Episode list

Practical Engineering

The 100 Year Flood Is Not What You Think It Is (Maybe)
The hundred year flood concept is important in the United States because it determines coverage for the National Flood Insurance Program. The program covers real estate that is likely to be flood once every one hundred years or equivalently has a one percent change of flooding in any given year.
0 /10
How Do Sinkholes Form?
Sinkholes are caused by the great eroder, water, flowing below ground level. As the water from an underground stream or broken drainage pipe flows it dissolves or simply washes away subsurface soil creating a cavern. When the cavern reaches the surface the undisturbed top layer collapses into the sinkhole.
0 /10
How Water Towers Work
Water towers store water to meet peak demand avoiding the need to additional pumps. And by refilling overnight they take advantage of off peak energy.
0 /10
What is a Weir?

Sun, Feb 24, 2019
A weir is a dam that allows water to flow over the top. Their intent is to maintain water levels upstream from the weir at a stable level. But water flow in a river is not constant so hydrology engineers have a few tricks to handle changes in water flow.
0 /10
How Electricity Generation Really Works
We consumers receive electricity through the electrical grid which has a variety of devices producing electricity. Solar energy is unique among them in not having any inertia to satisfy peak loads. Most of the remaining devices, nuclear, fossil fuels, geothermal convert heat to steam to spin a turbine. The exceptions are wind and hydro which use kinetic energy to spin a turbine.
0 /10
Flow and Pressure in Pipes Explained
Grady demonstrates the variables in pipe manifolds that cause pressure loss such as length and diameter. Using an experimental rig complete with flow and pressure gauges he predicts pressure loss using the Hazen-Williams equation and Minor Loss equation.
0 /10
The Fluid Effects That Kill Pumps
Priming, cavitation and vortices all involve air in a pump and can cause it to fail, sometimes permanently. Liquid pumps can't pump air so they need to be primed (filled) with liquid when started. Cavitation is the formation and collapse of bubbles which damage the impeller. Vortices allow some air into a pump making it less efficient.
0 /10
What Really Happened at the Millennium Tower?
Like most of the high rises in San Francisco, the Millennium Tower is build on a foundation of clay using friction piles. But the Millennium Towers load is particularly high and removing ground water has accelerated the settling much more than expected. The solution now underway is to add external piles down to bedrock.
0 /10
Why Retaining Walls Collapse
Engineers use retaining walls to prevent earth from moving at construction sites. But it isn't as simple as building a wall. Retaining walls have to be anchored. There are several effective ways to do so but the earth may still offer some surprises.
0 /10
What Really Happened During the 2003 Blackout?
Electrical power tends to have a mind of i's own traveling according to the laws of physics rather than human instructions. It is up to grid controllers to match supply and demand. But in Cleveland in 2003 their computer alarms were offline so they were working blind to a grown series of failures.
0 /10
The Most Mindblowing Infrastructure in My City
San Antonio's water resources range from drought to flash flood. Grady provides a tour of the city's water resource management systems. Since they were designed to be harmonize with nature his tour also includes many of San Antonio's parks.
0 /10
How French Drains Work
Controling subsurface water is essential to the integrity of any structure. The solution engineers most often turn to is the french drain.
0 /10

Edit Focus

All Filters