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Derek R.

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Everything posted by Derek R.

  1. Somewhere in the vicinity? It's changed a bit! It's called a feeder canal at this point. https://tinyurl.com/4hj4e8bm That's looking towards the Castle. North Road runs parallel the other side of the drama college. Blackweir ambulance station behind aways.
  2. Bear in mind it's a small can, and if it's a copy - it's a darned good one.
  3. I thought Wales, but it's not on the Montgomery, and it's certainly not on the Lancaster. Looking on Google maps at the entire length of the Mon & Brec comes up with nothing like it. That big wall with the gates has to be to some Manor house, that's not likely to have disappeared in 100yrs. The lamp posts are set to cover the lock, rather than the gates. The characters on the bridge look to me as adult male & female with child. Love to know where it is.
  4. I could live in a back cabin, but not in a slanty sided under cloth 'conversion'. That would rule out BADSEY, though it's well kitted out under the 'cloths'. At nearly twice the price, HYDRUS looks to be overkill. That slanty thing at the fore end of the cabin would see my cutting disc. Impressive rebuild (or is it 'replica'?). No thanks. I'd be quite happier to have dings and dents, all part of a boats history of a working life. HYDRUS is dead. And IVY! Apart from the easy to change curved undercloth contraption (catches the imagination as to what a 'cargo' might be) what a pretty thing. I like it. Yes, it's wooden, but I'll wager it's a dream to steer. Prices? There's now't so queer as folk. I can see the work on HYDRUS has been expensive, but worth £107k unfitted and super smooth sides? A recovering of costs as they escalate beyond dreams? Were I in the 'market', I'd take IVY.
  5. Looking at the general environs in the more recent image courtesy of G maps, it doesn't match with the original image posted by Heartland. The mid distance black and white bridge (could be modern) is not there, but more noticably the mature rows of trees have gone - and there's a house on the right - though it does look like 'new-build'. Some massive changes have taken place if it's Aldermaston lock. Then - I've changed a bit since I was ten years old.
  6. And more recently: - with 'scollops' https://tinyurl.com/2s3fpcxk
  7. On G maps, this is taken from the present day Monk Bridge, a broad road bridge looking toward a disused concrete footbridge. The run of the river in either direction does not fit the original claimed Monks Bridge, though it is over the river Foss in York. No idea. https://tinyurl.com/m3p7jsw5
  8. The Owl has been joined by a Deer . . . and the Chinese hat is missing.
  9. You'd have a job sticking one of those in your belt! I'm thinking the star wheel turns a shaft with worm gear on the end, connected to the large horizontal gear. That when turned, turns the vertical shaft and another spiral gear connected to the sluice which is thereby lifted. Complicated, and vulnerable. Ah - no - a 'rotating' paddle, Da Vinci style.
  10. Somewhat off topic, but my late Mother-in-Law would respond to her statements from her credit card account by writing all over the statement and sending it back. Not one for wasting paper.
  11. Not by the rise of the lock exactly, as it needs to take into account the displacement into the lock structure of any cill. These xyz mathematical calculations may be necessary when designing and constructing, but do not take into account water lost through leakages at gates. Reality has an unerring way of messing with figures, do they not? Water in real life, is fluid - it escapes, in differing amounts.
  12. Whichever way you look at it, water is needed from a summit supply and will ultimately end up at a lower level. A lock is a lock. The area of water between locks is a pound. If a lock is full (going uphill) you have emptied a lockfull into the lower pound in order to enter the lock. You then have to draw a lockfull of water off the upper pound to rise in the lock, thereby replacing the lockfull you emptied to enter. Therefore, you have taken a lockfull of water off the upper pound to proceed uphill (or conversley downhill). Water is needed to move a boat uphill or down. It gets used by moving water from a higher level to a lower level. This is basic stuff.
  13. May I point out, that if the boat going uphill presents itself to a bottom lock (in a flight or single) that is full, then immediately it has moved a lockfull into the lower pound which will have to be replaced ultimately by water from the upper pound. Only if the lock is empty upon approach can the above statement be true.
  14. I would agree with Tim. Most quotes I have heard are of 56,000 gallons for wide locks (Grand Union size) and around 26,000 for narrow locks. Depths will of course vary therefore the amount in volume. Heartland's original question can be answered only in theory, as lock depths vary. The volume of water in a 'lockfull' therefore also varies, and can only be used as a rule of thumb. The alleged American measurement of acre x foot (depth presumably) is neither here nor there. It may well be 270,000 gallons, but is that Imperial or Elizabethan gallons? As to how much water is used going uphill against downhill being different, and displacement of a vessel in the same calculation (was water over bywashes considered?), it's about as much use as fog on a dark night (apologies for being blunt). The fact is - it varies. Volumes used will also be affected by the difference between a shallow draught short narrow boat in a wide lock, compared to a heavily laden wide boat in a wide lock. Then there's evaporation and leakage to consider. The 'lock full' of water as a precise measurement is a useful estimate at best, but does give an 'indication' of how many lock emptyings/fillings that a reservoir is capable of supplying - roughly. Then there's the displacement in a reservoir caused by gradual silting from the banks; detritus thrown in; and fish displacement. It can get quite silly when an attempt at precise volumes are spoken of..
  15. What a stunning set of modelling images and skills! Love this one:
  16. Many thanks for the comment and interesting links.
  17. Glad something was saved. Hugh's level of maintenance had something to be desired. If that's how it was in the '70's, I can't imagine what Ellesmere Ports description as at 2014 of "dilapidated" might be.
  18. Can you confirm it is a Seffle and what condition it is in? Also - any knowledge of the boat itself?
  19. I believe PARRY II deteriorated quite badly, in fact, it was described as "dilapidated" At Ellesmere Port in 2014. The engine I believe was a Seffle. Same performance starting as a Bolinder. A lovely little boat at one time.
  20. What a satisfying job Mr. Nurser had back then. Though I doubt he would have thought it so at the time. Construction combined with art.
  21. This popped up on the forum in 2011. Can't find the video clip just now. The house to the right of the lock was used by Midland Counties Ice Cream in a shot involving a family outing in a Morris Minor, where 'Father' gets out and makes ice cream purchases. No boats were seen then (perish the thought!). Was the shed like structure used by a blacksmith at one time? Certainly the old stable block beyond housed horses (animals) in previous generations. It was being demolished at one point, but I believe stopped part way through, then got rebuilt as living accommodation, which it probably still is. Water deep enough outside to get right into the bank (well, it was in the eighties.) Edited to add link: https://tinyurl.com/55p2ftk9 (Oct 2008)
  22. Commonplace footwear in many places around the World at one time. https://www.clogs.co.uk/index.htm#xl_xr_page_index Blown up from a bigger image, therefore unclear, but taken in 1966/67 outside the Garage in Rue de Fauberg, Montrichard. The mechanic attendant the Renault's engine is wearing clogs.
  23. Interesting image. Is BabelColour a process, a corporation, or an individual? What are they unloading - beets? The produce can be seen in the truck on the right. Not coal, not wood (as far as can be determined).
  24. I don't recall he ever carried, [I see koukouvagia has answered in the positive] but you would have to ask him. He went on with CEDAR & CYPRUS (or is it CYPRESS? Can't remember off hand).
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