Looking at the photograph it is made up of two
circular iron discs with four scoops set around the
circumference, but it is not clear how it works.
Following the lines of rivets reveals that the space
between the two discs is divided into four spiral
passages, shown diagrammatically in the sketch. Each
spirals inwards from an entry at the rim to an
opening at the centre. Following a passage with a
pencil from entry A leads to the centre opening a. B
leads to b and so on. So how does it work? The wheel
turns clockwise so water scooped in at A will, as
the wheel turns, follow the spiral and eventually
emerge at a, 1.8 metres above the low water level.
From here it flows along the concrete channel and
from here to the fields.
The wheel is driven by a water wheel through a pair
of gears so arranged that the lifting wheel runs at
about half the speed of the water wheel. Clearly the
inlet water level for the water wheel is the same as
the low water level of the lifting wheel so the
water wheel is only operating with quite a low head
– an undershot or maybe a low-breast wheel. It was
not possible to make a full inspection.
Unfortunately the water wheel is in a poor state and
most of the wooden paddles have been dislodged. This
is a shame as the installation appears to be quite
rare.
HMG member Jeff Hawksley trained as a Marine
Engineer and served at sea in the Merchant Navy. In
1972 he came to Hampshire to work as a lecturer at
Southampton College of Technology (now Solent
University). Water has been an important theme
through his life and his interest in mills began
after retirement and he has made a particular study
of horizontal watermills and of the performance of
waterwheels. Jeff gave an illuminating talk on the
uses of horizontal waterwheels at the SPAB Autumn
Meeting last November.
Jeff has been a regular contributor to Mill News,
the quarterly magazine of the SPAB Mills Section.
Other published work includes:-
Watermills in Shetland pub. in International
Molinology No. 68, July 2004
The Power and Glory of Waterwheels published by
SPAB Mills Section, 2008
Des Roues à Cuve dans le sud-ouest de la France pub.
in Moulins de France No. 74, April 2008
How
Efficient were Horizontal Waterwheels? pub. in
Transactions of the 10th International Symposium of
International Molinological Society, Virginia,
USA. September 2000
The Power and Efficiency of Waterwheels in Theory
and Practice: pub in Transactions of the 11th
International Symposium of the International
Molinological Society, Portugal, September 2004
Regolfo Watermills, their Construction and
Performance: Transactions of the 12th International
Symposium of the International Molinological
Society, The Netherlands. June 2007
Romsey Mills & Waterways (co-author with several
others) published by LTVAS 1998