Comment by imurray

16 days ago

The Falkirk Wheel is cool and a fun trip, along with the nearby Kelpies, which were much more striking in person than I'd anticipated.

The wheel is a one-of-a-kind, but there are other ways of avoiding having a ladder of flood locks, see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boat_lift

I really liked this one in Peterborough, Ontario, Canada: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peterborough_Lift_Lock Built as a real working lift lock (originally 1904), rather than as a tourist attraction. Powered by a little bit of extra water in one of the buckets to tip the balance and drive the pistons.

There's also another unusual way - the Caisson lock.

Its design is TERRIFYING.

The boat is floated into a tube that get sealed at both ends and then (in the dark..) that tube is winched down into a completely flooded chamber until it (hopefully) lines up with the egress port at the bottom. The tube with the boat in is unsealed and the boat floats out.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caisson_lock

  • Ooof, I'd never seen that. Thanks! From the wikipedia link:

    > The May 1799 test at Oakengates carried a party of investors aboard the vessel, who nearly suffocated before they could be freed.

    (!) ...and eventually they built a flight of nineteen locks instead, with a steam-powered pump to return water. The lift locks (and Falkirk Wheel) are a really impressive and elegant solution in comparison.

  • Oh that is terrifying; interesting, it "was first demonstrated at Oakengates on a now lost section of the Shropshire Canal in England in 1792". That little bit of rural UK was hot and happening from 1700 to 1800 and doing a lot of canal and river transport; it claims some part in the Industrial Revolution. Within 20 miles around Oakengates around that time was:

    - early good quality cast iron; Abraham Darby in Coalbrookdale in ~1710 smelting iron from low-sulphur coal/coke for the first time, dominating the market in iron pots and pans.

    - his foundry casting iron parts for early Newcomen steam engines in 1715 [2].

    - the first iron bridge in the world[3] in 1781, now a town called Ironbridge. John Wilkinson invented a method of boring accurate cylinders for Bolton & Watt static steam engines, a friend wrote to him about the proposed iron bridge and he funded it.

    - the first iron boat in 1787 in Brosely; the Trial by the same John Wilkinson, "convincing the unbelievers who were 999 in 1000".[7]

    - the first iron framed building in the world, ancestor of skyscrapers. Thomas Telford[5] was a surveyor and engineer in the area, took inspiration from the iron bridge and started making other things out of iron, became friends with a flax mill owner whose mill burned down; they decided an iron framed building would be more fire resistant, and they built the first one ever[6] in 1797.

    - very early high-pressure steam engine and high-pressure steam locomotive. Richard Trevithick around 1800; Coalbrookdale foundries built a static high pressure engine and a high pressure locomotive[4] within a couple of years of his Puffing-devil road locomotive and Pen-y-Darren rail locomotive were trialled in other parts of the UK.

    Then Regression To The Mean happened and the area faded back into history.

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Iron_Bridge

    [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newcomen_atmospheric_engine#Co...

    [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Iron_Bridge

    [4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Trevithick#Puffing_Dev...

    [5] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Telford

    [6] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shrewsbury_Flaxmill_Maltings

    [7] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulcan_(barge)#Notes

Yes, the Kelpies are suprisingly striking. I went along thinking they'd be a modestly interesting thing to see but the scale and sculpture work makes them a real "Wow" moment when you see them up close.