The nearby town of Bellefonte, PA features the Gamble Mill, an old mill originally used to grind grain into flour in the 1800s for hydropower. The mill dam, pond, mill race and tail race are still in place and functional. The mill building is now a restaurant (currently for sale), but all the water works are owned by the borough. The municipal manager wants to put the system back to work as a small hydroelectric system to help supply the borough's electricity. Does this idea make sense? How much power could this system produce? The height difference between the mill race and the tail race is ten feet (3 meters), and the stream can supply, on average, 100 cubic feet of water per second (2.8 m3/sec). The planned turbine would be 72% efficient under those conditions. Power (watts) density of water* height flow rate acceleration of gravity coefficient of efficiency NOTE: the coefficient of gravity is 9.81 for this problem Don't round your answers.

Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics
10th Edition
ISBN:9781337553292
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Chapter14: Fluid Mechanics
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 21P: Water falls over a dam of height h with a mass flow rate of Iv, in units of kilograms per second....
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The nearby town of Bellefonte, PA features the Gamble Mill, an old mill originally used to grind grain into flour in the 1800s for hydropower. The mill dam, pond, mill race and tail race are still in place and functional. The mill building is now a restaurant (currently for sale), but all the water works are owned by the borough. The municipal manager wants to put the system back to work as a small hydroelectric system to help supply the borough's electricity. Does this idea make sense? How much power could this system produce? The height difference between the mill race and the tail race is ten feet (3 meters), and the stream can supply, on average, 100 cubic feet of water per second (2.8 m3/sec). The planned turbine would be 72% efficient under those conditions. Power (watts) density of water* height flow rate acceleration of gravity coefficient of efficiency NOTE: the coefficient of gravity is 9.81 for this problem Don't round your answers.

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