Sewer system classification: A rain–sanitary (combined) sewer is constructed to carry which types of flows?

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: All of the above

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:

Cities may use separate sewer systems (sanitary and storm sewers) or combined sewers that carry both sanitary sewage and storm runoff in one pipe. The term “rain–sanitary sewer” is a common way to describe a combined sewer designed to handle multiple sources of flow during wet weather.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • The phrase “rain sanitary sewer” refers to a combined sewer.
  • Combined sewers convey sanitary sewage, storm runoff, surface drainage, and incidental groundwater inflow.


Concept / Approach:

Combined systems are sized for extreme wet-weather events, so they must carry dry-weather sanitary flow plus wet-weather inflows. These include rainfall-derived inflow (from roof leaders, yard drains), overland surface runoff entering inlets, and some groundwater infiltration/inflow (I/I) through joints and defects.


Step-by-Step Solution:

Identify the system as combined (rain + sanitary).List components: sanitary sewage + storm sewage + surface runoff + groundwater inflow.Therefore, the correct selection includes all listed flows.


Verification / Alternative check:

Design manuals explicitly define combined sewers as conveying both sanitary and storm flows, including incidental I/I, validating selection of “All of the above.”


Why Other Options Are Wrong:

  • Selecting only one category (sanitary, storm, or groundwater) omits critical design flows and misrepresents combined sewer function.


Common Pitfalls:

  • Confusing combined sewers with separate sanitary or storm sewers.
  • Overlooking groundwater infiltration as a contributor to wet-weather flow.


Final Answer:

All of the above

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