The four basic elbow orientation names
Side bend right, Side bend left, Sag, Overbend
The feature assumed when pipe is tapping off
Mueller Valve Tee
All columns in PFL Data tab have to be unhidden before this macro is executed
issuesAnalysis
The circumstance when the Dig Request Form is not created
No Digs
What Tyler studied in college
Mechanical Engineering
The source of information when to placing an asterisk by the pressure test elevation value
Google Earth
The main difference between Strength Test and Strength Test Design when inputting into SFLs
Test Duration
Four circumstances where features that need to be manually imported into the Issues Analysis Tab
Features passing with CA in scope of a dig, GIS Only Features, Assumed Features, Overpressurized Features
These type of features with issues are excluded from the IR/Dig Diagram
GIS Only/Assumed Features
Where Tyler went to school
SDSU
Elbows should be assumed as this type of radius when building
Short
GIS/Assumed features are required to have this install date and job number
Pre-1970/Post-1970, Unknown
The two feature types that can be grouped together
Field Bend and Pipe
The color that is prohibited to use on the Dig/IR Diagrams
Yellow
Tyler's favorite food
Sushi
The main grade that also indicates what seam type the pipe is
WPB
The change log tab is used for this
Internal post production changes
The feature grouping rule for elbows installed prior to 1960
Every unique angle must be grouped separately
The Description of units when one scoping Project is completely cleared by another (Ex, adjacent pressure tests, or all feature groups of one project are present in another separate project)
Data Line
The skill Tyler wishes he could pick up
Surfing
One of the two feature types that bears no pressure in our SFLs
Pipe Appurtenance, Sleeve type A
The one cell that QCers forget to fill out most often
QC Date Complete
This federal code determines when something is "One Class Out"
CFR 192.611
Describe the "A to B" length and how it's used
There will be two separate lengths for the pressure tests in the scoping document. The "A to B" length is described as the total length of a pressure test in SFLs that includes all features needing to be tested and extends to natural stopping points. Examples, Taps, Valves, Plugs. The A to B length is inputted in the N-Q column, and the length of features impacted is inputted in column M.
One of the three people Tyler started with at GTS
Roopabalan S., Justin Z., or Ian T.