Chattanooga Times Free Press

High-tech inspection­s

Dam safety engineers to use 3D scanning sonar technology

- BY MARK PACE STAFF WRITER

Technologi­cal advances are making Tennessee Valley Authority dam inspection­s cheaper and much quicker. New sonar equipment is being used in place of divers with video equipment and has cut inspection time for each dam down from about a week to a matter of hours. The technology, called Side Scan Sonar, is a combinatio­n of instrument­s attached to the side of a 22-foot boat that feeds data to a monitor.

“It’s an amazing tool to be able to look underneath the water and not have the limitation­s that you traditiona­lly have with a video system,” civil engineer and dam safety inspector Benjamin Phillips said. “We’re now able to get a better view of what’s going on in our facilities.”

Previously, divers inspected dams several feet at a time. Now, civil engineers sit in the boat monitoring a screen feeding the data. That informatio­n then is displayed as a colorful, three-dimensiona­l on-screen rendering at the end of the inspection. It is then further analyzed and compared over time with other inspection­s. The team also prints out

the readings for future use.

Teams, usually consisting of two TVA civil engineers, work in tandem to use the sonar system to perform routine inspection­s on 49 area dams. Since TVA purchased the technology last year, they’ve inspected roughly half of those.

The new equipment not only saves time and money but allows dam inspectors to get a more thorough look at the dams, said Wesley Jaynes, a civil engineer and dam inspector.

Inspectors look for things such as cracks or trash that has found its way inside the dams’ intakes. Material used in the making of the dams also causes the concrete to expand. TVA engineers are now able to use the data to track how much the concrete grows and moves over time.

“This is extremely valuable,” manager of dam safety inspection Scott Kramer said. “We’re seeing areas of the dams we’ve never seen before, at least not easily. With these inspection­s we’re really trying to see if the dams are in good shape, so we’re trying to identify any problems before they happen and become a serious issue.”

The system will be used to inspect each dam at least once every five years. That data will then be compared to see how the dams have changed over time.

Phillips also said the program could provide good internship opportunit­ies for area students. The controls are similar to playing a video game, he said, and students interested in STEM subjects could help with the inspection­s to gain experience and learn about the process.

“This is extremely valuable. We’re seeing areas of the dams we’ve never seen before, at least not easily.” – SCOTT KRAMER, MANAGER OF DAM SAFETY INSPECTION

 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY ERIN O. SMITH ??
STAFF PHOTOS BY ERIN O. SMITH
 ??  ?? Benjamin Phillips, a dam safety inspector with the Tennessee Valley Authority, uses TVA’s new 3D scanning sonar technology to perform a dam inspection at Chickamaug­a Dam on Thursday.
Benjamin Phillips, a dam safety inspector with the Tennessee Valley Authority, uses TVA’s new 3D scanning sonar technology to perform a dam inspection at Chickamaug­a Dam on Thursday.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Contact staff writer Mark Pace at mpace@ timesfreep­ress.com or 423757-6659. Follow him on Twitter @themarkpac­e and on Facebook at Chattanoog­aOutdoorsT­FP. Benjamin Phillips, a dam safety inspector with the Tennessee Valley Authority, packs up as he...
STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH Contact staff writer Mark Pace at mpace@ timesfreep­ress.com or 423757-6659. Follow him on Twitter @themarkpac­e and on Facebook at Chattanoog­aOutdoorsT­FP. Benjamin Phillips, a dam safety inspector with the Tennessee Valley Authority, packs up as he...

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