and education, I hope you are giong to do a new video on the new treatment plant so we can contrast/compare the new technologies used there
At my childhood my school teacher took a trip or we called an excursion to a water purification plant...i still remembered...I was scared after looking at that big water tank and we were walking beside a thin path.....and same day I saw it in my dream ...and was much scared ..even today I have fear of water if i thought that day
Kazakhstan home of Tinshein swimming pool. It’s length thirty meter and width six meter. Filtration system a marvel to behold. It remove 80 percent of human solid waste. Great success!! 👍🏼🇰🇿👍🏼
7:24 into the video flies, roaches and rats are NOT attracted to this new material as flies buzz around the new material hahah, I had to look twice haha, impressive but is it true or no?
I noticed that the storage of the wastewater treatment plant on this video were mainly concrete, while with the development of technology many wastewater treatment plant have been using glass lined steel tanks to replace concrete storage during the process
its really awesome video sir... i am a teacher can i use it for education purpose... i want to translate it into kannada(Indian language) with some changes...
ప్రతి మూసి డాం డిస్ట్రిక్ట్ లో ఇలాంటి మిషనరీ ఉండాలి గ్రామపంచాయతీ నుంచి ప్రతి ఒక్కరికి ఇంకుడు గుంత సహాయము సహకారము ఉండాలి ఇంకుడు గుంత లేకుండా ఇల్లు కట్టవద్దని నిబంధనలు పెట్టాలి ఇంకుడు గుంత గవర్నమెంట్ గ్రామీణ సహాయం ఉండాలి
For the people who work at the water plants can you please clarify for tax purposes which capital allowances do you claim? Is this whole process considered as a manufacturing process or not?
Please I work in biological treatment plant and I have a serious challenge....my final effullent water is usually dark and in the one of our Lucas tank sludge is floating on top of the water.... please what can we do better
That sounds like an issue the plant administrators need to deal with. How is the plant passing its reporting requirements in your state? It almost sounds like some "anonymous" person needs to contact your state's regulatory agency that deals with wastewater treatment and let them know of the issues.
to design and maintain a facility like this, it takes a team of chemical engineers, environmental engineers, mechanical engineers (designing the pump systems, rotary arms, etc) civil engineers (geotechnical for the ground preparation, structural/precast engineers for the retaining basin designs), a construction team, and plant workers/technicians!
They left a key part out - you can't discharge chlorinated effluent into a receiving body of water, or it would then kill off naturally growing flora. The chlorine has to be neutralized before the effluent is discharged. As for the sludge, what makes you think it's toxic?
@@whiteknightcat Oh good I was hoping that would be the case. The sludge is likely full of pharmaceuticals heavy metals forever chemicals microplastics etc. Correct me if Im wrong.
@@angelaloof852 If you're referring to the treated effluent, it will either flow downstream to other surface bodies of water or percolate through the ground to water tables below. In either case, water treatment plants can be constructed to draw water out of the surface water bodies (lakes and rivers) or from the water table via wells. The water is then treated appropriately and distributed out through water distribution systems that can eventually end at ... your faucets.
@@angelaloof852 wastewater operators make sure the water has been treated enough so that it is safe for discharge to flora and fauna in rivers and lakes and such but really shouldn't be injested. Downstream will be a water treatment plant that makes the water safe to injest and come in contact with.
I have a question I've always been curious about, in my town, there is a place just called Water Treatment Plant, not waste water. And outside there is a small resevoire of water that looks similar to a swimming pool, it's not like those big round ones and this is in a residential area, so I assume the water is clean, or at least not waste water. Do you have any clue what an operation t like THAT is? I'm assuming it's where maybe the opposite of a waste water plant, and maybe it's where the water is pulled in from the rivers and purified to be sent out.... But I've always been curious
Looks like no one answered your question, so I'll bite! That Water Treatment Plant (WTP) you're asking about is most likely being used to do just what you thought, to clean up water and send it off to people to drink. And you are right, the plant shown in this video is the exact opposite of the plant you've seen! The water that a WTP produces is normally held to much higher standards than what a Sewage Treatment Plant is, because the treated water that humans drink needs to be much cleaner than the treated water that a healthy creek or river should receive from a sewage plant.
what do you think we're really drinking......it's a solid.....fact that were the only species on earth that deficates in their own drinking water and there's some other shit i can put on here too so yea
Treated effluent IS used for such purposes where practical, except in rare instances. I think there are only 2 or 3 places in Texas, for example, where treated effluent is returned as a raw water source for the water treatment process. Also consider ... the streams and creeks in which effluent is released eventually flow into rivers and lakes, lakes from which another utility dozens or hundreds of miles away may use as a raw water source. It all gets recycled eventually - only the number of intermediate steps differs.
I have one question. Taking the waste after screening to the landfills is very harmful to the planet earth. Is there anyway this could be reused than taking it to landfills?
I will continue to flush “flushable wipes” intentionally as a protest to the fact these facilities do not have any modernized features and rely heavily on outdated methods of water treatment. There’s a reason purifiers are becoming increasingly popular, and Americans are fed up with the lack of infrastructure upkeep due to constant political grifting. It’s time we rid ourselves entirely of the current water system and recreated it from scratch. Also I ain’t about to give up the luxury of flushing my rank ass wipes.
Extremely informative and extremely accurate. Ive been working on water and wastewater plants for the last 5 years doing electrical and control systems. This video depicted it perfectly. Ive seen older systems and newer systems at this point.
Question, where exactly does all like the dirt, and waste go?
How did you get into controls work if j might ask? Currently a water and sewer operator and thinking of trying to get into controls
I am an EE and PE in NJ. This is all I do plans for..interesting!
Brother i need the information related waste water plant
Pls send your whatsap number
Very cool video. Very similar to the plant I work at. Our trickler media isn't plastic, but special rocks. And we don't have a belt press for sludge, but a centrifuge. We also introduce bisulfite to eliminate residual chlorine.
I have a question I've always been curious about, in my town, there is a place just called Water Treatment Plant, not waste water. And outside there is a small resevoire of water that looks similar to a swimming pool, it's not like those big round ones and this is in a residential area, so I assume the water is clean, or at least not waste water. Do you have any clue what an operation t like THAT is? I'm assuming it's where maybe the opposite of a waste water plant, and maybe it's where the water is pulled in from the rivers and purified to be sent out.... But I've always been curious
@@jonnaking3054 could be a treatment process, although if there is just one it seems unlikely. Could be a sludge holding tank (stores the muck taken out of treated water) or a dirty backwash tank. Dirty backwash is the water used to clean filter media. Filters get clogged with dirt over time and the flow through them in reversed to clean the dirt off them, this is sometimes stored in a tank and then pumped to the front of the treatment works.
Its hard to say., let me know the address of the works and ill have a look on google earth.
@@dwall2 sorry for late response, but the address is 200 Bell Street McMinnville TN, it was close to my house growing up and it always looked like a swimming pool complete with life preservers , underwater lights, and a "fountain"!!!! I always thought they just needed picnic tables 😆 and it's right in a residential area
There is a waste water plant in town too but it's off in a more secluded area,
@@jonnaking3054 just had a look, yeah its a water treatment works, those open tanks are part of the treatment process.
@@jonnaking3054 it’s most likely a drinking water treatment plant. Depending on the size of your population. 😊
I work at laboratory that processes wastewater samples. Great video!
This video is SO good and education, I hope you are giong to do a new video on the new treatment plant so we can contrast/compare the new technologies used there
Interesting how different treatment plants are around the country.
I've always heard the initial filter referred to as the bar screen.
@@whiteknightcatthat’s how we refer to them as bar racks. However our setup is much different then the bar steps both achieve similar outcome.
@@whiteknightcat I always called them bar screens too
Thanks bro very very very helpful❤❤❤❤
this video was great! thank you so much. I was wondering, what do you do with the remaining water that's squeezed out of the sludge at the belt press?
Most likely the water squeezed out by belt presses is pumped or gravity fed back to head works aka the beginning of the process.
At my childhood my school teacher took a trip or we called an excursion to a water purification plant...i still remembered...I was scared after looking at that big water tank and we were walking beside a thin path.....and same day I saw it in my dream ...and was much scared ..even today I have fear of water if i thought that day
nycc incredible video🤗😽
Kazakhstan home of Tinshein swimming pool. It’s length thirty meter and width six meter. Filtration system a marvel to behold. It remove 80 percent of human solid waste. Great success!!
👍🏼🇰🇿👍🏼
We at Pure Water For All Foundation have been working on this problem for decades in over 50 countries. We have fantastic results.
😂😢😮😅🎉😊
1:00 here's the replay button enjoy
😭bro, we drink poop water?
Yes you do
Very interesting video❤
7:24 into the video flies, roaches and rats are NOT attracted to this new material as flies buzz around the new material hahah, I had to look twice haha, impressive but is it true or no?
This is the kind of stuff must of us just take for granted,
SHOUT OUT to Croft 5th graders in Wayland Square, RI from Ms. Bergmark and Ms. Colson! GO CORGIS!
What's the name of the song on the intro?
do you have literature of the whole process. this good for reading about
I noticed that the storage of the wastewater treatment plant on this video were mainly concrete, while with the development of technology many wastewater treatment plant have been using glass lined steel tanks to replace concrete storage during the process
1:00 here's the repeat button, enjoy!
2:04 the sequel LOL
where are the screwpumps?
That belt press looks like an Andritz belt press just based on the plow design.
It probably is
All the corn at 1:25 😂
My teacher send this video
great teacher 👍
Are you a studying about this man?
Are you in class7
same
So that!
I watched this video in my school in computer lab and now I came home and i type in RUclips, waste water purification and i find this video......
what will be the overall cost to setup this treatment plant?pls repy
Superb 😀
Super bro
its really awesome video sir... i am a teacher can i use it for education purpose... i want to translate it into kannada(Indian language) with some changes...
nice video sir
Imagine swimming in that
Just think, you might end up swimming or even drinking that water at some point in your life.
@@RyanVorobiev-x8d Right lol
ప్రతి మూసి డాం డిస్ట్రిక్ట్ లో ఇలాంటి మిషనరీ ఉండాలి గ్రామపంచాయతీ నుంచి ప్రతి ఒక్కరికి ఇంకుడు గుంత సహాయము సహకారము ఉండాలి ఇంకుడు గుంత లేకుండా ఇల్లు కట్టవద్దని నిబంధనలు పెట్టాలి ఇంకుడు గుంత గవర్నమెంట్ గ్రామీణ సహాయం ఉండాలి
amil hensem
❤❤❤❤
For the people who work at the water plants can you please clarify for tax purposes which capital allowances do you claim? Is this whole process considered as a manufacturing process or not?
Where is this present place
The video specifically said "Spanish Fork". Google it and find out.
Please I work in biological treatment plant and I have a serious challenge....my final effullent water is usually dark and in the one of our Lucas tank sludge is floating on top of the water.... please what can we do better
That sounds like an issue the plant administrators need to deal with. How is the plant passing its reporting requirements in your state? It almost sounds like some "anonymous" person needs to contact your state's regulatory agency that deals with wastewater treatment and let them know of the issues.
Whose job is it: chemistry engineer biologist medical doctors or physiochemists?
All of them kinda ....
to design and maintain a facility like this, it takes a team of chemical engineers, environmental engineers, mechanical engineers (designing the pump systems, rotary arms, etc) civil engineers (geotechnical for the ground preparation, structural/precast engineers for the retaining basin designs), a construction team, and plant workers/technicians!
Thanks for making detailed video
These sludge is converted into biogas
Interesting. The chlorine water goes into the creek and the toxic sludge goes on our crops.
They left a key part out - you can't discharge chlorinated effluent into a receiving body of water, or it would then kill off naturally growing flora. The chlorine has to be neutralized before the effluent is discharged. As for the sludge, what makes you think it's toxic?
@@whiteknightcat Oh good I was hoping that would be the case. The sludge is likely full of pharmaceuticals heavy metals forever chemicals microplastics etc. Correct me if Im wrong.
@@whiteknightcathow does it end up coming out of our faucets?
@@angelaloof852 If you're referring to the treated effluent, it will either flow downstream to other surface bodies of water or percolate through the ground to water tables below. In either case, water treatment plants can be constructed to draw water out of the surface water bodies (lakes and rivers) or from the water table via wells. The water is then treated appropriately and distributed out through water distribution systems that can eventually end at ... your faucets.
@@angelaloof852 wastewater operators make sure the water has been treated enough so that it is safe for discharge to flora and fauna in rivers and lakes and such but really shouldn't be injested. Downstream will be a water treatment plant that makes the water safe to injest and come in contact with.
In India same thing happens but in large scale
2:04 enjoy
what kind of epoxy coating is used for the water pond?
I have a question I've always been curious about, in my town, there is a place just called Water Treatment Plant, not waste water. And outside there is a small resevoire of water that looks similar to a swimming pool, it's not like those big round ones and this is in a residential area, so I assume the water is clean, or at least not waste water. Do you have any clue what an operation t like THAT is? I'm assuming it's where maybe the opposite of a waste water plant, and maybe it's where the water is pulled in from the rivers and purified to be sent out.... But I've always been curious
Looks like no one answered your question, so I'll bite! That Water Treatment Plant (WTP) you're asking about is most likely being used to do just what you thought, to clean up water and send it off to people to drink. And you are right, the plant shown in this video is the exact opposite of the plant you've seen! The water that a WTP produces is normally held to much higher standards than what a Sewage Treatment Plant is, because the treated water that humans drink needs to be much cleaner than the treated water that a healthy creek or river should receive from a sewage plant.
what about all this drugs and chemicals that been flush to the toilet that will go to the land?
After seeing the poop i don't wanna drink water😢 2:03
Disturbing 😳
good!!!
This is my lesson bro
Excellent.👍👍
But what happens with all of the water after the treatment procedure is completed?
It is released into Dry Creek. (5:55)
Even I know that😂
what do you think we're really drinking......it's a solid.....fact that were the only species on earth that deficates in their own drinking water and there's some other shit i can put on here too so yea
Watching b4 parents 😅but couldn't understand only watching video at 2x speed
Look at all the corn for Ratty at 1:25
Treated sewage water should be used for irrigation and industrial purpose only
Treated effluent IS used for such purposes where practical, except in rare instances. I think there are only 2 or 3 places in Texas, for example, where treated effluent is returned as a raw water source for the water treatment process. Also consider ... the streams and creeks in which effluent is released eventually flow into rivers and lakes, lakes from which another utility dozens or hundreds of miles away may use as a raw water source. It all gets recycled eventually - only the number of intermediate steps differs.
Ohhh shhitt
I want to go fishing at one of water waste plants
wow
👍👍
1:35 Looks Like Rising River Water
గ్రామీణ చెరువులను మళ్లీ పునరుద్ధరించాలి
i like apple!!!
I have one question. Taking the waste after screening to the landfills is very harmful to the planet earth. Is there anyway this could be reused than taking it to landfills?
What is your Total EFF Phosphorus and Ammonia permit by concentration?
Im sitting here wondering why theres not dechlore
Anyone want a glass of water
1:10 😅
Who else is watching this while sitting on the toilet letting out a big one?
Chlorine
Chlorine
Chlorine
Digestor
Aerobic
Anerobic
15 days to degrade
Sludge
Belt press
Landfill
Cognizant
Soooo much corn
Do they wash it and repackage it in cans
Can’t see why not
I work at the waste water I be seeing everything from condom underwear an toothbrush an all
Hows the pay
I saw a peanut in that poop.
Who is from kahatan
We need this in Nepal😭😭😭..We don't have sewage treatment plants..so we drain the sewage directly into the rivers😭😭😭
Ohh my god
Am I right ✅
No
Hi, I want to use this video for a promotional video of departments with Walter treatment plant, than you
Ariel
g l a m o u r
Listen the word at 1:09
મારા ટિચરે આ વિડિયો ળતાવ્યો છે
💯🔥
your clarifiers are dirty, your sprayers have too little pressure, your cake is too wet. Do better.
Cyookok
In the UK we have a much more cost effective sysyem..... they just pump it straight out to sea 🤣
Lies, I work at one in Scotland, better than that this one in the video
Future is horrible
Video is good but kindly remove this shitty background music interfering with the script of the video.
Good pun sir 4:05
I will continue to flush “flushable wipes” intentionally as a protest to the fact these facilities do not have any modernized features and rely heavily on outdated methods of water treatment.
There’s a reason purifiers are becoming increasingly popular, and Americans are fed up with the lack of infrastructure upkeep due to constant political grifting. It’s time we rid ourselves entirely of the current water system and recreated it from scratch.
Also I ain’t about to give up the luxury of flushing my rank ass wipes.
🤢🤢
Sorry its either i flush the condom or I risk becoming a father by person with ill intentions lol😂
Garbage cans exist bro
Put hot sauce in it and throw it in trash can
Replace it with one from your worst enemy 😈
Thanks
ruclips.net/video/ZzUk_tDokB0/видео.html
my teacher send this video