Showing posts with label Kennet and Avon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kennet and Avon. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 March 2017

Claverton Pumping Station

Claverton Pumping Station
March 2017

Wednesday 23rd March represented the 13th meeting of the CRT National Council, this time gathering in the beautiful city of Bath.

One particularly positive dimension of the Council meetings is the provision of a guided tour around what is usually one of the lesser known elements of the CRT estate. This time it was the turn of the Claverton Pumping Station on the banks of the river Avon, about three miles upstream from the town. 



Our visit coincided with one of those mornings when BBC Weather indicated grey cloud with two drops of rain - in other words it would be p*****g down! And on this occasion the good old BBC were spot on, not that it dampened our enthusiasm for a brief tour.

The station is spread over three levels and we entered beside a swollen mill pond which was pouring two tons of water over 48 wooden slats fixed to 24 foot wide and 17ft diameter wheel which rotates every 12 seconds. Given the fall in the river at this point there is not enough height for an overshot wheel, so instead the water rushes onto the wheel mid way up, producing more power than the sort of undershot wheel I am more familiar with from the Norfolk watermills.



This huge wheel originally drove a traditional watermill but with the construction of the adjacent Kennet and Avon Canal an additional water source was needed. The mill was therefore converted to house a beam engine uniquely powered by water, lifting 50 gallons of water with each stroke and pumping nearly 100,000 gallons per hour 48 feet to the canal. To put that in perspective, its enough to fill two locks each hour. All this is achieved using free power supplied by the river.



As a walked under the bobbing and thrusting rods I was entranced by the geometric ingenuity of what I later learned was the Watt linkage, Watts huge contribution to the development of the Beam Engine. When I got all excited about it the visitors around me gave me rather strange looks so I will try to explain the problem the linkages overcame.



When a nodding beam engine seeks to convert power into an upwards and downwards motion for a pump it is hampered by the fact the the end of the beam arcs as it moves, so its end does not stay directly above the pump cylinder. Most engineers overcame this problem by using a cable on a rim which provides the desired vertical motion, but a cable can only be pulled, not pushed. Watts device involved two hinged bars hanging down from the beam which can swing to and fro. The alignment is then achieved by a bar attached to both the drop bars and the external framework, gently compensating for the movement created by the arc. I am not sure I am explaining this very well so you had better pay the site a visit and see it for yourself. My thanks to Phil Prettyman for the explanation.



This unusual structure continued quietly about its business from its construction in 1813 till 1952 when it fell into disuse. Then a group of volunteers set about its restoration, a group which continues to this day under the watchful oversight of CRT, the site's owner.

These days the mechanism is fully operational and they just need to reestablish a pipe under the adjacent railway line and they will be able to join Crofton as the second operational beam engine supplying water to the canal.

This site is well worth a visit if you are passing on one of their monthly open days.

Thursday, 1 April 2004

Kennet and Avon

Kennet and Avon Canal
Seend to Bath

April 2004

36 Miles
20 Locks
4 Days

Another trip from the archive. Belle was ferreting through some old prints and came across some of a four day trip in 2004, on the western end of the Kennet and Avon aboard ABC's Empress, part of their Hilperton fleet.


This trip was very significant in that it was our very first boating trip as a family. Some friends had used their Tesco's vouchers for a canal trip from Alvechurch on the Worcester Birmingham Canal and Belle suggested we could do the same. I seem to remember that the £400 of vouchers covered all but £50 of the cost of a four day hire, and we linked the boat trip to a visit to see some relatives in Trowbridge.


Belle captured my look if beatific euphoria as I took the tiller for the first time in nearly 20 years, and I think she realised that at that moment just how much boating meant to me. For me it was like an ex junkie taking a another fix. I was hooked all over again! We only had four days so we struck out westwards along the course of the Avon, meeting yet more family at Bradford on Avon lock and then on across firstly the Avoncliff Aqueduct, and on through the wooded section of Limpley Stoke and over Rennie's magnificent Dundas Aqueduct and the entrance to the Somersetshire Coal Canal (as it was called when built).


A feature of the canal was the huge number of unofficial and officious live aboard boaters who lined the route and made the passage very slow. If I had any sense I would have winded just beyond Cleveland Tunnel, but sadly I didn't and was obliged to descend the top three locks and wind between Bath Deep Lock and Wash House Lock, and then work back up again. Eight locks is a high price to pay for over shooting a winding hole!



We moored above Bath Top lock and spent a very enjoyable afternoon wandering around this ancient city, followed by a family pizza in the evening. We retraced our steps and had a day to spare, so moved on beyond Trowbridge with a view to getting somewhere close to the foot of Caen Hill, which we had walked up during a previous visit to the area. To the west of Hilperton lies the new Semington aqueduct over the A350 Trowbridge to Chippenham Road, all bright and brash in fresh concrete. Its no Dundas but it is still impressive and provides an idea of how the M6 Toll Aqueduct will look when the Lichfield Canal is in water.



In the event we made it past the bricked off entrance to the Wilts and Berks Canal (another basket case but now with real prospects of restoration) and on up the Semington and Seend Locks, finally winding between the two swing bridges near Sells Green. The section to the east of Trowbridge marks a change of scenery, with the canal breaking away from the Avon valley and starting to climb though the Wiltshire farmland. One day, I would like to get back to this area in our own boat ,but with Bath being three weeks cruising from Birmingham its a dream that will have to wait a while yet.