scoop wheel

image:Scoop-Wheel-at-Streatham-old-engine-by-Chris-Allen.jpg, Cambridgeshire]]

File:Wipmolen Laaglandse Molen Hellouw scheprad.jpg

File:Dogdyke engine scoopwheel-Geograph-579691-by-Chris-Allen.jpg, Lincolnshire ]]

A scoop wheel or scoopwheel is a pump, usually used for land drainage.

A scoop wheel pump is similar in construction to a water wheel, but works in the opposite manner: a waterwheel is water-powered and used to drive machinery, a scoop wheel is engine-driven and is used to lift water from one level to another. Principally used for land drainage, early scoop wheels were wind-driven{{PastScape|mnumber=1394837|mname=| accessdate = 2013-09-11 }} National monument record for typical but surviving wind driven scoop wheel at Turf Fen but later steam-powered beam engines were used.Most of this section taken from 'Machines, Mills & uncountable costly necessities', R L Hills, Goose & Co (Norwich), 1967 It can be regarded as a form of pump.

A scoop wheel produces a lot of spray. They were frequently encased in a brick building. To maintain efficiency when the river into which the water was discharged was of variable level, or tidal, a 'rising breast' was used, a sort of inclined sluice. The basic construction is, of necessity, similar to an undershot water wheel.

The individual blades were frequently called ladles.

Scoop wheels have been used in land drainage in Northern Germany, in the Netherlands, and in the UK, and occasionally elsewhere in the world. They began to be replaced in the mid 19th century by centrifugal pumps. The East and West Fens to the north of Boston, Lincolnshire were drained by such pumps in 1867, but although they were smaller and more economical to install, a Mr. Lunn was still arguing that scoop wheels were a better solution if the initial cost did not rule them out, they were employed in situations where the water did not need to be raised by more than {{convert|8|ft|m}}, and where the water levels of the input and output did not vary much.Hills (2008), p.168

An interesting comparison between the two types of pumps is available, because a {{convert|60|hp|kW|adj=on}} vertical spindle centrifugal pump was installed at Prickwillow on the River Lark in Cambridgeshire, alongside an existing {{convert|60|hp|kW|adj=on}} scoop wheel. A series of tests were carried out in 1880, to check their efficiency. The scoop wheel lifted 71.45 tons per minute through {{convert|9.78|ft|m}}, with the engine indicating that it was developing {{convert|103.33|hp|kW|abbr=on}}, while the newer installation was developing {{convert|106|hp|kW|abbr=on}}, and raised 75.93 tons per minute through {{convert|10.84|ft|m}}. Efficiency was calculated as 46 per cent for the scoop wheel and 52.79 per cent for the centrifugal pump. The most significant difference was the coal consumption, which was reduced from {{convert|11.64|lb|kg}} per hour to {{convert|6.66|lb|kg}} per hour for the newer system.Hills (2008), pp.170-172

See also

=Pumping stations employing a scoop wheel=

References

{{Reflist}}

=Bibliography=

{{Refbegin}}

  • {{cite book

|title=The Drainage of the Fens

|author=Richard L. Hills

|publisher=Landmark Publishers Ltd

|year=2008

|isbn=978-1-84306-323-0}}

  • {{cite book|title=Stoombemaling in Nederland 1770-1870

|author1=K. van der Pols |author2=J. A. Verbruggen

|year=1984

|publisher=Delftse Universitaire Pers

|isbn=90-407-1353-7}}

{{Refend}}