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JimH September 1st 06 01:00 PM

Getting a barge over a dam
 
This is how the Russians do it:

http://ueba.net/hosted_pages/Moving-a-Boat-20060813

A nice bit of engineering. ;-)



[email protected] September 1st 06 01:31 PM

Getting a barge over a dam
 
COOL!


it seems so complex, yet so simple as well. and when you think about
it. the lift is probably a one-man operation.

But...I wonder why all the windows?

doesn't matter.

it's still way cool!


JimH wrote:
This is how the Russians do it:

http://ueba.net/hosted_pages/Moving-a-Boat-20060813

A nice bit of engineering. ;-)



JoeSpareBedroom September 1st 06 02:16 PM

Getting a barge over a dam
 
" JimH" not telling you @ pffftt.com wrote in message
. ..
This is how the Russians do it:

http://ueba.net/hosted_pages/Moving-a-Boat-20060813

A nice bit of engineering. ;-)


I don't like the looks of those bridge trestles, but I guess it worked.



Bill Kearney September 1st 06 02:17 PM

Getting a barge over a dam
 
This is how the Russians do it:
http://ueba.net/hosted_pages/Moving-a-Boat-20060813
A nice bit of engineering. ;-)


Pretty impressive. An inclined railway for boats.

I wonder what the top exit looks like?

JoeSpareBedroom September 1st 06 02:33 PM

Getting a barge over a dam
 
" JimH" not telling you @ pffftt.com wrote in message
. ..
This is how the Russians do it:

http://ueba.net/hosted_pages/Moving-a-Boat-20060813

A nice bit of engineering. ;-)


Actually, now I'm wondering what was so important about that barge, and
those rusty old shipping containers. The containers could've been trucked
around the dam. Hopefully, they didn't build this whole apparatus just for
one event.



basskisser September 1st 06 02:41 PM

Getting a barge over a dam
 

JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
" JimH" not telling you @ pffftt.com wrote in message
. ..
This is how the Russians do it:

http://ueba.net/hosted_pages/Moving-a-Boat-20060813

A nice bit of engineering. ;-)


Actually, now I'm wondering what was so important about that barge, and
those rusty old shipping containers. The containers could've been trucked
around the dam. Hopefully, they didn't build this whole apparatus just for
one event.


No, look carefully at the cogs on the rails, it's been used a lot, and
for a long time.


thunder September 1st 06 04:05 PM

Getting a barge over a dam
 
On Fri, 01 Sep 2006 09:17:05 -0400, Bill Kearney wrote:


Pretty impressive. An inclined railway for boats.

I wonder what the top exit looks like?


It's shown at the bottom of the page. They appear to spin it 90 degrees
and run a down ramp at the top, presumably to float the barge.
Interesting to note, it appears to be running on the electricity produced
by the dam.

UglyDan®©™ September 1st 06 09:26 PM

Getting a barge over a dam
 
(JimH)wrote
This is how the Russians do it:
http://ueba.net/hosted_pages/Moving-a-Boat-20060813
A nice bit of engineering. ;-)


Thats pretty cool!
I don't know if its still there, but 40 yrs ago they had something
similar to this tho on a much smaller scale at the Dam that flowed from
Lake Drummond into the feeder canal off the Dismal Swamp in Va.
It was a small wood cradle on a railway using an old reversible 3/4"
drill for power. UD





JimH September 1st 06 10:15 PM

Getting a barge over a dam
 

""UglyDan®©T"" wrote in message
...
(JimH)wrote
This is how the Russians do it:
http://ueba.net/hosted_pages/Moving-a-Boat-20060813
A nice bit of engineering. ;-)


Thats pretty cool!
I don't know if its still there, but 40 yrs ago they had something
similar to this tho on a much smaller scale at the Dam that flowed from
Lake Drummond into the feeder canal off the Dismal Swamp in Va.
It was a small wood cradle on a railway using an old reversible 3/4"
drill for power. UD





You have to wonder what the "toll charge" is for this service. It looks
like 30-32 containers on the barge. Perhaps this method of carrying them
past the dam is cheaper than unloading the barge, trucking those containers
to the other side, then reloading them onto another barge.



[email protected] September 2nd 06 02:31 AM

Getting a barge over a dam
 

JimH wrote:
""UglyDan®©T"" wrote in message
...
(JimH)wrote
This is how the Russians do it:
http://ueba.net/hosted_pages/Moving-a-Boat-20060813
A nice bit of engineering. ;-)


Thats pretty cool!
I don't know if its still there, but 40 yrs ago they had something
similar to this tho on a much smaller scale at the Dam that flowed from
Lake Drummond into the feeder canal off the Dismal Swamp in Va.
It was a small wood cradle on a railway using an old reversible 3/4"
drill for power. UD





You have to wonder what the "toll charge" is for this service. It looks
like 30-32 containers on the barge. Perhaps this method of carrying them
past the dam is cheaper than unloading the barge, trucking those containers
to the other side, then reloading them onto another barge.


Impressive. Where is this? It looks as if it has been used a lot and
I wonder about the economics of this vs a lock system.


Wayne.B September 2nd 06 04:54 AM

Getting a barge over a dam
 
On 1 Sep 2006 18:31:58 -0700, "
wrote:

Impressive. Where is this? It looks as if it has been used a lot and
I wonder about the economics of this vs a lock system.


I was wondering about the lock alternative also. I'm guessing that
either the terain precluded a lock for some reason ot that the height
of the dam would have necessitated a cascade of locks which might have
had the effect of limiting boat length. The only other possibility
that I can think of is that making the river navigable was an after
thought.


Huss Mohrens September 2nd 06 07:51 AM

Getting a barge over a dam
 
In article . com,
" wrote:

JimH wrote:
""UglyDan®©T"" wrote in message
...
(JimH)wrote
This is how the Russians do it:
http://ueba.net/hosted pages/Moving-a-Boat-20060813
A nice bit of engineering. ;-)


Thats pretty cool!
I don't know if its still there, but 40 yrs ago they had something
similar to this tho on a much smaller scale at the Dam that flowed from
Lake Drummond into the feeder canal off the Dismal Swamp in Va.
It was a small wood cradle on a railway using an old reversible 3/4"
drill for power. UD





You have to wonder what the "toll charge" is for this service. It looks
like 30-32 containers on the barge. Perhaps this method of carrying them
past the dam is cheaper than unloading the barge, trucking those containers
to the other side, then reloading them onto another barge.


Impressive. Where is this? It looks as if it has been used a lot and
I wonder about the economics of this vs a lock system.


Amazing. This is Yenisei river, in the middle of Siberia
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Yenisei_basin_7.png).
The dam is for the Krasnoyarsk hydro powerplant, over 100 meters high
(about half the Hoover dam), surrounded by granite cliffs,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krasnoy..._Power_Station.

I guess building and operating locks there would be much more expensive.
One company operates the entire river (the fleet AND the lift). Looks
like the barges were specifically made to fit the lift.

As far as I can tell from their website, the charge is approximately
$30-50 per metric ton per 1000 (that's THOUSAND) miles, lift included.
There are major mining and timber businesses there, but no other major
means of transportation.
Few more photos at their site,
http://www.e-river.ru/gallery/view.php?id=1413&p=2

Huss Mohrens September 2nd 06 08:06 AM

Siberian humor ( Getting a barge over a dam)
 
From the same Siberian site (photo contest):

http://www.e-river.ru/gallery/viewfo...286&group=2244

(text translates as "entry forbidden")



In article ,
Huss Mohrens wrote:

In article . com,
" wrote:

JimH wrote:
""UglyDan®©T"" wrote in message
...
(JimH)wrote
This is how the Russians do it:
http://ueba.net/hosted pages/Moving-a-Boat-20060813
A nice bit of engineering. ;-)


Thats pretty cool!
I don't know if its still there, but 40 yrs ago they had something
similar to this tho on a much smaller scale at the Dam that flowed from
Lake Drummond into the feeder canal off the Dismal Swamp in Va.
It was a small wood cradle on a railway using an old reversible 3/4"
drill for power. UD





You have to wonder what the "toll charge" is for this service. It looks
like 30-32 containers on the barge. Perhaps this method of carrying them
past the dam is cheaper than unloading the barge, trucking those
containers
to the other side, then reloading them onto another barge.


Impressive. Where is this? It looks as if it has been used a lot and
I wonder about the economics of this vs a lock system.


Amazing. This is Yenisei river, in the middle of Siberia
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Yenisei_basin_7.png).
The dam is for the Krasnoyarsk hydro powerplant, over 100 meters high
(about half the Hoover dam), surrounded by granite cliffs,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krasnoy..._Power_Station.

I guess building and operating locks there would be much more expensive.
One company operates the entire river (the fleet AND the lift). Looks
like the barges were specifically made to fit the lift.

As far as I can tell from their website, the charge is approximately
$30-50 per metric ton per 1000 (that's THOUSAND) miles, lift included.
There are major mining and timber businesses there, but no other major
means of transportation.
Few more photos at their site,
http://www.e-river.ru/gallery/view.php?id=1413&p=2


JohnH September 2nd 06 12:10 PM

Getting a barge over a dam
 
On Sat, 02 Sep 2006 02:51:08 -0400, Huss Mohrens wrote:

In article . com,
" wrote:

JimH wrote:
""UglyDan®©T"" wrote in message
...
(JimH)wrote
This is how the Russians do it:
http://ueba.net/hosted pages/Moving-a-Boat-20060813
A nice bit of engineering. ;-)


Thats pretty cool!
I don't know if its still there, but 40 yrs ago they had something
similar to this tho on a much smaller scale at the Dam that flowed from
Lake Drummond into the feeder canal off the Dismal Swamp in Va.
It was a small wood cradle on a railway using an old reversible 3/4"
drill for power. UD





You have to wonder what the "toll charge" is for this service. It looks
like 30-32 containers on the barge. Perhaps this method of carrying them
past the dam is cheaper than unloading the barge, trucking those containers
to the other side, then reloading them onto another barge.


Impressive. Where is this? It looks as if it has been used a lot and
I wonder about the economics of this vs a lock system.


Amazing. This is Yenisei river, in the middle of Siberia
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Yenisei_basin_7.png).
The dam is for the Krasnoyarsk hydro powerplant, over 100 meters high
(about half the Hoover dam), surrounded by granite cliffs,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krasnoy..._Power_Station.

I guess building and operating locks there would be much more expensive.
One company operates the entire river (the fleet AND the lift). Looks
like the barges were specifically made to fit the lift.

As far as I can tell from their website, the charge is approximately
$30-50 per metric ton per 1000 (that's THOUSAND) miles, lift included.
There are major mining and timber businesses there, but no other major
means of transportation.
Few more photos at their site,
http://www.e-river.ru/gallery/view.php?id=1413&p=2


Thanks Huss!

Your research is appreciated!
--
******************************************
***** Hope your day is great! *****
******************************************

John

JimH September 2nd 06 03:30 PM

Siberian humor ( Getting a barge over a dam)
 

"Huss Mohrens" wrote in message
...
From the same Siberian site (photo contest):

http://www.e-river.ru/gallery/viewfo...286&group=2244

(text translates as "entry forbidden")




Good one! ;-)



Bill Kearney September 2nd 06 08:44 PM

Getting a barge over a dam
 
Here's a few other novel ways to do it:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ship_elevator

The Falkirk Wheel looks amazing.

Another site listed the reason for using such a railroad type of conveyance
as a means to avoid letting a type of lamprey migrate from one body of water
to another:

http://www.galenfrysinger.com/big_chute_ontario.htm

-Bill Kearney


JohnH September 2nd 06 08:52 PM

Getting a barge over a dam
 
On Sat, 2 Sep 2006 15:44:55 -0400, "Bill Kearney"
wrote:

Here's a few other novel ways to do it:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ship_elevator

The Falkirk Wheel looks amazing.

Another site listed the reason for using such a railroad type of conveyance
as a means to avoid letting a type of lamprey migrate from one body of water
to another:

http://www.galenfrysinger.com/big_chute_ontario.htm

-Bill Kearney


Very interesting. Thanks, Bill!
--
******************************************
***** Hope your day is great! *****
******************************************

John


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