Emergency Gate, Greenup Locks Ohio River, Kentucky: Hydraulic Model Investigation.

Abstract

Tests were conducted on a 1:25-scale model of the emergency lift gate proposed for use in the locks at Greenup Dam. Model tests were made to determine the vertical hydrodynamic forces acting on the downstream leaf of the gate as its crest is raised through flowing water from elevation 497 (sill elevation) to above the upper pool elevation 515. The tests revealed that the gate as originally designed was unsatisfactory and would bounce (vertical displacement) violently during certain tailwater conditions. The instability of the gate was attributed primarily to negative pressures on the curved gate crest and to the back roller from the outflow nappe which tended to force the gate upward. At low tailwater conditions (elevation 484), venting of the gate crest eliminated the bouncing; however, at tailwater elevations between 499 and 508, the vent system was drowned and the gate bounced violently. As no curved-surface gate crest would ideally fit all flow conditions, tests of a plane-surface gate crest were undertaken.

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Oct 01, 1959
Accession Number
AD0760940

Entities

People

  • E. S. Melsheimer
  • N. V. Cowan

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Air Platforms

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Displacement
  • Elevation
  • Emergencies
  • Hydraulic Models
  • Instability
  • Kentucky
  • Model Tests
  • Models
  • Ohio River
  • Rivers
  • Scale Models

Readers

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  • Riverine Ecology
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