CANAL INCLINED PLANE

Inclined plane on Marne-Rhine Canal

An 'inclined plane' is a system used on some canals for raising boats between different water levels.
Typically, such a feature consists of a slope, up which there are two sets of rail tracks, and boats are raised between different levels by sailing into giant water-filled tanks, or caissons, which have wheels on the bottom and watertight doors at each end, and which are perpendicular to the slope. These are then drawn up or down hill on the rails, usually by means of cables being pulled by a stationary engine. In almost all designs two caissons are used, one going up and one down, to act as counterweights to make the system more efficient. When the caisson has reached the top or bottom of the slope, the doors are opened and the boat leaves. On some canals an inclined plane was used just to the transfer the loads up or down to the boats on a rail system.
Near Coalisland, County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, a series of inclined planes or 'dry wherries' were used to connect adjoining canal sections on Dukart's Canal, an extension of the Coalisland Canal. The system was ahead of its time and didn't work.
An inclined plane is quicker, and wastes less water, than a flight of canal locks, but is more costly to install and run. It can be considered a specialised type of funicular railway.

Contents
Timeline
Other examples
With caissons
Without caissons
See also
Further reading
References
External links

Timeline



★ '1167' Nieuwedamme overtoom (a simple type of incline) was built at Ypres.

★ '1568' Wagon of Zafosina in use near Venice.

★ '1773' John Edyvean proposes the use of inclined planes on the St. Columb Canal in Cornwall, UK.

★ '1777' 3 inclined planes begin operation on the Tyrone Canal, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland'Hadfield's British Canals' eighth edition ''Joseph Boughey'' Page 49 ISBN0-7509-0017-2

★ '1788' An inclined plane is used for the first time in England to raise canal boats, on England's Ketley Canal. [1]

★ '1792' William Reynolds of Ketley Ironworks constructed several inclined planes on the Shropshire Canal. [2]

★ '1793' American born inventor Robert Fulton wrote a letter to Lord Stanhope suggesting inclined planes instead of locks for Bude Canal in Cornwall. Lord Stanhope replied saying his idea for working the plane had already been thought of by Edmund Leach.

★ '1794' Robert Fulton took out a British patent (# 1988), for improvements to inclined planes including a double inclined plane system to be used to raise canal boats without locks.

★ '1797' Worsley Navigable Levels underground incline started in 1795 was completed. Canal Lifts and Inclines of the World, Hans-Joachim Uhlemann, , , , ,

★ '1800' Francis Henry Egerton, eighth Earl of Bridgewater (1756-1829) wrote 'The Description of the Inclined Plane at Walkden Moor. (Lancashire)' [3]

★ '1801' Inclined plane built on the Somersetshire Coal Canal [4]

★ '1801' to 1806. Two inclined planes built on the Stollen Canal at Gliwice, Upper Silesia.

★ '1806' Three inclined planes built on the Canal du Creusot near Torcy, France.

★ '1825' to 1831. 23 inclines built on the Morris Canal, USA.

★ '1827' The Rolle Canal includes an inclined plane

★ '1832' Mrs. Frances Trollope
[5], publishes in "Domestic Manners of the Americans" her account of a visit the previous year to see one of the inclined planes of the Morris Canal. This waterway, 100 miles long, connected the Hudson and Delaware Rivers, rising more than 1400 feet by means of a series of inclined planes.

★ '1885' Keage Incline on Lake Biwa Canal in Kyoto, Japan was built.

★ '1900' Foxton Inclined Plane was built.

★ '1911' Foxton Inclined Plane mothballed.

★ '1921' Trench plane closes and brings to an end boat carrying inclined planes in Britain

★ '1973' Montech water slope the first of its kind was built on the Canal latéral à la Garonne in France.

Other examples


With caissons



★ The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal in Washington, D.C. later had an inclined plane built to move boats into the Potomac River so that they could bypass Georgetown which was becoming congested with traffic. The inclined plane was two miles upriver from Georgetown.

Foxton Inclined Plane

Ronquières Inclined Plane on the Brussels Charleroi Canal in Belgium.

★ The electric "ship elevator" at the Krasnoyarsk hydroelectric dam, ship capacity up to 1500 tons, maximum ship size 80 x 17 x 2 metres, elevation 104 metres.

St.Louis-Arzviller Incline on the Canal du Marne au Rhin.
Without caissons

Inclined plane on the ElblÄ…g Canal, showing a vessel entering the cradle.
Cradle starting its climb on an inclined plane of the ElblÄ…g Canal.
There are also inclined planes without a tank or caisson, instead carrying vessels up out of the water cradled in slings or resting on their keels. In a few cases the boats were permanently fitted with wheels.

Big Chute Marine Railway on the Trent-and-Severn-Waterway

Bude Canal in Cornwall

Elbląg Canal between Elbląg and Ostróda in Poland

Hay Inclined Plane

Morris Canal, Northern New Jersey. Photo Documentary of Morris Canal

St. Columb Canal built by John Edyvean

Trench Inclined Plane on the Shrewsbury Canal

★ Underground inclined plane in the Worsley Navigable Levels

See also



Boat lift

Funicular

Overtoom ''(in Dutch)''

Water slope

Further reading



Canal Inclines and Lifts, , David, Tew, Sutton Books, ,

Canal lifts and inclines of the world, , Hans-Joachim, Uhlemann, Internat, ,

References


External links



Article on the C & O incline plane

Photo of St Louis-Arzviller Inclined Plane, Canal de La Marne au Rhin, Alsace-Lorraine, France

Second photo of St Louis-Arzviller Inclined Plane

The inclined plane of Ronquières (official site)

Ronquières Inclined Plane

Photos of Ronquières Inclined Plane

Krasnoyarsk hydroelectric dam boat lift — photograph gallery showing all stages of ship elevation

Funicular railways of the UK – ''Mainly concerning Funiculars but with a good section on Canal Inclined Planes''

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