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n k s i d e Ted Prangnell, draughtsman for CEGB recalls... |
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| | EXIT | Looking Back | The New Bankside | The District Heating Scheme | CEGB Research | | |||||||
Looking Back at Bankside Old and New
Ted Prangnell had a long career as a draughtsman in the electricity industry from the early 1950s, until circa 1990 when privatisation took hold. He was involved in the planning, design, and improvement of many systems within plants throughout the UK, including Bankside. Here he recalls various aspects of the site.
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The New Bankside In those days a pair of Kestrels nested (despite the smoke) on an upper ledge of the Power Station stack. An exhaust gas washing plant was installed to remove the harmful sulphur. This only made matters worse, because it cooled the exhaust gases and caused them to sink instead of rise. Sometimes smoke would virtually crawl down and around the chimney to ground level, creating an unpleasant fog. It would also carry far across the River to form a fog there, and in the City! Whether this was the sole cause of the station's demise I know not, but in response to the Clean Air Act 1956, one of my tasks was to draw a Ringelmann Chart (new to the electricity industry) from calculated dimensions. I then had to reduce these figures to a suitable scale so that I could get the chart to fit on my drawing board. The result was reduced still considerably further, and printed to be used as the official CEGB smoke density measuring card/device. The Ringlemann Chart is widely used today, though in a somewhat more sophisticated form, influenced by modern technology. [Note: A Ringelmann Chart is used to define dark smoke. The chart has five shades of grey with 0 being clear and 5 being black. Smoke is considered 'dark' if it has a shade of 2 or darker. You can find the Ringelmann chart in British Standard BS2742C: 1957]
There was another aspect of Bankside about which I wonder what happened. That was the City of London District Heating Scheme, which utilised hot Condensate Cooling Water as a heating medium for properties across the River. Quote from 'Power into Art', Karl Sabbagh 2000: "Around the base of the chimney tower was an extension that had been added later as part of a district heating scheme. Herzog and de Meuron decided to remove that structure."
We carried out quite a lot of research work to improve the efficiency of C W (Cooling Water) flow through the system, using Hydraulic Gradient Charts, introducing gyratory flow circular pump houses, and even sloped cooling tower pond floors to add natural momentum to the flow. We could increase the efficiency by approximately 5%, but this had to be weighed against extra construction costs and other factors.
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The Bankside pages are a part of the Fynevue Chronicles © 1999-2008 |
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