A New Era in Home-Owner Hydro

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Seventeen years ago, Dan New's father started making hydroelectric turbines near Deming, Washington. "He was just fascinated with falling water," says New. "I never understood it, until the day he let me turn on the penstock valve. When the lights came on, I was instantly hooked:"

"I see water pouring out of a storm sewer, and I immediately start calculating head and volume," says New. "I can't help it:'

The hydro turbines he makes are at once simple and sophisticated. A metal shroud surrounds a wheel. The shroud is pierced by a nozzle. The nozzle emits a jet of pressurized water. Moving at up to 100 miles an hour, it strikes the wheel. The wheel is a turbine's heart. Spinning, it pumps electrons.

The wheels are surprisingly small and surprisingly beautiful. In this market, a nine-inch wheel is a giant. Harris' Pelton is just six inches across. Cast of bronze, its complex geometry is a work of art, a hydrodynamic sculpture. "What's elegant is the electricity:" New retorts. "You and I, we take power for granted, think it comes from an outlet on the wall:"

"Energy is eternal delight," wrote the poet William Blake two hundred years ago. Throughout history, a good hydro spot was coveted and many a town was founded at a mill site. In 1880 there were 23,000 waterwheels between Maine and Georgia, and hydro supplied much of this nation's energy. By the turn of the century, 27 independent laboratories tested turbine designs.

"The shape of a Peltonwheel was perfected 70 years ago," says New. "In those days, before NASA, biotech, computers, nuclear physics, half the nation's brains were working on it:'

During the Depression, small hydro was eclipsed by mega-dams such as Hoover and Grand Coulee. Cheap, subsidized power from the Rural Electrification Association was the industry's death blow.

Today, however, it is enjoying a quiet revival. The current hotbeds are the Rockies, California, and British Columbia. The future, though, may lie overseas. Pakistan, Cuba, Peru, Laos-village power. There are 2 billion people out there with no electricity. If they all get it by burning coal ...well, let's hope global warming is a myth.

Already, New has installed systems in Morocco and New Guinea. His latest project was in the Aleutians. "I just love to unplug diesel generators," he says. Harris, meanwhile, is on his way to the highlands of Bolivia, where almost every village has an untapped stream.

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