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Municipal Water Mains · Metro Vancouver

Acoustic Water Main Leak Survey in Port Coquitlam, BC

Systematic acoustic survey of municipal distribution networks — correlators, ground microphones, and listening points worked block by block until every leak on the route list has a paint mark and a record. The backbone method of every serious water loss program since long before anything flew. Delivered in Port Coquitlam and across the Metro Vancouver by the crews that have pinpointed BC water leaks since 1999.

km/crew-day
Distribution survey rate
±0.5 m
Typical pinpoint accuracy
Since 1999
BC acoustic experience

Free phone consult · No pressure · Mon–Sat 8am–6pm PT

Working Port Coquitlam: local context

Ground conditions: Floodplain silts limit deep imaging south of the rail corridor; northern till scans conventionally. Shallow residential services image well throughout. That shapes both where escaping water shows itself and how leak noise carries — survey design here starts from the ground truth.

Community profile: Postwar bungalows mid-renewal, distribution warehouses on the floodplain, and a compact older downtown with mixed-age services. The distribution system under it carries the pipe materials of every era that built it.

How the Port Coquitlam program runs

  1. 1

    Route planning

    System maps, pipe materials and diameters, valve and hydrant inventory, and any loss data set the survey routes — metallic mains, AC, and PVC each get sensor spacing and methods matched to how far leak noise actually travels in them.

  2. 2

    Systematic listening

    Crews work contact point to contact point — hydrants, valves, services — logging acoustic levels and flagging points of interest. Quiet hours are used where traffic noise demands it; scheduling is built around your community, Mon–Sat.

  3. 3

    Correlation & pinpointing

    Points of interest get correlated: sensors bracket the suspect span, the processor times the leak noise arriving at each, and the position falls out of the velocity math. Ground microphone verification walks the final metres to a paint mark.

  4. 4

    Survey deliverable

    Every confirmed leak documented with location, suspected pipe section, acoustic evidence, and severity ranking — plus the clean-route record that proves the rest of the system listened tight. GIS-ready on request.

Pair it with the aerial layer in Port Coquitlam

For network-scale work, our drone thermal water main survey in Port Coquitlam screens whole corridors first, so these ground crews spend their hours confirming ranked zones instead of walking quiet pipe.

Port Coquitlam questions, answered

How does acoustic correlation actually locate a buried leak?

A pressurised leak makes continuous noise that travels along the pipe wall and water column. Two sensors placed on accessible contact points either side of the suspect span — hydrants, valves — both hear it, but the nearer one hears it first. The correlator measures that time difference, and with the pipe material, diameter, and distance between sensors, computes the leak position. On metallic mains, well-executed correlation routinely lands within half a metre.

Does it work on PVC and asbestos-cement mains — half of BC's stock?

Yes, with adjusted technique and honest expectations. Plastic and AC pipe attenuate the higher frequencies correlators love, so leak noise travels shorter distances — we tighten sensor spacing, lean on lower-frequency sensing and ground microphones, and accept that some quiet PVC leaks need a second pass under better pressure or night conditions. Crews that only ever surveyed cast iron get humbled by PVC; ours have worked BC's mixed stock since 1999.

How much of the system can you survey, and how fast?

A crew typically covers several kilometres of distribution main per day depending on contact-point density, traffic noise, and how many points of interest demand correlation. A small municipality's whole system fits in a survey season; larger systems usually run rolling programs — a third of the network per year — or target zones flagged by metering or our aerial thermal screening.

How do Port Coquitlam ground conditions affect water main leak detection?

Port Coquitlam ground is predominantly Pitt River floodplain silts with till toward the north side. Floodplain silts limit deep imaging south of the rail corridor; northern till scans conventionally. Shallow residential services image well throughout. For leak work that cuts two ways: it shapes whether escaping water surfaces or vanishes, and it influences how leak noise carries to our sensors — both factored into how we run acoustic water main leak survey here, and into when we recommend pairing the aerial thermal screen with the ground crews.

What does the local pipe stock look like in Port Coquitlam?

Postwar bungalows mid-renewal, distribution warehouses on the floodplain, and a compact older downtown with mixed-age services. The water mains underneath broadly track that growth story — each construction era left its pipe materials behind, from early metallic stock through the postwar asbestos-cement years to modern PVC — and each material gets matched methods in our survey design.

Do you work nights or off-peak hours in Port Coquitlam?

Where the data quality requires it, yes — minimum-demand hours give the cleanest acoustic and flow readings, and noise loggers do their listening at 2–4 a.m. by design. Scheduling is coordinated with your operations staff, Mon–Sat, and active breaks get priority response. 604-239-9934.

What does acoustic water main leak survey cost in Port Coquitlam?

Province-wide pricing — no regional premium for Port Coquitlam or anywhere in the Metro Vancouver. Surveys and programs are quoted by network size and scope; single investigations start in the high hundreds. The free phone consult produces a firm number in about five minutes.

Need acoustic water main leak survey in Port Coquitlam?

Free phone consult — system, scope, and a firm quote in five minutes. No pressure.

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