A: Since the piping is maintained under a continuous vacuum, any leaks that might develop will draw air INTO the pipes, preventing waste infiltration. The Acorn Vac Center is equipped with several alarm features that help alert maintenance personnel of any leaks that might develop in the vacuum piping network.
A: Unlike underground piping, a catastrophic piping failure, regardless of the cause, will be immediately identified and easily repaired.
A: Most facilities add the Vac Center to their standby power generating system. In fact, Acorn Vac offers a number of control features and hardware options to accommodate the unique needs of standby generator power sources. If the facility does not have a generator, or chooses not to add the Vac Center to the standby power
source, the drainage system is simply not available until normal power is restored.
A: Yes. Proper engineering ensures that the system is sized for such events.
A: Debris found to inhibit the performance of gravity drainage systems typically has little detrimental effect on the performance of the vacuum drainage system. In fact, items that would typically block a gravity drainage system will pass directly through the vacuum piping network to the Vac Center collection tanks due to the fact that they are assisted in their movement by atmospheric pressures entering the system in the course of normal operations. Vacuum drainage systems virtually eliminate clogged piping.
A: All parts are supplied by AcornVac and are available for immediate shipment. However, a local factory certified maintenance contractor will stock a quantity of repair parts for emergency purposes.
A: The AcornVac system is designed to provide complete redundancy on all primary Vac Center components. This includes dual collection tanks and multiple pumps to ensure that the system can continue to operate so long as electrical power is available.
When the Vac Center is operating on an emergency power generator, it is designed to switch the pump control strategy to a method that is most compatible with this power source. For those facilities with generators that have marginal capability for starting induction motor loads such as a vacuum pump, we offer electronic motor starters which minimize the inrush current of a pump as it is being brought on-line.
A: The primary service requirements would be at the Vac Center. The vacuum pumps are equipped with a small cartridge filter that we recommend be changed every twelve months. The pumps also have a cooling coil that should be cleaned once a year. The AcornVac vacuum interface components have been tested to well over three million cycles without failure. These components have no regular required preventive maintenance. Should a problem occur with either a Controller or an Extraction Valve, the component is designed to be easily removed and replaced.
A: Yes. Any gasses or odors which might exist in the Vac Center collection tanks are discharged when the tank is drained, and any gasses or odors that might exist in the piping network are contained therein by the normally closed Extraction Valve and removed by the condensate extraction process.
A: Yes; however, the system must be engineered considering all load factors including anticipated activity and peak loads as well as diversity requirements. Call the AcornVac Engineering Department for design assistance.
A: All vacuum parts are made in the USA.
A: No, the vacuum system does not need vent stacks. Air removed from the piping network by the vacuum pumps becomes the vent for the system.