Tag:waterway=pressurised

waterway=pressurised
Description
An artificial waterway where water flows in a closed space without air 
Group: Waterways
Used on these elements
Useful combination
Status: approved

Pipe flow regime

This key is intended to map artificial conduits where water is found permanently pipe flowing in a closed space without air. As water is filling all space available in the conduit, it applies a positive static pressure on the conduit walls.
The conduit can be either a pipeline or a tunnel. This is specified by adding man_made=pipeline or tunnel=* to the way tagged waterway=pressurised.
Pressurised waterways require an intake below the water level at all time as to preven any air to get inside the conduit. It's not only a physical constraint but air can cause heavy damages on equipment expected to run with no air. There is usually no change in flowing regime as pressurised waterways require special design to run.

A "pipe flow regime" is one of the three main flow regimes of liquid water. This regime is obtained by design when the intake of the conduit is built below the lowest water level the source can reach. This is the only use case of waterway=pressurised.

How to map

Waterways are mapped as ways: draw a line, starting at the intake, in the direction of the flow of water. Tag with waterway=pressurised Then, add man_made=pipeline, tunnel=culvert or tunnel=flooded depending of the nature of the conduit. Look at those keys pages for more information. Remember that the water conduit must start at an intake placed below water level.

Pressurised waterways can be added as a member of Relation:waterway with the role side_stream or main_stream depending of the situation.

There is actually no problem to use pressurised consecutively with any other waterway=* value depending of successive regime you find along the same watercourse.

Usage

Such waterways are found in water transmission, irrigation and hydropower systems which need large amount of water.
Depending on conduit usage, you can put usage=* with those values :

LOADING TAG LIST...

Examples

Headraces

Photo Tagging Note

waterway=pressurised
tunnel=flooded
usage=headrace
location=underground
diameter=4900
operator=*

Horizontal tunnels carrying water from intakes to penstocks. Such ways have a pipe flow regime, their inlet are always below the water level and no air can get inside.

waterway=pressurised
man_made=pipeline
substance=water
usage=headrace
tunnel=yes
location=underground
operator=*
access=private

The most complete case with a headrace pipeline hosted in a human accessible tunnel in operation.
This is the only situation where man_made=pipeline is used in combination with tunnel=* on the same way.

On all parts, use: waterway=pressurised
man_made=pipeline
substance=water
usage=headrace
operator=*

On the bridge part, use:
bridge=aqueduct

On the underground part, use:
location=underground

A big siphon allowing water to cross a valley. Only half side is visible on the picture, tunnels or pipelines are connecting each side at equivalent altitudes. The siphon is a pipe flow waterway.

Penstocks

Photo Tagging Note

waterway=pressurised
man_made=pipeline
substance=water
usage=penstock
operator=*
location=overground
diameter=1200
pressure=70 bar

Metallic penstocks feeding a power plant down the mountain. No air can get inside and water goes pipe flow

waterway=pressurised
operator=*
man_made=pipeline
substance=water
usage=penstock
location=underground
diameter=2800
direction=both

Vertical or inclined pressure shafts are shielded as pipeline without tubes. Pipes are connected upstream and downstream.

See the two vertical shafts on the power plant digital model and some pics of how it was built with a raise drill machine.
Since Nant de Drance power plant can pump water back, penstocks, tunnels and shafts get direction=both.

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