Pelton Wheel
The Pelton wheel is an impulse type water turbine: extracting energy from the impulse of moving water, as opposed to water's weight. The design extracts almost all of the impulse energy, allowing for a very efficient turbine. It was invented by Lester Allan Pelton in the 1870s.
The Pelton wheel is the most widely used water turbine in the world. It is the preferred turbine for hydro-power, when the available water source has relatively high hydraulic head at low flow rates, where the Pelton wheel geometry is most suitable. Pelton wheels are made in all sizes: the largest units can be over 400 megawatts, while the smallest ones are only a few inches across.
Gallery
Product Ecology
Possibility of using a windpump to lift water up to a reservoir that acts as a "battery" of potential energy. Then a Pelton turbine micro hydro power plant can convert that energy to electricity.
Links
- other OSE Wiki pages: Pumped Hydroelectric Storage
- Wikipedia: Pelton Wheel
- Mother Earth News (1972) "Water Power: Building a Pelton Wheel"
- "DoradoVista - Small Hydro Power Project"
- "Pelton and Turgo Turbines"