Hi
Hope this post gets some attention.
I live in Costa Rica and am trying to figure out the best way to set up a small Hydro system.
I have a spring fed flow of water across our small farm. I have measured the flow at 5 Gallons at 14 seconds. I realize this is not a lot of water.
I have dug a small pond uphill from the water source. It will be 4' deep and have around 9000 gallons of storage, but, be fed with possible 2 waterwheels, each pushing 2 piston pumps to push the water up to the pond. I plan on using the overflow for the generation, downhill. Hopefully, I will have 1500 gallons in 24 hr period of time, OR MORE.??
First, the pond is right at 110' elevation, at 200 feet distance to the stream and waterwheel location. I have 2-4" PVC pipes set in concrete for the drain and overflow. I will cap the ends inside the pond, and let the overflow drop down a 4" pipe, into the "T" that attaches the drains to each overflow. That will drop the water to the generator site, just above and upstream of the waterwheel site. The spent water from the generator, can be piped right back downstream, to help the waterwheels, in case there is insufficient water available to run both. Figure to wear out the water, using it over and over and over. This is a second water supply, coming as a direct result of the first supply being piped to the waterwheels from the stream source to the waterwheels.
Today, I was digging around below the elevation of the waterwheels location, trying to see how deep the bedrock is, because, I found out that the small dam I installed upstream, to put the 3" pipes into, that will feed the waterwheels, has less flow than at the location where I was digging. SOOooooo, I am thinking about putting a Dam at THIS location, and have it hold back a small pond, that would be 18' wide, X 40'+ long, X nearly 36" deep, throughout the whole pond area. There is plenty of room to build a small cement block, "powerhouse" at the base of the Dam. IT will be cement blocks, poured full of concrete, and tied into the existing boulder type rocks that are set into a "concretion" type mix, that looks exactly like moist coarse sand mix concrete. I can drill holes into this concretion, and put pieces of rebar in the holes, that will allow me to tied the blocks into the concretion.
This whole dam will be 4' high by the thickness of the blocks, 4½", and span a distance of 4-5 FEET or so. Pretty small set up.
What I am needing to find out is, I can figure the amount of power I can produce at the Pond overflow system, but, is it possible, I could put a drain pipe low in the dam, and have sufficient pressure to get the same amount of power, without the Rube Goldberg piping-waterwheel system? Just picture a MINI-Hoover Dam using this SPRING fed stream.
I can supply all the photos needed, but, first, would like someone to try to figure out if there is sufficient FORCE of water pressure, to run a Pelton Wheel set up, at the discharge of the dam ?? AND how much power would be available from the info I have provided. Anyone? PLEASE