In the older works with but crude appliances for regulating the rate of filtration and admission of raw water, a considerable depth of water was necessary upon the filter to balance irregularities in the rates of filtration; the filter was made to be, to a certain extent, its own storage reservoir. When, however, appliances of the character to be described in Chapter IV are used for the regulation of the incoming water, and with a steady rate of filtration, this provision becomes quite superfluous.
With open filters a depth of water in excess of the thickness of any ice likely to be formed is required to prevent disturbance or freezing of the sand in winter. It is also frequently urged that with a deep water layer on the filter the water does not become so much heated in summer, but this point is not believed to be well taken, for in any given case the total amount of heat coming from the sun to a given area is constant, and the quantity of water heated in the whole day—that is, the amount filtered—is constant, and variations in the quantity exposed at one time will not affect the average resulting increase in temperature. If the same water remained upon the filter without change it would of course be true that a thin layer would be heated more than a deep one, but this is not the case.
It is also sometimes recommended that the depth of water should be sufficient to form a sediment layer before filtration starts, but this point would seem to be of doubtful value, especially where the filter is not allowed to stand a considerable time with the raw water upon it before starting filtration.
It is also customary to have a depth of water on the filter in excess of the maximum loss of head, so that there can never be a suction in the sand just below the sediment layer. It may be said in regard to this, however, that a suction below is just as effective in making the water pass the sand as an equal head above. At the Lawrence Experiment Station filters have been repeatedly used with a water depth of only from 6 to 12 inches, with losses of head reaching 6 feet, without the slightest inconvenience. The suction only commences to exist as the increasing head becomes greater than the depth of water, and there is no way in which air from outside can get in to relieve it. In these experimental filters in winter, when the water is completely saturated with air, a small part of the air comes out of the water just as it passes the sediment layer and gets into reduced pressure, and this air prevents the satisfactory operation of the filters. But this is believed to be due more to the warming and consequent supersaturation of the water in the comparatively warm places in which the filters stand than to the lack of pressure, and as not the slightest trouble is experienced at other seasons of the year, it may be questioned whether there would be any disadvantage at any time in a corresponding arrangement on a large scale where warming could not occur.
The depths of water actually used in European filters with the full depth of sand are usually from 36 to 52 inches. In only a very few unimportant cases is less than the above used, and only a few of the older works use a greater depth, which is not followed in any of the modern plants. As the sand becomes reduced in thickness by scraping, the depth of water is correspondingly increased above the figures given until the sand is replaced. The depth of water on the German covered filters is quite as great as upon corresponding open filters. Thus the Berlin covered filters have 51, while the new open filters at Hamburg have only 43 inches.