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A canal lock or navigation lock is a device that lifts or lowers boats, barges or other vessels from one water level to another. Locks used on canals allow the negotiation of hills without recourse to lengthy detours, or the use of tunnels or aqueducts. The same kind of locks are used on rivers, often in connection with dams since there is generally a difference in water level between the upstream side of a dam and the downstream side.

A lock traditionally consists of two pairs of oak or elm gates placed one after the other along a navigable channel of water. Modern commercial locks consist of large steel gates but use essentially the same swinging gate design, with the exception of some low head locks that use sliding gates (see Kiel Canal) The system operates in much the same way as an airlock but acts between two levels of water as opposed to two levels of air pressure.

1 Operation

A boat wishing to follow the canal down-hill, approaches the lock on a higher level of water to that on which it will leave. The water level within the lock - that is to say between the two pairs of gates - will be at one of these two levels. Presuming the lock is empty (at the same level as the lower stretch of canal), the lock will need to be filled before the boat can enter it. This is generally achieved by opening a pair of ground paddles: sluices built into the canal bank, which when opened allow water to pass through culvert s and into the lock. Some locks will not have ground paddles and, in such cases, paddles on the top gates are used. Modern locks use pipes and valves to fill the locks but most are still filled by gravity alone.

Once the lock is full, the top gates are opened, and the boat enters the lock. The gates and paddles are then closed again, and the paddles on the bottom gates are opened, letting the water drain from the lock to the lower water-level. The bottom gates are then opened, and the boat continues on its way.

The two halves of a lock gate meet at a chevron which points against the flow of the water. This prevents the lock gates from bursting open from the differences in pressure between an empty lock and the full force of canal above it. It also has the effect of sealing the lock whenever the water levels at each side of the gate are different.

Some locks are manned by lock keeper s and many locks are now self-operating, but most small locks have to be worked by hand, by pushing against an overhanging part of the gate called the balance beam. Paddles are operated using a detachable handle device called a windlass, though many paddles now have their handles ready-attached. On large modern canals such as ship canals the locks gates and machinery are too large to be hand operated, and are operated by large scale hydraulic or electrical equipment.

Operating locks can be tricky, and hard work. Gongoozler s are people who take entertainment from observing the fruitless endeavours of hapless narrow-boat crews struggling with locks.


2 Staircase locks

When a very steep gradient has to be climbed, what is known as a lock staircase is often used. A lock staircase is a group of locks which connect directly into each other without any intermediate pound. Many bargeNote that "Barge" is the NATO reporting name for the Soviet Tupolev Tu-85 bomber. A barge is a flat-bottomed boat, built mainly for river and canal transport of heavy goods. Most barges are non-self-propelled and need to be moved by tugboats towing them oes consider lock staircases the stuff of nightmareThis page is about a type of dream. See Nightmare (disambiguation) for other meanings of the term A nightmare is a dream of particular intensity and with content that the sleeper finds disturbing. They are usually associated with rapid-eye movement ( REM)s. One example of a lock staircase is at Foxton LocksFoxton Locks are a staircase of ten canal locks located on the Grand Union Canal about five miles west of the Leicestershire town of Market Harborough and are named after the nearby village of Foxton. Staircase locks are used where a canal needs to climb in EnglandEngland is the largest, the most populous, and the most densely populated of the four " Home Nations" which make up the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (UK). Occupying the south-eastern portion of the island of Great Britain, England.



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