A technical challenge realized by RAZEL-BEC on the Kariba dam of Zambesi

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 28 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 55

  • @frogmanant
    @frogmanant 6 років тому +39

    Thanks for posting this. I was a diver on the first repair project in1969. We performed dentistry underwater, filling holes in the walls of the plunge pool with cement bag walls back-filled with rocks & pumped full of cement. In those days the pool was 230 ft deep & I worked at 180ft. We thought major repairs would be needed sooner than has proved to be the case.

    • @dimitriazevedo5798
      @dimitriazevedo5798 5 років тому +1

      Thats amazing..Im a photographer based in Harare and I am heading to kariba for a few weeks to stay with national parks.

  • @brendacampbell3635
    @brendacampbell3635 3 роки тому +3

    Don’t wait until it fails! I grew up in Zimbabwe and these people deserve to be assured of the dam being maintained.

  • @cholweMatibini
    @cholweMatibini Рік тому +2

    David Livingstone did not discover the falls as they were indigenous Toka Leya people who settled in the area hundred of years before. However, he was the first white man to see it.

  • @victornguni4794
    @victornguni4794 4 роки тому +11

    David did not discover Mosi~o~tunya! Locals took them there. Imagine me as a Zambian going to UK and telling people I discovered Thames River. Would that not be absurd?

  • @dandelange6561
    @dandelange6561 2 місяці тому +1

    How did they get that Tugboat in an out of the coffer dam/plunge pool I think that was a Logistical Horror movie by itself, would love to see the video showing that

  • @gerdacoetzer3615
    @gerdacoetzer3615 2 роки тому

    I just love this big engineering marbles. And dams are my favorite ones. I'm so happy to see they're going to fixed Kariba dam.

  • @garydurandt4260
    @garydurandt4260 3 роки тому +4

    Very clever. What happens though if they have to open the sluice gates due to rising dam levels?

    • @luyandomapanza5755
      @luyandomapanza5755 2 роки тому

      The turbines installed in the dam can also be used to provide relief when water levels rise. The two power utilities would just have to figure out where to take that extra generated power!

  • @tsnyatsnya123
    @tsnyatsnya123 Рік тому +2

    Congratulations!! I am not an engineer, but I am interested in some aspects. Kariba Dam is the largest man-made dam (185 km3 of water). It is almost five times bigger than the Chinese Three Gorges Dam (38 km3). However, the Three-Gorges Dam has an installed capacity of 22,500 MW compared to Kariba's 1,626 MW (with the Zambia side). Is the difference only in terms of number turbines, Kariba has 14 compared to 34 and their capacity? What is the maximum that can be harnessed from Kariba, if financial resources were available (a simple matchbox calculation says 110,000 MW)?

  • @kimstrong301
    @kimstrong301 6 років тому +4

    I have wondered why engineers don't build trompes on the outlet of dam walls and hydro electric installations. Trompes provide a continual source of compressed air which can be used in adajcent towns for cooling, running machinery, vehicles etc.
    They cost very little to maintain, are environmentally friendly and a largely unexploited source of sustainable energy, despite being a 2000+ year old technology. That way the output of the dam or hydro electric installation would be able to passively generate more power.
    It seems that Kariba dam would be an excellent site to investigate in this regard.

    • @RichardKingADI
      @RichardKingADI 6 років тому +1

      Interesting idea, which I hadn't heard of before! Perhaps it is more cost-effective to simply run the water through a turbine? The flow would be very intermittent, in any case. Flowing only when the in-flow to the dam is very high so, once again, not cost effective to make use of the seemingly wasted energy?

  • @ksmmalaba2667
    @ksmmalaba2667 4 роки тому +5

    The largest artificial Lake in the world by volume!

  • @Lord_Bryson
    @Lord_Bryson 2 роки тому +1

    David livingstone did not discover the falls

  • @gaving.griffon2703
    @gaving.griffon2703 4 роки тому +2

    What if we instead dismantle the dam itself slowly?

  • @Moose_oo
    @Moose_oo 6 років тому +3

    Interesting, why were the energy dissipators not part of the initial design/construction?

    • @tafadzwamusekiwa659
      @tafadzwamusekiwa659 2 роки тому

      Which ones would you propose considering this is not a Spillway, water is falling from about 100m height

  • @mrrickmutasonde.9342
    @mrrickmutasonde.9342 4 роки тому +13

    David Livingstone: discovers falls
    People living there: I didn't see that there😮😮

  • @leoniefitzgerald1153
    @leoniefitzgerald1153 2 роки тому +1

    That's very interesting

  • @abrahamedelstein4806
    @abrahamedelstein4806 4 роки тому +1

    Wouldn't it have been easier to decommission the current spillways and build new ones routing the water around the dam wall?

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 4 роки тому +1

      The hole was supposedly so big that it put the dam in jeopardy of collapse. They had to fix it regardless.

  • @ginnysinclair3289
    @ginnysinclair3289 4 роки тому

    Like a highway for the water to run down and back into the river... with possible small off ramps to lose water gradual over distance

  • @richardstubbs6484
    @richardstubbs6484 2 роки тому +1

    There are so many turbines letting out water now that the dam might never spill again .

    • @luyandomapanza5755
      @luyandomapanza5755 2 роки тому +1

      I share the same view. We might never enjoy the spectacular view of the artificial waterfalls. Granted, the spill gates are necessary to safeguard the dam wall in a case where all the generators shutdown and the water levels are critically high. Engineering design requires all manner of contingency.

  • @Nankolongo
    @Nankolongo 5 років тому

    I hear the completion of the works have been extended to 2022 instead of 2021, kindly advise at which stage have the works reached.

  • @hendrikjbboss9973
    @hendrikjbboss9973 4 роки тому

    Absolutely amazing!!!

  • @frezzalata
    @frezzalata 6 років тому

    very interesting video. Thank you

  • @gazroyalesrhodes2331
    @gazroyalesrhodes2331 2 роки тому

    When is this project ending and who is funding it?

  • @craigevans4881
    @craigevans4881 6 років тому +2

    Where us the water redirected once coffer dam in place.

    • @craigevans4881
      @craigevans4881 6 років тому

      Belle Of New York water from the dam has to go down stream to the river below to continue to cabora bassa and onto Mozambique. So whilst this going on there must be a diversion of the water flow from the zambezi.

    • @markoosthuysen4346
      @markoosthuysen4346 6 років тому +1

      The water flowing through the hydro plants on both the Zambian and Zimbabwe sides exits below the plunge pool / proposed cofferdam . . . .

    • @kalondesiulapwa4792
      @kalondesiulapwa4792 6 років тому +1

      @@markoosthuysen4346 wait a second, this would take three years to complete, how sure are you that there wouldn't be a flooding that would necessitate the opening of the flood gates? you cant entirely depend on the plant exits to maintain pressure behind the walls as the plunge pool and cofferdam are worked on.

    • @richardstubbs6484
      @richardstubbs6484 5 років тому

      @@kalondesiulapwa4792 the water level has been lowered in the dam, and the hydro capacity increased, so little chance of flooding

    • @watkinsrory
      @watkinsrory 4 роки тому

      @@richardstubbs6484 Have you seen the river at the moment ?

  • @abitonphiri9833
    @abitonphiri9833 5 років тому +14

    How does someone discover a place when theres people already living there, worse more the people living there actually showed him him the place???🤷🏿‍♂️🤷🏿‍♂️🤦🏿‍♂️

  • @teegeecees
    @teegeecees 2 роки тому

    Interesting.

  • @alexandervanwyk7669
    @alexandervanwyk7669 3 роки тому

    why couldnt they direct those outlets down into additional hydro power turbines and release water eventually horizontally?

    • @tatendazuze
      @tatendazuze 3 роки тому

      I wonder 🤔

    • @marshalngwenya1164
      @marshalngwenya1164 Рік тому

      Firstly it is not cost effective and the energy harnessed from there would only be used intermittently as those spillways are only open when the dam is at risk of over filling.

  • @kalondesiulapwa4792
    @kalondesiulapwa4792 6 років тому

    am sorry am not an expert, but this model either has its own cracks and plunge pools or it was not in-depth. i have been left with more questions than understanding for this whole thing.

  • @george.a_m
    @george.a_m 3 роки тому

    Largest man made lake in the world

  • @ginnysinclair3289
    @ginnysinclair3289 4 роки тому +1

    Why not just make a slide for the water over the plunge pool?

    • @watkinsrory
      @watkinsrory 4 роки тому

      The water does not always flow through the gates. They are only opened when there is enough water so that is not the issue to repair it you would still have to empty the plunge pool.

  • @olipankhoma
    @olipankhoma 5 років тому

    **Zambezi

  • @Connor-gk4vd
    @Connor-gk4vd 3 роки тому

    Zambezi*

  • @suwilanjikasese364
    @suwilanjikasese364 2 місяці тому

    Retract. Livingstone never discovered anything. Change your silly narrative.

  • @bighardman33
    @bighardman33 4 роки тому +2

    Dam was hastily and badly constructed in the first place. About 75 people were killed during the project. The Italian engineer in charge of the project committed suicide after every other dam he built collapsed.

    • @AS-uk5ej
      @AS-uk5ej 3 роки тому

      Not true. The only dam of his that collapsed was the malpasset dam.