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View Full Version : New to Hydro Power alot of questions


Tom Nolan
29th July 2020, 09:06
I have a 10' river in front of my house. At 150lbs if I stepped into I would end up 100' out in the ocean with how fast it runs
I have a lot of reading to do but the elevation drop is only about 10' on a 120' run.
I have string lights around my deck that I would like to power from the river and then I got thinking.
Could I not use the river to run a pool heater.
The pool heater would be a 10Kw.
I have no heater now because at .13Kwph it's just not worth it.
Is there any options on using power from the river?

Thanks for any advice

Rob Beckers
2nd August 2020, 06:42
Hi Tom,

Hydro power is not my strength, but since nobody else is answering I'll give it a try.

EcoInnovation, a New Zealand manufacturer of small water turbines that go under the "PowerSpout" name, published a nice chart that shows head (how high you can drop the water down from), vs. flow rate, vs. output power from a turbine. You can find a copy at https://s1.solacity.com/docs/EcoInnovation/PowerSpout-Model-Selection-Chart-Metric.pdf

You don't mention flow rate, but if you can create a 10 foot drop you'd need around 1000 liters per second (about 16,000 GPM) to intersect that 12 kW output power line (i.e. your pool heater). That's a lot of water! Powering the string lights may be easier...

What that graph shows very well is how things get a heck of a lot easier if you have more pressure (head) to work with.

Some people have built relatively simple undershot water wheels (though with 10' you can do an overshot wheel), and generated a kW that way. The advantage is that you don't need to change the water flow for a waterwheel, no need to divert part to keep it high. A waterwheel just drops in the water.

-RoB-