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Power Plant Stop-log Rails Cleaning And Inspection Machine
Stop-log cleaning and inspection machine is used by removing and flushing away loose debris such as marine life silt from the stop log seating surfaces using a frame and attachments without the need of human divers.
Stop logs are commonly used in industrial applications such as power plant intake cavities, canals, and discharge conduits, tunnels and piping to provide a barrier or dam to allow water to drained or pumped out of an area or structure that is otherwise flooded. The areas or structures are normally drained for the purpose of allowing workers to enter the space and perform maintenance activities that either can not or are not cost effective to perform underwater. The stop log is basically a temporary wall that is lowered into a slot or guides that are embedded into a concrete structure sealing on the bottom and the edges on the side facing the space to be drained or pumped out acting as a dam. The guides/slots are commonly formed by two steel C-channels or a steel plate forming a shape similar to a C-channel with the open sides facing each other, with a smooth flat sealing surface at the bottom running between the channels, and open at the top end of each channel to allow the stop log to be inserted.
Key Features
Remove the shell and barnacles on the stop-log rails
Power Plant Stop-log Rails Cleaning And Inspection Machine
Stop-log cleaning and inspection machine is used by removing and flushing away loose debris such as marine life silt from the stop log seating surfaces using a frame and attachments without the need of human divers.
Stop logs are commonly used in industrial applications such as power plant intake cavities, canals, and discharge conduits, tunnels and piping to provide a barrier or dam to allow water to drained or pumped out of an area or structure that is otherwise flooded. The areas or structures are normally drained for the purpose of allowing workers to enter the space and perform maintenance activities that either can not or are not cost effective to perform underwater. The stop log is basically a temporary wall that is lowered into a slot or guides that are embedded into a concrete structure sealing on the bottom and the edges on the side facing the space to be drained or pumped out acting as a dam. The guides/slots are commonly formed by two steel C-channels or a steel plate forming a shape similar to a C-channel with the open sides facing each other, with a smooth flat sealing surface at the bottom running between the channels, and open at the top end of each channel to allow the stop log to be inserted.
Key Features
Remove the shell and barnacles on the stop-log rails