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Scientific American Supplement, No. 799, April 25, 1891 by Various
page 61 of 124 (49%)
Water wheels of various forms for this purpose have been used from time
immemorial in Europe, Asia and Egypt, where the record gives examples of
wheels of the noria class from 30 to 90 feet in diameter; the term
_noria_ having been applied to water wheels carrying buckets for raising
water; the Spanish _noria_ having buckets on an endless chain.

Records of a Chinese noria, of 30 feet diameter, made of bamboo, show a
lifting capacity of 300 tons of water per day to a height of ¾ of the
diameter of the wheel--velocity of current not stated.

For less quantity and greater elevation, these forms of wheel may have
pumps attached to the shaft, by crank, that will give a fair duty for a
high water supply.

For power purposes, as in the plain current wheel, Fig. 23, there are
two principal factors in the problem of power--the velocity of the
current and the area of the buckets or blades.

[Illustration: Fig. 23]

Their efficiency is very low, from 25 to 36 per cent., according to
their lightness of make and form of buckets. A slightly curved plate
iron bucket gives the highest efficiency, thus ( to the current, and an
additional value may also be given by slightly shrouding the ends of the
buckets.

The relative velocity of the periphery of the wheel to the velocity of
the current should be 50 per cent. with curved blades for best effect.

The most useful and convenient sizes for power purposes are from 10 to
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