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Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: May 30, 2012 18:34 UTC (41 seconds ago)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A boat lift, ship lift, or lift lock is a machine for transporting boats between water at two different elevations, and is an alternative to the canal lock and the canal inclined plane.

It may be either vertically moving, like the ship lifts in Germany, Belgium, the lift at "Les Fontinettes" in France or the Anderton boat lift in England, or rotational, like the Falkirk Wheel in Scotland.

Contents

History

The first known boat lift was a 2.5 ton tub boat lift on the Churprinz canal near Dresden. It lifted boats 7 metres without the use of caissons. The lift operated between 1789 and 1868.[1] For a period of time after the opening of the Churprinz lift boat lifts were of an experimental nature with the engineer James Green reporting that 5 had been built between 1796 and 1830. He credited the invention to Dr James Anderson of Edinburgh.[2] Erasmus Darwin's Commonplace Book dated 1777–1778 includes a design for a canal lift based on balanced water filled caissons on page 58-59[3]

An example of these early lifts was the one constructed at Mells on the Dorset and Somerset Canal.[2] Lifts on the tub boat section of the Grand Western Canal entered into operation in 1835 becoming the first non experimental boat lifts in Britain.[4]

1904 the Peterborough Lift Lock designed by Richard Birdsall Rogers opened in Canada. The lift system is operated by gravity alone, with the upper bay of the two bay system loaded with an additional 30 cm of water as to give it greater weight.

The world's still highest boat lift, with a 73.15 metre height difference and European Class IV (1350 tonne) capacity, is the Strépy-Thieu boat lift in Belgium.

As projected, the new ship lift at the Three Gorges Dam will be even higher and able to lift vessels of up to 3,000 tons displacement.[5] However, as yet engineers have been unable to design a mechanism with the lifting power called for in the lift specifications.[citation needed]

Selected lift locks

Notable lift locks — ordered by size
name location displacement dimensions vertical lift cycle time
Three Gorges Dam China 3000 tons 280 x 35 meters x 5 metres 113 metres 30-40 minutes (under construction)
Krasnoyarsk hydroelectric dam Russia 1500 tons 80 x 17 meters x 1.86 metres 104 metres
Strépy-Thieu boat lift Belgium 1350 tons 112 x 12 metres x 3.35 metres 73.15 metres 7 minutes
Scharnebeck twin ship lift Germany 1350 tons 105.4 x 15.8 x 3.4 metres 38 metres 3 minutes
Peterborough lift lock Canada 1300 tons 42.7 x 10.1 x 2.1 metres 19.8 metres 10 minutes
Kirkfield Lift Lock Canada 1300 tons 42.7 x 10.1 x 2.1 metres 14.9 metres 10 minutes
Rothensee boat lift Germany 1000 tons 85 x 12.2 x ? metres 16 metres 20 minutes
Falkirk Wheel Scotland 600 tons 35 metres 4 minutes
Henrichenburg boat lift Germany 600 tons 67 x 8.2 x 2 metres 14 metres 25 minutes
Danjiangkou dam China 450 tons
Geheyan dam China 300 tons
Longtan dam China 250 tons 40 x 10.8 x 1.8 metres 68.5 metres claimed to be the "fastest ship-lift in the world"
Anderton boat lift UK 250 tons 22.9 x 4.7 x 2.9 metres 15.25 metres
Canal du Centre Belgium 17 metres
Fontinettes France 13 metres 90 minutes
Niederfinow boat lift Germany 85 x 12 x 2.5 metres 36 metres 20 minutes

See also

References

  1. ^ Charles Hadfield World Canals: Inland Navigation Past and Present Page 71 ISBN 0-7153-8555-0
  2. ^ a b The Canals of Southwest England Charles Hadfield Page 104 ISBN 0-7153-8645-X
  3. ^ revolutionaryplayers.org.uk
  4. ^ The Canals of Southwest England Charles Hadfield Page 109 ISBN 0-7153-8645-X
  5. ^ "Three Gorges Dam". Missouri Chapter Of The American Fisheries Society. April 2002. http://www.moafs.org/newsletter/April%202002/3gorgestats.htm. Retrieved 2008-03-11. "Ship lift will be a one-stage vertical lift capable of carrying a 3,000-ton passenger or cargo vessel." 

Further reading

  • Tew, David (1984). Canal Inclines and Lifts. Sutton Books. ISBN 0-8629-9031-9. 
  • Uhlemann, Hans-Joachim (2002). Canal lifts and inclines of the world (English Translation ed.). Internat. ISBN 0-9543-1811-0. 

External links








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