rocket_scientist wrote:n7axw wrote:
Do we have any idea how Safehold pumps are powered?
Don
Sorry to resurrect an old thread that had finally died down after much backing and forthing, but I have just been rereading the series and during the GCR and then during the canal repairs in the next book there are so many mentions of pumps as a part of the lock. In fact, they seem to be critical parts to the lock. I can imagine a modern lock having a diesel or electric motor driving the pump to push the water back up to the upper level when the lock is emptying down to the lower level to minimize water loss so it would be critical to lock function. I can also imagine a much smaller pump that would run continuously to take water out of the lower canal and pump it back into the upper canal to also slow down water usage from the upper canal, but this would not be critical to lock usage.
For Safehold, the question of what powers the pumps is very interesting. Using the blessed three of wind, water, and muscle we have many problems. The volume of water needed to raise or lower a 140' long, 40' wide barge up even just a 10 foot rise is huge. It would take many windmills to pump that much water back up to the upper canal and they would run constantly and thus not be critical to lock function. It would take several water wheels wasting a great deal more water than they are pumping back up but could conceivably be used for a VERY slow emptying of the lock to go downhill. And I shudder to think of how many men (or even just horses, dragons, etc) it would take to crank the pumps to move that much water back uphill for each cycling of the lock.
When a canal connects a lake or river at the high end with anything else lower down then there should be a plentiful supply of water to allow using one full charge of water each time the lock is used. If the locks are needed to go over and back down a terrain feature like a ridgeline with no source of water at the top then I can see catch basins and lots of windmills feeding a small lake or reservoir at the top, but even then they would not be part of the lock and not critical to short term use. With the limitations of the Proscriptions, I can't see any other way to operate a lock except pipes and valves to fill the lock from the upper level and empty the lock into the lower level.
So what does power the pumps? Engineers with enquiring minds want to know
Hmmm.
Your logic is generally correct, but I can think of a case where you don't need ANY pumps to make the lock work. You need two valves.
Picture this...
The lock is between a higher canal and a lower one. If the valve is in a pipe between the lock and the lower side canal, then when the lock closes, you can just open the low-side valve and drain the lock to the level of the low-side canal. Bigger pipe and bigger valve --> faster operation.
That accounts for LOWERING the vessel.
To RAISE the vessel, you need one special case: a large body of water that's HIGHER than the canal at the high side of the lock. Vessel on the lower lock enters the lock and the door closes. Valve from the body of water that's at or higher than the level of the high-side is opened. Water flows into the lock. If the body of water is at exactly the level of the high-side canal, then you can just leave it open until the lock level and the canal level are equal. If the body of water is higher than the canal's high side, then you'll have to shut the valve at the right time to keep from raising the lock level too high.
But you're right, large-volume pumps and a reservoir of water make it all easier. IIRC, the Mad Wizard told us in LaMA that the locks fill in about 15 minutes. For the 140'X40' LOCK, that would be 56,000 cubic feet of water for a 10' lift, or about 3,733 cubic feet (roughly 28,000 gallons) of water PER MINUTE.
LOTTA WATER!
EDIT...
Just on a whim, I looked at some commercial pump curves. For the 48" model I was looking at, with a 175 RPM pump and low dynamic head, you
could get as much as 32,000 GPM flow rate. Of course a Safehold pump wouldn't be as efficient due to propeller/casing tolerances and leakage. But maybe with multiple pumps?