• @[email protected]
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    291 day ago

    How does that siphon work? I would think they would need a pump of some kind, even if it’s just a bunch of Roman workers/slaves turning an Archimedes Screw, to get the water to go uphill.

      • @Donjuanme
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        823 hours ago

        How did the Romans seal that apparatus? Cement? Even that would fail rather quickly

      • @jaybone
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        31 day ago

        By why did they even need one here though?

        • @[email protected]
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          1 day ago

          Because it’s simpler to build siphons through large valleys instead of 100 meter high 10 kilometer long aqueducts.

          • @Donjuanme
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            523 hours ago

            But you have to keep water pressure throughout the length of that tube, how did they do that with their materials?

            • @Buddahriffic
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              22 hours ago

              They had metal working and also knew how to work clay. Plus finding water leaks isn’t difficult to know what specific points need attention, then you just add material until it stops leaking. The pipes might have been large enough to work from the inside if the flow was diverted.

              They also wouldn’t need a perfect seal, just a good enough seal that the majority of the water makes it to the other side.

              I’d bet that there were teams of people whose full-time job was to maintain each of the siphons rather than the more modern approach of “build it and then bury it under asphalt because it will probably be fine for years” plumbing takes today.

        • @[email protected]
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          41 day ago

          Valley was too deep for the aqueduct but they didn’t want to make the drawing taller just for that

        • @KillerTofu
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          81 day ago

          For demonstration purposes only.

      • @SendMePhotos
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        21 day ago

        Yeah, but the water pipe goes back up meaning that there is near equal pressure on either side of the U-Siphon, right? Kind of negates the siphon, in a sense?

        I’m no fluid dynamics expert. Just a casual Joe.

    • @[email protected]
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      141 day ago

      If you’ve ever used a siphon to drain a fish tank, it’s a similar concept. I believe the entrance is a bit higher than the exit, so I guess gravity and water pressure?

      • @Donjuanme
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        423 hours ago

        Not disagreeing with you there, but if you’ve siphoned something you’ve probably done it with a polymer, how the heck were the Romans doing it? You can’t get intestines sealed together tightly enough back in those days.

        • @PugJesusOPM
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          23 hours ago

          The Romans would often use lead or clay pipes with either dirt or concrete packed around them to make a solid seal that would resist the water pressure and not burst the pipe like a ripe fruit.

      • @chonglibloodsport
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        31 day ago

        It needs to be water pressure because atmospheric pressure can’t lift water more than about 10 metres.

    • troed
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      161 day ago

      The “pump” is the higher elevation at the source.