Walter Zuppinger

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Walter Zuppinger (born June 21, 1814 in Männedorf ; † November 16, 1889 in Eschenz ) was a Swiss engineer and industrialist . He is best known as the inventor of a water wheel known as the Zuppinger wheel .

Live and act

After completing his apprenticeship, Zuppinger found a job at the Zürcher Maschinenfabrik Escher, Wyss & Co. and rose to a management position. Between 1856 and 1859, as Escher's confidante, Zuppinger set up a branch for Escher-Wyss in Ravensburg (today Andritz Hydro ) and was director there for a long time.

By expanding hydropower as the basis for industrialization in Upper Swabia , Zuppinger acquired a high reputation in the region. Among other things, Zuppinger was a co-founder of the Baienfurt paper mill near Ravensburg. For his services and his expertise, he was appointed the Württemberg building officer. A street in Ravensburg is named after Zuppinger.

Zuppinger turbine and Zuppinger water wheel

Between 1838 and 1844 Zuppinger worked for Escher-Wyss on the development of new types of water turbines . The result was the “tangential wheel”, also known as the Zuppinger turbine. It was a partially pressurized constant pressure turbine with a flow from the outside in. Their area of ​​application is now covered by Pelton turbines .

His best-known construction from this period is the water wheel named after him (patented 1849), which was based on the predecessor of Poncelet and Sagebien . The Zuppinger wheel is a medium to undershot crop wheel with involute-shaped curved blades, which not only use the hydrostatic but also the dynamic pressure of the water and thus achieve a higher degree of efficiency . Technically, the wheel is a transition form from the water wheel to the water turbine.

Since the wheel works effectively on low gradients (0.5 - 2 m) and without complex control even with strongly fluctuating water quantities, it is still used today as an alternative to the turbine in water mills and small hydropower plants under such operating conditions .

literature

  • Josef Weinmann: From “Pröbler” to ingenious inventor: the engineer and inventor Walter Zuppinger - outstandingly active in the Swiss and southern German machine industries. In: Zürichsee-Zeitung. Right bank. Stäfa. April 28, 2000 - p. 9.
  • Max Preger: Walter Zuppinger - engineer and inventor and his contribution to the industrialization of Upper Swabia , in: Writings of the Association for the History of Lake Constance and its Surroundings , 96th year 1978, pp. 153-186 ( digitized version )

Web links

Commons : Zuppingerräder  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Paul-Gerhard Franke, Adolf Kleinschroth: short biographies - hydraulics and hydraulic engineering: personalities from the German-speaking area . KM Lipp, Munich 1991, ISBN 3-87490-517-9 , pp. 174 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  2. a b Wilhelm Müller: Die Eisernen Wasserräder , Verlag von Veit & Comp., Leipzig, 1899 ( online at www.hylow.eu ; PDF; 8.4 MB)
  3. ^ Karl Heinz Burmeister: Ravensburg. In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland .
  4. Page no longer available , search in web archives: Wasserkraft Strom at www.solarstiftung-ulm.de @1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.solarstiftung-ulm.de
  5. https://books.google.de/books?id=cP04DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA309&lpg=PA309&dq=Zuppinger-Turbine&source=bl&ots=FPGbw1Ekk8&sig=ACfU3U0infcejgwEiILYF4V7dGzGq4uzLA&hl=de&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjKqu25rpnnAhVOLewKHYPhDvwQ6AEwDnoECAUQAQ#v=onepage&q=Zuppinger-Turbine&f=false lectures on theory of Turbines by Gustav Zeuner, 1899
  6. ^ Württemberg Landesgewerbeamt (Hrsg.): Gewerbeblatt from Württemberg . 1855, p. 186 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  7. Gerald Müller: Water wheels as a power source , online at hmf.enseeiht.fr (English, PDF; 1.3 MB)
  8. ^ Hartmuth Drews: hydroelectric power plants . In: Figures for Agriculture 2005 , Board of Trustees for Technology and Construction in Agriculture, Darmstadt, 2005, online at www.wasserrad-drews.de (PDF; 1.1 MB)
  9. water motors . In: Otto Lueger: Lexicon of the entire technology ( online at zeno.org )