From Wallingford Software:
Overview
InfoWorks CS provides water utilities with a uniquely effective tool with which to undertake hydrological modeling of the complete urban water cycle. Essential for identifying and justifying cost effective infrastructure improvements, InfoWorks CS also provides a practical method for operational control, including real time control, of your wastewater network. Other applications include urban flooding and pollution prediction and the modeling of water quality and sediment transport throughout the network.
As well as supporting fast and accurate network modeling, there are specific tools to support the modeling of subcatchment take-off and infiltration. Offering exceptionally fast and robust simulations, InfoWorks CS facilitates the swift modeling of total networks or any sub-network. Users may now simulate models of up to 100,000 nodes with confidence that the results will be as accurate as those for far smaller models.

Example Applications
- Undertake drainage and sewerage master planning or studies
- Assess the impact of climate change on urban drainage systems
- Effectively implement sustainable urban drainage systems (SUDS)
- Undertake hydraulic analysis of wastewater treatment works
- Identify solutions to intermittent discharges from sewerage systems (UID’s, CSO’s or SSO’s)
- Flooding and pollution prediction
- Modeling of sediment transport and water quality
- Secondary drainage and urban storm water system assessment and management
- Wastewater system assessment and management
- Infiltration and inflow assessments
- Urban drainage storm runoff control and retention design and assessment
- Urban storm water quality assessments and pollution control
- Combined / wastewater interceptor system design and analysis
For more information see Infoworks CS web page.
AWWA 124th Annual Conference and Exposition, June 12–16, 2005.
Moscone Center, San Francisco, California.

See it here.
From Haestad Press’ online books:
Advanced Water Distribution Modeling and Management builds on Haestad Press’ best-selling Water Distribution Modeling book. Addressing the modeling process from data collection to application, Advanced Water Distribution Modeling & Management includes all the material from the best-selling Water Distribution Modeling book plus many additional topics.
See the book online here.
Advantica proudly announces the release of SynerGEE ®Water 4.1, featuring a significant set of enhancements and additions for water distribution network simulation:
SynerGEE 4.1 offers practical base map advancements that allow users to import external geospatial information system (GIS )source data into the SynerGEE modeling environment. Building up on the basemapping feature and polyline con version functionality introduced in SynerGEE 4.0,the basemap conversion tool lets users not only view the basemap behind the model, but also convert multiple pipe and facility layers into a model simultaneously, integrate external source data into SynerGEE and save basemap attributes using existing names and settings.
The new version also features a reverse facility orientation tool that enables users to switch the direction of model facilities that have been placed in to a model from an external source incorrectly .The tool “flips”unidirectional facilities, including check valves, regulators and pumps, mistakenly positioned backward in the simulation.
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ADVANTICA unveils SynerGee Water 4.1
From GAEA Technologies web site:
We are very pleased to announce that WinLoG Version 4 has been released. This upgrade has taken over two years to develop and represents the culmination of many of our users and internal ideas for enhancements.
The geographical information system feature added in version 4 displays a location map for the project showing the boreholes, cross-sections, and any surface features. This feature makes it easy to visualize your project and can be used to print a location map of the project. To edit a borehole all you need to do is click on it in the location map.
News announcement by MWH Soft:
State-of-the-Art Product Radically Advances Sewer Collection Systems Management with Breakthrough GIS Integration and Hallmark Hydraulic, Hydrologic and Water Quality Simulation
Supporting native GIS data as well as the USEPA’s industry-standard (and FEMA-approved) Stormwater Management Model (SWMM 5), this milestone release integrates the needs of both GIS and wastewater engineering professionals in one complete, affordable package. Distinguished by a compelling combination of cutting-edge GIS functionality and hallmark hydraulic, hydrologic and water quality simulation capabilities, H2OMAP SWMM delivers a comprehensive and cost-effective solution for managing urban runoff and wet weather water quality problems in complex sewer systems. It also offers users unprecedented power in optimizing BMP and LID designs and meeting SSO and CSO regulations.
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MWH Soft Releases H2OMAP SWMM
The following information was received from Innovative Hydraulics:
What is Visual Hydraulics?
Visual Hydraulics is a state of the art, flexible hydraulic analysis tool. It is used primarily for modeling the hydraulic characteristics of water and wastewater treatment plants, and is capable of analyzing entire hydraulic profiles. The program follows the traditional method for analyzing water surface profiles: a downstream control point is selected, and the hydraulic profile is then determined upstream of that control point.
What can Visual Hydraulics model?
Visual Hydraulics covers most of the hydraulic features typically encountered in a treatment plant application. A user may analyze the following features: full flow pipes, open channels (rectangular, trapezoidal, triangular, circular), tanks, orifice/baffle/gate(s), weirs (v-notch, rectangular, sharp crested, Cipolletti, contracted, and broad crested), flumes (Parshall, rectangular, trapezoidal, cutthroat), racks/screening devices, tank launders, filter media, contraction/enlargements, and Venturi meters. Submerged weir and flume analysis is also included.
Visual Hydraulics Features:
- Full hydraulic analysis capabilities for almost any hydraulic feature.
- Multiple flow options, including any number of return flows.
- Take units off-line or put units on-line and see how it affects the hydraulic profile.
- Specialty tools, including unequal flow splitting, user defined loss equations, and manifolds/diffusers.
- Built-in alerts catch unwanted conditions, such as high velocities, weir submergence, and high losses.
- Advanced summary features including summary equations, diagrams, and reports.
- Analyze an entire hydraulic profile or just one hydraulic feature.
For more information see Innovative Hydraulics web page.
Related Link: Hydraulic Valves This site is a great resource. Find relief valves, check valves, directional valves, and more. Pages of manufacturers and distributors listed.
Back in May 2001, Lewis Rossman, author of EPANET, released a small utility to convert dxf files to EPANET format. After a little time he announced that the EPA will not continue to distribute and support the utility.
A few days ago I found the file in my old computer and thought that people may find it useful. So here is a short description form the utility manual and a download link:
“DXF2EPA is a Windows utility program that converts a line drawing of a pipe network stored in Autodesk’s DXF file format into an input data file that can be read by the EPANET water distribution system analysis program. It converts all of the line and polyline elements in selected layers of the DXF drawing into a set of pipes and junctions for EPANET, with all coordinates and vertex points intact. Additional elements, such as reservoirs, tanks, pumps, and valves, have to be added to the EPANET model by hand. Although the conversion program can compute pipe lengths if so desired, other network data, such as junction elevations and demands, and pipe diameters and roughness values have to be edited within EPANET after the converted file is loaded.”

Download dxf2epa.zip (~147 KB)
The US Army Corps of Engineers announced the release of HEC-RAS 3.1.3.
The HEC-RAS modeling system was developed as a part of the Hydrologic Engineering Center’s “Next Generation” (NexGen) of hydrologic engineering software. The NexGen project encompasses several aspects of hydrologic engineering, including: rainfall-runoff analysis; river hydraulics; reservoir system simulation; flood damage analysis; and real-time river forecasting for reservoir operations.
The HEC-RAS system will ultimately contain three one-dimensional hydraulic analysis components for:
(1) steady flow water surface profile computations;
(2) unsteady flow simulation;
(3) movable boundary sediment transport computations.

Currently steady and unsteady flow are available and sediment transport is under development. A key element is that all three components will use a common geometric data representation and common geometric and hydraulic computation routines. In addition to the three hydraulic analysis components, the system contains several hydraulic design features that can be invoked once the basic water surface profiles are computed, including bridge scour computations, uniform flow computations, stable channel design, and sediment transport capacity.
The current version of HEC-RAS supports steady and unsteady flow water surface profile calculations. New features and additional capabilities will be added in future releases.
For more information and download see HEC-RAS web page.
Manuel López-Ibáñez, currently at the School of the Built Environment of Napier University in Edinburgh (UK), adapted the EPANET Toolkit version 2.00.10 to GNU/Linux.
A number of new features were added:
- Calculation of pump switches
- Saves time of day (in seconds) when a pump changes its status. The vector of pump scheduling is obtained using
ENgetlinkvalue() ENgetnodevalue()can return the initial (EN_INITVOL) and current volume (EN_VOLUME) of a tank.ENgetcount()returns the number of pumps and the number of reservoirs in the network.- When
ENgetcount(EN_CONTROLCOUNT, &count), a control may be added dynamically callingENsetcontrol()withcindex = count + 1
New toolkit functions:
ENgettotalenergycost(): calculates total energy cost per pump plus demand cost.ENgetpumpswitches(): number of switches of a pump.ENaddleveltrig(): adds rule with the following format
IF SYSTEM CLOCKTIME >= start_time (in seconds)
AND SYSTEM CLOCKTIME < stop_time (in seconds)
AND TANK id(tank_index) LEVEL [BELOW|ABOVE] level
THEN PUMP id(pump_index) STATUS IS statusENgetminstoptime(): returns the shortest time interval (in seconds) that a certain pump was not active.ENgettankindex()andENgetpumpindex(): allow to find a pump or tank without knowing its id or index.ENaddpattern()adds a new pattern to the database.
This version is highly experimental but Manuel is doing a serious effort to document the changes. He is using a Control Version System (CVS) to keep track of the development, so this version is open to contributions from anyone. Manuel is hoping to obtain feedback in the form of code, testing, reports, acknowledge or just complains.
For more information, and download, please see Manuel López-Ibáñez web page.








