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Helder Costa
Приєднався 5 лип 2009
Perícia automóvel nas festas de São Bernardo 2018, em Sátão
Perícia automóvel nas festas de São Bernardo 2018, em Sátão
Переглядів: 426
Відео
The Falkirk Wheel - How it works
Переглядів 295 тис.10 років тому
The Falkirk Wheel lies at the end of a reinforced concrete aqueduct that connects, via the Roughcastle tunnel and a double staircase lock, to the Union Canal. Boats entering the Wheel's upper gondola are lowered, along with the water that they float in, to the basin below. At the same time, an equal weight rises up, lifted in the other gondola. This works on the Archimedes principle of displace...
Very smart design.
Awesome video, thanks.
Great !
Coming here due to IELTS Reading
8 kettles!!??!!! Shout out to Tony Kettle for the design!! en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Kettle
You didn't explain this 2 spikes in of the pendulum's shape? It's not just design, is it?
Thank you for not having background music, makes it easier for me as a non-native English speaker (listener!)
By making the water level higher in the upper lock than the lower, this could have been made self-acting. Was this idea taken into consideration?
I agree, and my answer--- apparently not.
Scoția
Saw this on “Impossible Fixes” Amusement Parks episode. Thought this was an Amusement Ride. Lol. Not sure why on that episode.
Mi familia vive. En. Esta. Población. De Escocia
so smart
We visited this today and its mesmerising to watch. It did creek and groan when it was approaching the top 😳
VENICE : HOLD MY BEER.
C'est complètement le Zzga
I don't think the gondolas/caissons would tip over even without the gearing mechanism. They have their center of mass well below the rotation axis for the individual caissons so they are intrinsically stable. But the friction in the rollers would probably make them tilt a couple of degrees if they were only self leveling by gravity. The gears help them stay perfectly level even with some friction in the rollers.
This is one of those "why" that you can answer with "Because we can". A demo of human ingenuity
Amazing, elegant design and engineering! It reminded me of the Panama canal I visited some years ago, although a different mechanism.
Please may I use your video to explain the working model I have on my n gauge model railway, see UA-cam - Ranoak The Layout?
Absolutely bloody f|_|ckin genius!!!
In belgium this principle was used in 1917 see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boat_Lifts_on_the_Canal_du_Centre No energie involved just more water in the higest lock....
1.5kwh/ damn
I especially like the ingenious system for sealing the gates so no water leaks out.
what a mechanical project
There's nothing a smart engineer cannot do
My real src of inspiration.
Today I practiced this one! same script
Who will get to drive past it every day on the way to school in 4 months
that IELTS passage was a nightmare, even after reading it multiple times, only after seeing this wheel in action that I was able to get it amazing design and beauty.
yeah it was difficult for non-technical people..... but i found it easy
Absolutely brilliant! A great example of what engineering can do. Outstanding innovation - well done.
Who looked at it because of the IELTS text?
guzforce me :)
😀✌🏻
Same question I wanted to ask!! 🤣
🤣🤣🤣🤣me...hi..
Me
what a wonderful bit of engineering very impressed by it
hello samson
Hello Class !!! :)
hello little bitch
ПИЗДЕЦ, ХУЛЬ ТУТ СКАЖЕШЬ))))))))))))))
what is the maximum size of the boat which can transit through this wheel? Is there a reason why this principle will NOT work on huge ocean liners e.g. to replace locks of Panama Canal?
I think the wheel can be scaled up, but a tall cliff would be required. Falkirk has a nice sudden level difference. Panama canal level drop is also quite sudden, the locks are only slightly spread out because of the incremental level difference. On the Pacific side two smaller wheels would be needed. The depth of gondolas would have to accommodate large, tall ships, but the radius of wheels would be smaller than gondola alone. Two large ships would not fit in a small wheel, even on the Atlantic side. The total level difference is 26m, ships alone are taller than that (tallest ships permitted there are about 50m). Perhaps instead of a wheel just a giant playground lever. It would save water, but I guess that locks are cheaper. Another thing is the tides (severe at Pacific side), at least one set of locks at both oceans would be needed anyway to control the water level for the wheel or lever.
Interesting concept, it would be one hell of an engineering project.
@@michaeljohnson-li5nn The funny thing is the original Panama Canal was hell of engineering project then too!
@@12vgs8606 absolutely true!
pwr pozdrawia
This is a beautiful bit of engineering! I'm amazed, and highly happy it got past the drawing board stage. Appreciate this simple video explaining how it works.
I live in Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA, and I work at a community college. A student who was born in Scotland but was raised in the USA let me borrow his book about The Falkirk Wheel. I enjoyed watching this video very much! Thank you for posting it on UA-cam:)
Surely this could have been put together with a moderate level of focus.
Marvelous application of engineering skills.
Thanks for your explanation
Well done
Hi guys
IELTS 11 Test 1 PASSAGE 2
+Martian 李华阳 I just have done the test 1 today and being curious about how the "locks" function to lift the boat.
confirmed. 95% same in words. That's so good to be illustrated
Raise my hand 😂😂😂
I want to model it on SolidWorks,, Please Help !! and how can I reach the supervising engineers of this amazing project??
Unfortunately, Butterley Engineering ceased trading a few years ago. A sad end to a great company.
Derbyshire Engineering at its best made by the Butterley Company founded 1790.
I served my apprenticeship with Butterley in the late 70’s. I was still employed with them when the celebrated their bi-centenary in 1990. Butterley were also responsible for several other major engineering projects. They constructed the iron arches of St Pancras station - each arc has a plaque at its base to confirm this. Unfortunately Butterley Engineering ceased trading a few years ago and the site is now derelict. A sad end for such a great company.
i want to make a model of falkirk wheel PLZ help
+Prabhjot Singh did you model it??
yes
Do it yourself
Very interesting.Engineering in practice.Learned in theory.
i want to make model of it .. plz help
+Nishi Vishwakarma did you model it??
Unfortunately, Butterley Engineering ceased trading a few years ago. A sad end to a great company.
That. Is. BRILLIANT.