lift-lock - significado y definición. Qué es lift-lock
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Qué (quién) es lift-lock - definición

MACHINE FOR TRANSPORTING BOATS BETWEEN WATER AT TWO DIFFERENT ELEVATIONS
Lift lock; Ship elevator; Boatlift; List of lift locks; Ship lifts; Boat lifts; Shiplift (boat lift)

lift-lock      
n.
Lock (of a canal).
Lift (force)         
  • Airflow separating from a wing at a high angle of attack
  • Control volumes of different shapes that have been used in analyzing the momentum balance in the 2D flow around a lifting airfoil. The airfoil is assumed to exert a downward force −L' per unit span on the air, and the proportions in which that force is manifested as momentum fluxes and pressure differences at the outer boundary are indicated for each different shape of control volume.
  • Lift is defined as the component of the [[aerodynamic force]] that is perpendicular to the flow direction, and drag is the component that is parallel to the flow direction.
  • An illustration of the incorrect equal transit-time explanation of airfoil lift.<ref name="nasa_equal_transit"/>
  • streamlines]].
  • Illustration of the distribution of higher-than-ambient pressure on the ground under an airplane in subsonic flight
  • isobars]] of equal pressure along their length. The arrows show the pressure differential from high (red) to low (blue) and hence also the net force which causes the air to accelerate in that direction.
  • Streamlines and streamtubes around an airfoil generating lift. Note the narrower streamtubes above and the wider streamtubes below.
FORCE; AERODYNAMICS TERM
Dynamic lift; Lift force; Lift Force; Useful lift; Lift equation; Aerodynamic lift; Lift (physics); Lift (fluid mechanics); Lift distribution; Equal transit-time fallacy; Equal transit time fallacy; Lifting force; Lift vector; Lift (airplane); Three-dimensional flow; Lift (aerodynamics)
A fluid flowing around an object exerts a force on it. Lift is the component of this force that is perpendicular to the oncoming flow direction.
Lock (water navigation)         
  • Agde Round Lock
  • Operation of caisson lock
  • <u>Operation of a canal lock</u><br/>
1–3. Boat enters 'empty' lock<br/>
4. Bottom gates are closed, bottom paddles closed, top paddles opened, lock starts to fill<br/>
5. Lock is filling with water, lifting boat to the higher level
  • gates]]. The gates in each pair close against each other at an 18° angle to approximate an arch against the water pressure on the "upstream" side of the gates when the water level on the "downstream" side is lower.
  • [[Dalmuir]] drop lock
  • Berendrecht Lock (right) and Zandvliet Lock (left), located at the entrance to the Port of Antwerp (top) from the Scheldt (foreground)
  • Lock on the River [[Neckar]] at [[Heidelberg]] in Germany
  • Iroquois Lock on the [[Saint Lawrence Seaway]]
  • A pound lock on the Keitele–[[Päijänne]] Canal at [[Äänekoski]] in [[Central Finland]]
  • Collection of lock windlasses. Note: rakes are for clearing trash out of the lock.
  • Hatton flight]] in England
  • Doubled locks. Left lock has boat in it, right lock (center of drawing) is empty. This is on the Erie Canal at Lockport.
  • Entrance to Minden shaft lock
  • The turf-sided [[Monkey Marsh Lock]] on the Kennet & Avon Canal at [[Thatcham]]
  • 180px
  • Model of early river pound lock, constructed in Lankheet water park, Netherlands
  • abbr=on}} in a lock
  • Snubbing a boat to keep it from hitting the downstream gates. Note the rope wrapped around the snubbing post.
  • [[Three Gorges Dam]] model view. A pair of five locking steps is at center with a ship lift to the left
  • [[Three Gorges Dam]] lock near [[Yichang]] on [[Yangtze]] river, China
  • Barges at a lock on the [[Mississippi River]]
FALL STRUCTURE WITH A FIXED CHAMBER IN WHICH THE WATER LEVEL CHANGES
Canal locks; Ship lock; Lock (canal); Lock and dam; Shiplock; Navigation lock; Pound lock; Lock (river); Locks (canal); Canal lock; Locks (water transport); Sea lock; Gate (water transport); Lock (ship); Ship locks; Mitre gate; Staircase locks; Shaft lock; Twin lock; Sluse; Sluser; Canal Lock; Lock gate; Lock navigation; Stop lock; Lock gates; Lock flight; Lock-chambers; Shipping lock; Lock chamber; Staircase lock; Lock (waterway); Lock (water transport); Lock (waterwat transport); Dock gate; Lock (water); Drop lock; Flight of locks; Lock flights; Lock paddle; Lock rise; Double lock
A lock is a device used for raising and lowering boats, ships and other watercraft between stretches of water of different levels on river and canal waterways. The distinguishing feature of a lock is a fixed chamber in which the water level can be varied; whereas in a caisson lock, a boat lift, or on a canal inclined plane, it is the chamber itself (usually then called a caisson) that rises and falls.

Wikipedia

Boat lift

A boat lift, ship lift, or lift lock is a machine for transporting boats between water at two different elevations, and is an alternative to the canal lock.

It may be vertically moving, like the Anderton boat lift in England, rotational, like the Falkirk Wheel in Scotland, or operate on an inclined plane, like the Ronquières inclined plane in Belgium.