Rotork Australia in spillway upgrade at Lauriston Reservoir

24/11/2006


Rotork Australia in spillway upgrade at Lauriston Reservoir

Rotork Australia has completed a comprehensive 'turnkey' actuation retrofit project to improve flood capacity at a water supply reservoir in central Victoria.

Rotork's contract involved the replacement of worn out gearboxes and braking mechanisms on ten spillway gates at Lauriston Reservoir with IQ actuators and Rotork Gears gearboxes.

Owned by Coliban Water, Lauriston Reservoir with a capacity of 20,000 ML, is one of three major storages along the Coliban River supplying water to 130,000 domestic and business customers. The spillway structure was completed in 1941 and several years later the spillway gates and operating mechanisms were installed to enable the controlled release of water during a flood.

The ten gates vary in width from 6.71 to 8.23 metres. Each gate is 2.76 metres high and weighs over 5 tonnes. Before the upgrade each gate was operated by a 1.7 tonne gearbox, requiring 14800 turns to fully stroke the gate. The gates are wound down to close, originally by hand and later with a portable hydraulic drive. The gates are counterweighted to open so the gearboxes acted only as braking units in this direction.

Maintenance inspections revealed that the gearboxes were in poor condition with worn gears and braking mechanisms. The overhaul costs would be very high. At the same time a risk assessment carried out on the operation of the gates concluded that, in addition to Occupational Health and Safety risks, the gates could not be opened quickly enough to achieve maximum flood capacity and therefore the spillway capacity of the reservoir itself was reduced. A faster, more reliable and less physically demanding solution was required.

Rotork Australia offered IQ25, 24 rpm actuators fitted to Rotork Gears MTW8 (120:1 ratio) gearboxes, with new mounting frames designed to utilise the original gearbox fixing points, eliminating the need for any structural modification. As part of the 'turnkey' project the actuators were fitted with vandal resistant covers.

Actuator installation was completed on schedule and commissioning was performed using a Pocket PC with Rotork Pocket Insight software. A Pocket Insight equipped PC was also used to download the actuators' data logger files for torque monitoring following test operations.

Coliban Water's Headwork's Manager Bruce Duncan commented on the project:

"Rotork's actuators not only exceeded the lifting capacity and gate operational speed specified by the project but also provided an industry proven product, well supported through a regional office."