Are we fooling ourselves a little with pretending that there is a difference 
between removing kinetic energy from a flowing stream and driving a turbine 
with a high head using the potential energy of the water.

In a stream there is a relationship between speed of flow and difference in 
height. It may be complex, but its there, and we know it intuitively to some 
extent.
If the stream is level then its a lake - it doesnt move - as the difference in 
height grows, so does the horizontal component of gravity and so the horizontal 
force applied to the water, hence its acceleration. The water accelerates to 
the point where the forces holding it back are the same as the forces pulling 
it downstream. 

When we talk about using the streams kinetic energy, then what we are doing is 
slowing down the water, and in doing so we back it up to some extent. The more 
kinetic energy we extract from a stream the more we slow down the flow of the 
water, and the more water is backed up. Since the water upstream of the energy 
conversion device is now higher than the water downstream then isnt that the 
same as using a very small difference in water height?

When we use a pelton wheel or similar driven from a water jet with a large head 
then what we are doing is using the difference in height to accelerate the 
water and then using the kinetic energy of that water to turn the turbine. The 
fact that before the water flowed through the nozzle it had been in a pipe and 
then in settling tanks and then in a flowing stream doesnt really change what 
we are doing.

I'm still figuring this out so I may have simplified it or complicated it, but 
that's my understanding right now.

Dominic Read
Georgia, USA
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ranjitkar, Ghanashyam 
  To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' 
  Sent: Friday, November 05, 2004 10:18 AM
  Subject: RE: [microhydro] Re: Newbie question: energy estimation from flow 
rat e



  Hi there,

  It is possible to extract energy from the flowing water. The potential
  energy will depend on the speed of the water current, normally given in
  meter per second. Just like in wind power, higher the speed higher the power
  output form the turbine. The turbine that you are looking for is commonly
  knows as water current turbines, and many are still in prototype stages.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]






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