SWMM5 - Stormwater Management Model

SWMM 5, Watersheds, Water Quality,Hydrology, Hydraulics - Watersheds

Introduction

The EPA SWMM 5 calibration file is only for comparing the following 12 internal variables graphically to either SWMM 4 results, monitored data or some other model results:
  1. Subcatchment Runoff
  2. Subcatchment Washoff
  3. Node Water Depth
  4. Link Flow Rate
  5. Node Water Quality
  6. Node Lateral Inflow
  7. Node Flooding
  8. Groundwater Flow
  9. Groundwater Elevation
  10. Snow Pack Depth
  11. Link Flow Depth
  12. Link Flow Velocity
The graph on your SWMM 5 screen can be saved either to the clipboard or an external file for further manipulation of the computed and observed (calibration file data) by using the commands
Edit->Copy To=>Clipboard=>Text or
Edit->Copy To=>File=>Text
 
Just remember that the computed variable value comes first in the text followed by the observed variable value.  For example:
 
Link 1030 Flow
Series                  Elapsed Time (hours)    Flow CFS
Computed                0.1667                  0.0000
.
.
Observed                0.0167                  0.0000

 

Last updated by Robert E Dickinson May. 24, 2008.

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Snowlapse Monday, February 8th, 2010 Noel St. John, quasi-official photographer of TheAgitator.com, made this very cool time-lapse animation of the D.C.-area’s blizzard this past weekend.
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The solution is iterative but each iteration is dependent on the CFL or explicit time step. The time step we select is based on the CFL condition but instead of just using the explicit solution we iterate until the node depths are converged or a max…
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A Short History of Hydrogen Sulfide From the sewers of Paris to physiological messenger Roger P. Smith from http://www.americanscientist.org/issues/pub/2010/1/a-short-history-of-hydrogen-sulfide/2 Early last year, reports began to emerge in the Sout…
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Robert E Dickinson Ich bin ein Watershed Engineer, die weniger Überschwemmungen und eine bessere Wasserqualität für die Erde will.
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As rivers go, the Mississippi is one of the world’s biggies. It’s 3.734 km (2.320 mi) long and has a watershed of more than 3,2 million sq. km (1.245.000 sq. mi), the third-largest in the world (preceded only by the Amazon and Congo rivers), drai…
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Comment: A really nice water analogy for the field properties Divergence, Curl and Gradient from the Blog Starts With a Bang ....it's pretty mathematically intensive, but what's missing from most textbooks and E&M courses are physical explanations…
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