Sluice
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A sluice is a water channel that is controlled at its head by a gate. For example, a millrace is a sluice that channels water toward a water mill.
A sluice gate is traditionally a wooden or metal plate which slides in grooves in the sides of the channel. Sluice gates are commonly used to control water levels and flow rates in rivers and canals. They are also used in wastewater treatment plants and to recover minerals in mining operations.
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Raising a sluice gate allows water to flow under it. (The term sluice gate refers to any gate that operates by allowing water to flow under it.) When a sluice gate is fully lowered, water sometimes spills over the top, in which case the gate operates as a weir.
Usually a mechanism drives the sluice gate up or down. This may be a simple, hand-operated, worm drive or rack and pinion drive, or it may be electrically or hydraulically powered.
The gates of a Guillotine lock work in a way similar to a sluice gate, but most canal lock gates are hinged to swing like doors.
- Flap sluice gate
- A fully automatic type, which is controlled by the pressure head across it. It is a gate hinged at the top. When pressure is from one side, the gate is kept closed. A pressure from the other side opens the sluice when a threshold pressure is surpassed.
- Vertical rising sluice gate
- A plate sliding in the vertical direction, controlled by machinery.
- Radial sluice gate
- A structure, where a small part of a cylindrical surface serves as the gate, supported by radial constructions going through the cylinder's radius. Occasionally a counterweight is provided.
- Rising sector sluice gate
- Also a part of a cylindrical surface, which rests at the bottom of the channel and rises by rotating around its centre.
- Needle sluice
- A sluice formed by a number of thin needles held against a solid frame through water pressure as in a needle dam.
In the Somerset Levels, sluice gates are known as clyse[1] or clyce.[2][3]
In the mountains of New England, sluices were used to transport logs from steep hillsides to downslope sawmill ponds or yarding areas. 19th century logging was traditionally a winter activity for men who spent summers working on farms. Water was applied to logging sluices every night so a fresh coating of slippery ice would reduce friction of logs placed in the sluice the following morning.
- ^ FOCUS on Industrial Archaeology No. 68, June 2007. Hampshire Industrial Archaeology Society website. Retrieved on 2007-10-30.
- ^ Dunning R. W. (2004). History of the County of Somerset: Volume 8: The Poldens and the Levels (Victoria County History). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 1-90-435633-8.
- ^ 'Huntspill', A History of the County of Somerset: Volume 8: The Poldens and the Levels. British History Online. Retrieved on 2007-10-30.
- Crittenden, H. Temple (1976). The Maine Scenic Route. McClain Printing.
- Moody, Linwood W. (1959). The Maine Two-Footers. Howell-North.
- Cornwall, L. Peter and Farrell, Jack W. (1973). Ride the Sandy River. Pacific Fast Mail.
- Jones, Robert C. (1979). Two Feet Between the Rails (Volume 1 - The Early Years). Sundance Books.