Guardian Water Treatment at the Facilities Event

3rd April 2019

Guardian’s MD, Steven Booth, will be discussing how monitoring can avoid some of the issues associated with water system handover at the Facilities Event. Speaking alongside Steve Munn from Hevasure, the seminar will take place on Wednesday 10th April from 11.30 – 12.00.

The Facilities Event takes place from the 9th – 11th April at the NEC in Birmingham and is free to attend. Visit www.facilitiesevents.com to register.

What’s wrong with handover?

As an FM you are often at the mercy of other people’s mistakes; the bottom of the food chain following installers, consultants, and commissioning engineers. When it comes to closed-circuit water systems, essential for all HVAC plant, the potential issues are exacerbated as the methods used to check condition and then consequently handover a system are largely outdated.

Traditionally, sampling is used during and after pre-commissioning cleaning to determine that water is clean and free from the contaminants that can lead to system fouling and corrosion further down the line. Sampling has a number of inherent problems, however:

  • It only provides a snap shot in time
  • Results can take days, if not weeks to return
  • This process doesn’t effectively detect for dissolved oxygen – the pre-cursor to almost all types of corrosion

A ‘good’ sample, used as proof of a clean bill of health, therefore, can be misleading.

Oxygen issues

As mentioned, dissolved oxygen is the pre-cursor to all forms of corrosion, either directly or by creating the right conditions for bacteria to thrive. Sampling does not effectively detect for oxygen, it focuses on bacteria, which is the result of a problem and not necessarily a reliable indicator. In closed-circuit systems where there is no risk to human health, when free-flowing (the point at which they are detectable by sampling), bacteria is doing no real harm. Biofilm on the pipe wall is the real issue, a state that is hard to identify with a water sample.

Another way

The answer is 24/7 real-time monitoring, tracking a range of parameters including the all-important dissolved oxygen, pressure, pH, inhibitor levels, temperature and corrosion rates.

Monitoring can begin during pre-commissioning cleaning, become a key part of the handover process and continue throughout a water systems life to ensure small issues are nipped in the bud and maintenance regimes are exacting to the requirements of the individual system.

For FMs, this ultimately means control – results are sent straight to their inbox, with no need for expensive consultants.

Hevasure’s monitoring technology has helped Guardian’s clients save thousands of pounds, due to the avoidance of breakdown, expensive repairs and off-plan call outs. Many issues that monitoring flags up can be dealt with in-house.

Don’t leave it to chance; real-time monitoring is the only way to ensure that when you’re handed a new water system it is free from hidden problems.