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Industrial
Hydraulic Lifts
Elevating materials throughout early
history was deemed more important than lifting people, although isolated
attempts were made to elevate Royalty and Princes of the Church within their
domiciles. Loads of materials in most instances were much heavier than a
cabin of passengers, prompting much thought to lifting cargo by hydraulic
power, a form that could be multiplied in a variety of ways. The idea for
lifting loads by hydraulics was envisioned by Yorkshireman Joseph Bramah
who received a patent in 1795 for the principle of a hydraulic press. He
is better known for his experimentation and patenting of the all-important
leather cup that would contain the water under pressure within a cylinder,
yet allow the easy movement of the piston. He foresaw high pressure mains
in English towns in one of his last patents in 1812 but half a century had
to pass before practical application. That practical usage was the brain
child of Sir William Armstrong in 1848. Low pressure lifting machines were
developed thereafter with large diameter cylinders. To power the industrial
lifts to load the vessels of "Her Majesty's Fleet," British engineers came
to use a source older than England, herself -- the water of the River Thames.
Few activities were more important than keeping commerce moving through
the docks of London, then the world's largest city. In 1871, Parliament gave
monopolistic powers to the Wharves and Warehouses Steam Power and Hydraulic
Pressure Company, and by 1883, it laid seven miles of mains on either side
of the river with 700 pounds per square foot being generated at the Falcon
Wharf Pumping station. Intensifiers and accumulators augmented chains, ropes
and sheaves to increase industrial capacity of hydraulic power. |

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