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Boat
Lifts of Europe |
Price £16.99 Available for purchase on-line from our sister company redumbrella. In PAL DVD-R format, suitable for the UK, European and Australia / New Zealand markets. Will also play in laptops anywhere. |
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Building
canals over flat land is easy. But making them go uphill has always been
a problem. This programme features some of the ingenious answers that
canal engineers have come up with, under the general heading of "Boat
Lifts". The grandfather of all boat lifts has to be Anderton in Cheshire,
designed in the 1870's, and completely restored in 2002. The design was
adopted at Les Font-inettes in Northern France and in Belgium where we
take you through three of the four lifts on the Canal du Centre. Here
too is the highest lift in the programme at Stripy Thieu, where the ship
lift, started in 1982 and still under construction, will lift 1350 tonne
peniches through 73 metres. We take you to Germany where the great ship
lifts at Henrichenburg provide a solution that is elegant in its simplicity.
These have a capacity of 2000 tonnes. The longest lift is an inclined
plane at Ronquiere on the Brussels - Charleroi canal where the bed of
the incline is 1.5 kilometres long, again with a 1350 tonne capacity.
The most bizarre lift featured is at Montech on the Canal Lateral du Garonne
in Southern France, where two 1000 hp traction units attempt to propel
you up hill on a wedge of water trapped in a concrete channel by a giant
bulldozer blade. The newest and most fantastic lift of all is the Falkirk
Wheel, where a great starwars-like construction swings boats through an
aerial arc, like a giant theme-park ride. |
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