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Emergency: California’s Oroville Dam Spillway Near Failure, Evacuations Ordered
Breitbart ^ | Feb 12, 2017 | Joel B. Pollak1

Posted on 02/12/2017 4:26:47 PM PST by janetjanet998

Edited on 02/12/2017 9:33:58 PM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]

The California Department of Water Resources issued a sudden evacuation order shortly before 5 p.m. Sunday for residents near the Oroville Dam in northern California, warning that the dam’s emergency spillway would fail in the next 60 minutes.

The Oroville Dam is the highest in the nation.


TOPICS: Breaking News; News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: butte; california; dam; dwr; evacuation; lakeoroville; liveoroville; moonbeamcanyon; moonbeammadness; oroville; orovilledam; orovillelive; runaway; spillway; sutter; water; yuba
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To: abb; mad_as_he$$
Yes, very much a building frustration situation. This was one of the wildest episodes of the series I've ever seen. Fistfight broke out - Dave was hit & had a black eye. Took the whole team of members to wrestle Dave & hold him to the ground. Very intense.

FReeper mad_as_he$$ can give you his perspective on his view.... the intensity was such that the camera people were kept away at times as stakes & emotions were high in trying to salvage the situation (friendships, team,...). There are two sides to each story... felt there was more information to what built up to this that was not revealed (Dave had a reason for frustration towards this situation, just an unfortunate "slip" statement at the wrong moment triggered it).

2,581 posted on 03/21/2017 5:08:16 AM PDT by EarthResearcher333
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To: mad_as_he$$
>>>Granddaddy of this? http://i.imgur.com/39EF2P5.jpg <<

What an unbelievable monster. I believe that Bucket Wheel machine was in Germany - most of these beasts are used for brown coal mining.



2,582 posted on 03/21/2017 5:59:19 AM PDT by EarthResearcher333
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To: EarthResearcher333

That thing looks like a crossbreed between a giant Tonka toy and a Transformer. :)


2,583 posted on 03/21/2017 6:06:54 AM PDT by meyer (The Constitution says what it says, and it doesn't say what it doesn't say.)
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To: EarthResearcher333; All

This link https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nOnDeAIgUo8 is a short video of the construction of the dam. It shows that machine in operation. As add supposed,”They must have been classifying the aggregate prior to conveying to the dam site.” They mention that and you can see two conveyor belts.

This link is to a longer version. It has more info on the train and material placement. Worth watching to the end. BVB

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=how56Jem9ZU


2,584 posted on 03/21/2017 10:01:01 AM PDT by Bobsvainbabblings
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To: EarthResearcher333; All

This video fits in with your post #2579...

https://m.youtube.com/watch?feature=em-subs_digest&v=OcjXPpRLSM4


2,585 posted on 03/21/2017 12:00:29 PM PDT by meyer (The Constitution says what it says, and it doesn't say what it doesn't say.)
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To see how the dam fit the landscape a current topographic map was superimposed with one pre-dating the dam. The older map showed a stream originating on the hill adjacent to the spillway, in the vicinity of "841" near the center of the map, the stream does not appear on the current map. I doesn't really matter, I just thought it was an interesting feature.


fig 1

 

Flowing water cuts a "v" shaped profile into hillsides. Some of these profiles are highlighted in blue on this map:


fig 2

 

Here is an overall view of the complex prior to the emergency. The profiles highlighted in figure 2 are visible in this photo.


fig 3

 

This photo shows the heavily eroded area downstream from the emergency spillway.


fig 4

 

Several channels were cut.


fig 5

 

The channels in figure 5 correlate with the flows illustrated in figure 2 (channels A and C), and with a road (channel B-blue).


fig 6


So...

1) the topography was known, stream cuts are obvious
2) the geology was known, the weathered "rotten" rock was known
3) the emergency spillway is expected to be used

Water followed known paths. The erosion was foreseeable. It was foreseeable yet not mitigated. Why not?


Another question is, why is the erosion most severe at the head of channel B?

 

2,586 posted on 03/21/2017 12:41:25 PM PDT by Ray76 (DRAIN THE SWAMP)
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To: Ray76
Water leaving the spillway at the blowout is following a predictable path.

In figure 2 water to the left of the spillway runs roughly parallel to the spillway, takes a brief jog toward the spillway, and then moves progressively further from the spillway.

In figure 2 water to the right of the spillway runs roughly parallel to the spillway, bows sharply away from the spillway, and then returns to a roughly parallel course down to the river.

That's pretty much what happened:

2,587 posted on 03/21/2017 1:01:36 PM PDT by Ray76 (DRAIN THE SWAMP)
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To: Ray76
Hi Ray76, the answers to your questions require starting way back at the original total flood control "concept" design. From this starting point, thereon followed a historical accounting of engineering testing, analysis, expert inputs & change process - forming long series of design decisions. These design decisions fall into "Engineering Judgement". Along the way, some interesting events occurred (very important "tradeoff decisions"). To get this understanding, a person has to walk back through all of the design archives & studies, and reconstruct the process, to see how some original design specifications were transitioned into "assumptions"** when non-solution space was encountered.

**Assumptions: Term to identify where unanticipated alternate solution options were chosen where the decision(s) had a sense of a political tradeoff. "Political" in the sense of a decision that did not have the "scrutiny" of the engineering processes of the prior decisions. Whether this was done because of schedule reasons, cost reasons, plain assumption, or "being overruled" is not stated (not stated fully in the archives), but is recognizable by experienced engineers familiar with large & complex projects were command decisions occur.

I will post more on some key decisions and their significant impact on the MS & ES final design.

2,588 posted on 03/21/2017 6:34:46 PM PDT by EarthResearcher333
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To: EarthResearcher333

Political solutions are a huge issue when government takes on tasks that have real-world consequences down the road. It happens a lot, but usually with less risk. And it generally seems to happen well after the errant politician(s) are out of office.

I’m with TVA - we are quite the quasi-government outfit. I see stuff that is generally jaw-dropping. Then again, with Obama’s war on coal, I have the whole electric power industry do some jaw-dropping things.


2,589 posted on 03/21/2017 7:19:20 PM PDT by meyer (The Constitution says what it says, and it doesn't say what it doesn't say.)
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To: meyer
Hi meyer, I was desiring to differentiate the word "political" from politicians. Rather "political" in the realm of the Oroville "project engineering process". Politics, from Greek: Politiká definition of "affairs of the cities", in this case would be the "affairs of the project"; whereas it is the process of making decisions applying to all members of each group (geologists, scientists, civil engineers, construction specialists, mechanical engineers, hydraulic fluid flow researchers, logistics, & historical meteorological experts). Of course, there is a reconciliation of the total project to the ever influential "projected costs & budgeting".

When such entities encounter critical design issues, the dynamics of this "political sense of engineering" may result in consequential outcomes. THE MOST consequential outcome, for Oroville's Flood Control scheme, originated in the hydraulic fluid flow test studies. A huge problem forced a re-design of the original concept, that ultimately led to the design as it is today. From the series of events that followed, a decision tree may be traced that reveals a "political dynamic" in tradeoffs that occurred.

2,590 posted on 03/21/2017 8:10:50 PM PDT by EarthResearcher333
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To: Ray76
Hi Ray76, FYI - Here's a superimposed photo of DWR's captured geologic 3D image data with your original topo map & stream denotations. There is an addition topographic inferred stream erosion path marked in blue arrows. This path follows the edge of the main spillway. Note: the 3D perspective image is rotated in the Z axis with respect to the topo map. This shifts a bit of the alignment references (such as historic roads).



2,591 posted on 03/21/2017 9:22:58 PM PDT by EarthResearcher333
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To: EarthResearcher333; All

Another Juan Browne update video. In part of it, he explains the reason that the rock bolts are sticking out rather than counter-sunk...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c16dr9qzlZY


2,592 posted on 03/22/2017 7:48:59 AM PDT by meyer (The Constitution says what it says, and it doesn't say what it doesn't say.)
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Related:

http://www.kolotv.com/content/news/1-million-Chinook-salmon-rescued-during-dam-crisis-released-416794623.html


2,593 posted on 03/22/2017 9:50:29 AM PDT by mad_as_he$$ (Rick Grimes Rules.)
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To: mad_as_he$$
Some DWR pictures
Feb 22 , 2017

source: https://twitter.com/CA_DWR/status/834573813249486848


Mar 10, 2017

source: https://twitter.com/CA_DWR/status/840304624909266944


2,594 posted on 03/22/2017 11:48:47 AM PDT by Ray76 (DRAIN THE SWAMP)
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Feb 28

source: http://abc30.com/news/oroville-dam-spillway-water-shut-off-to-clear-debris/1777218/

2,595 posted on 03/22/2017 1:27:58 PM PDT by Ray76 (DRAIN THE SWAMP)
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To: Ray76; Grampa Dave; Jim 0216; WildHighlander57; meyer; Repeal The 17th; KC Burke; Oldexpat; ...
Politics of Engineering Judgement: How Failure is introduced…

Continuing from a discussion:... "When such entities encounter critical design issues, the dynamics of this "political sense of engineering" may result in consequential outcomes. THE MOST consequential outcome, for Oroville's Flood Control scheme, originated from a crisis from hydraulic fluid flow test studies. A huge problem forced a re-design of the original concept, that ultimately led to the design as it is today. From the series of events that followed, a decision tree may be traced that reveals a "political dynamic" in tradeoffs that occurred."...

= =

The information below reveals the evidence of "political forms of engineering decisions" that resulted in a flawed total spillway design (true specs/performance) & violated the norms of high standards of dam engineering safety assurance. By simply "deeming" the use of a Weir based Emergency Spillway as "infrequent" and exceeding estimates of 10,000 yr maximum usage conditions, a "rationale was justified" to allow a "political solution" to introduce a significant design flaw in engineering judgement. This dangerous "rationale" justification propagated into other evidence of lesser importance consideration factors including non-anchoring of the Weir, non-concern for damaging erosion, no consideration to construct armor protection of the hillside, make the Weir long enough as needed to meet a flow "number", etc. All justified due to an introduced "reasoned minimal use" of a long Emergency Spillway Weir [6]. LEFT OUT of this "rationale" was the imperative safety necessity of REDUNDANCY in case of failure. i.e. The Main Spillway became supercritical in that any failure to the Main Spillway structure HAD NO backup (no redundancy as ES had high risk - unproven/tested [5]- and validated to be flawed) & that could risk the entire dam.

These type of "rationale" justified decisions, that lack a full comprehensive engineering thoroughness, is what leads to grand failures (in the politics of engineering judgement).

The Original Oroville Dam Spillway was presented to the public where it had a design capable of handling standard condition floods up to 440,000 cfs and worst case floods up to 720,000 cfs (reservoir inflow). As presented, the public could be assured that the design could handle worst case conditions such as the 1861-1862 MegaFlood. To meet this criteria, the flood control spillway was originally designed for a total 620,000 cfs flow using a massive "delta" set of combined gate structures of a "main" and "emergency" headworks. See the Artist's concept painting [1]. IN this design, there is NO erodible hillside flow spillway [2].

Then a Crisis occurred in scale model testing of this design. "Fins", "Standing Waves", and "monster splashing" (up to 100+ ft re: model scale) were becoming too challenging to resolve [3][4]. Turbulence and Eddy swirls aggravated the challenge. The cost of the fixes, in the fix design construction, was becoming more extensive from deeper rock excavation and higher concrete volume requirements. In the summation of these mounting design challenges, the California Department of Water Resources stepped in and made a "command decision" to break the combined design into two separate structures[5]; A main spillway with a separate Emergency Spillway Weir (as it is today & Failed at 12,000+ cfs [6]).

+Image [1] Original Design proposed to the public for funding - a combined high capacity spillway - Artist's concept painting.

+Image [2] Original Spillway design with Combined Flood structure - 620,000 cfs total capacity (370,000 cfs main flow + 250,000 cfs emergency flow).

+Image [3] Original Spillway model testing reveals "Fins", "Standing Waves", and "monster splashing" (up to 100+ ft re: model scale) @ 620,000 cfs total capacity (370,000 cfs main flow + 250,000 cfs emergency flow).

+Image [4] 3rd round of "fixes" in model testing still reveals challenges @ 620,000 cfs total capacity (370,000 cfs main flow + 250,000 cfs emergency flow).

+Image [5] California Department of Water Resources steps in and makes a "command decision" ("political engineering") when faced with this design crisis challenge.

+Image [6] Failure is introduced from the "a political engineering decision" with flawed rationale/justification (excludes full scrutiny in engineering thoroughness).

Image [1] Original Design proposed to the public for funding - a combined high capacity spillway - Artist's concept painting.


Image [2] Original Spillway design with Combined Flood structure - 620,000 cfs total capacity (370,000 cfs main flow + 250,000 cfs emergency flow).


Image [3] Original Spillway model testing reveals "Fins", "Standing Waves", and "monster splashing" (up to 100+ ft re: model scale) @ 620,000 cfs total capacity (370,000 cfs main flow + 250,000 cfs emergency flow).


Image [4] 3rd round of "fixes" in model testing still reveals challenges @ 620,000 cfs total capacity (370,000 cfs main flow + 250,000 cfs emergency flow). Note the "hand control angle experimentation" of vanes by engineers.


Image [5] California Department of Water Resources steps in and makes a "command decision" ("political engineering") when faced with this design crisis challenge.


Image [6] Failure is introduced from the "a political engineering decision" with flawed rationale/justification (excludes full scrutiny in engineering thoroughness).



2,596 posted on 03/22/2017 9:29:46 PM PDT by EarthResearcher333
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To: EarthResearcher333

I don’t know...something bothers me about the whole idea...
I have a problem with the concept of building something like that
and capturing that much emery and having no way of neutralizing it.
Like charging a capacitor with no way of grounding it,
or building a bomb with no way to defuse it.
I know they put two ‘bottom drains’ in the original design, but
they did not have the capacity to handle the river load,
and are currently non-functional.


2,597 posted on 03/22/2017 9:38:27 PM PDT by Repeal The 17th (I was conceived in liberty, how about you?)
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To: Repeal The 17th
Dams have been very instrumental in regulating flood conditions (via a reservoir buffer & controlled releases). The immense need for water for agriculture & the public created a necessity for managing (capturing) a precious resource.

Your analogy of the charged cap & live bomb is accurate. There cannot be any major flaws - especially in safety factor & redundancies. Losing a dam is not an option.

2,598 posted on 03/22/2017 10:01:18 PM PDT by EarthResearcher333
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To: EarthResearcher333
The dam I am most familiar with is the one I grew up around.
This is Sinclair Dam forming Lake Sinclair between Milledgeville and Eatonton, Georgia.
It was built in 1954 by Georgia Power as a hydro dam,
Mama and Daddy took me out there on weekend picnics to watch the lake fill up.

There are 24 flood gates in the old river bed that can drain the entire 15,000 acre lake.
The generation capacity is to the left of the gates,
behind a wall discharging into what we always called the "tail race"
which was a great fishing spot, by the way.
I have stood downstream and watched when 12 of the 24 gates were wide open
(every other one) and it looked liked a flood of biblical proportions.
But, my point is, the energy that was captured here could be neutralized.
I do not see any way to do that at the Oroville Dam.
2,599 posted on 03/22/2017 10:23:01 PM PDT by Repeal The 17th (I was conceived in liberty, how about you?)
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To: Repeal The 17th
"I have stood downstream and watched when 12 of the 24 gates were wide open (every other one) and it looked liked a flood of biblical proportions.

Yes, Oroville's Dam location, massive size/elevation & reservoir to flood control inlet elevations, creates a very significant energy potential. The hydro plant is not designed to handle an emergency situation to "neutralize" an accumulated reservoir head.

btw- Sinclair Dam is a perfect example -to compare to Oroville's ES specs- of a flood control gate structure designed for a total combined 240,000 cfs flow capacity (each gate is rated at/near 10,000 cfs). [Technically, the flood control gates would lower the lake/reservoir to the height of the lowest elevation of the flood control gate inlets. The hydro plant inlet is lower and its flow would further "lower the lake" below the flood gate inlets.]

Twice of what you saw flowing is 10,000 cfs short of Oroville's specified ES rating of 250,000 cfs. Imagine the hydraulic armageddon of the hillside and undermining of the Weir at the existing Oroville ES design...,

Back to Lake Sinclair...

From your description, the topology of the reservoir indicates that a significant amount of the shoreline dimensions & volume reduction capability occur from a "gate elevation" release perspective (surface area/volume reduction to the elevation of the flood control inlets). The Sinclair Dam flood control gates have the capacity to handle, in your terms, a "biblical outflow" - in matching a combined equivalent inflow. Since you observed just half of the capacity flow (assuming the starting water head elevation was at/near max) of 120,000 cfs, just imagine twice this flow if all 24 gates were opened (I believe your fishing holes -fish- may experience quite a "ride" i.e. become involuntary flying fish).

2,600 posted on 03/23/2017 7:13:08 AM PDT by EarthResearcher333
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