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  2. Water wheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_wheel

    A water wheel is a machine for converting the kinetic energy of flowing or falling water into useful forms of power, often in a watermill. A water wheel consists of a large wheel (usually constructed from wood or metal), with numerous blades or buckets attached to the outer rim forming the drive mechanism. Water wheels were still in commercial ...

  3. List of watermills in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_watermills_in_the...

    Dellingers Mill, Bakersville, seasonally operational, water powered, 1867; Emmett Isaacs Mill, Surry County; Gwynn Valley Mill, Brevard; Linneys Mill, Alexander County, 1902; Mingus Mill, Cherokee; Old Mill of Guilford, Oak Ridge. Fully operational water-powered grist mill. Founded in 1767, moved 500 feet downstream to current location in 1819.

  4. Watermill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watermill

    Watermill of Braine-le-Château, Belgium (12th century) Interior of the Lyme Regis watermill, UK (14th century). A watermill or water mill is a mill that uses hydropower.It is a structure that uses a water wheel or water turbine to drive a mechanical process such as milling (grinding), rolling, or hammering.

  5. Terryville Waterwheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terryville_Waterwheel

    The wheel was powered by water delivered from a dam upriver (no longer extant) via a wooden head race (also not extant, although it survived until 1951). This wheel provided power to lockmaking concerns until about 1940, when the factory was demolished. Of Connecticut's three surviving 19th-century water wheels it is the best preserved. [2]

  6. Reverse overshot water wheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverse_overshot_water_wheel

    This system was also a stack of 16 wheels but worked like a normal overshot wheel, the wheels driving stone mills and used to grind grains. The water mills were worked from a masonry aqueduct supplying the Roman town at Arles , and the remains of the masonry mills are still visible on the ground today, unlike the underground drainage systems of ...

  7. Will Fort Worth’s water wheel ever see the light of day ...

    www.aol.com/fort-worth-water-wheel-ever...

    The estimated cost to build one water wheel is $1.9 million, and the city has yet to meet its goal. Donations from sponsors and partnerships total $1.34 million.

  8. Pelton wheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelton_wheel

    Some water wheels were used in the larger rivers, but they were ineffective in the smaller streams that were found near the mines. Pelton worked on a design for a water wheel that would work with the relatively small flow found in these streams. [4] By the mid 1870s, Pelton had developed a wooden prototype of his new wheel.

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