Sluice

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Sluice gates near Henley, on the River Thames
Sluice gates near Henley, on the River Thames
Combination of sluice gates and canal lock under bridge Grave
A small wooden sluice in Magome, Japan, used to power a waterwheel.
A small wooden sluice in Magome, Japan, used to power a waterwheel.

A sluice is a water channel that is controlled at its head by a gate. 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.

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[edit] Operation

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 lock may work in a way similar to the way a sluice gate works, but traditional canal lock gates are hinged to swing like double doors.

[edit] Types of sluice gates

  • 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.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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