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Santa Cruz's West Cliff Drive Wave Motor Who
hasn't stared at the pulsing ocean and tried to imagine a way to harness
all that energy and have it DO something? The ocean still pulses up and down at the bottom of hole and when the sunlight hits the ocean just right, the water at the bottom hole has an eerie glow as if there were a huge electric light down there. The hole is six feet in diameter and over thirty feet deep and the sea has been whumping in and out for over one hundred years. The wave motor was a wondrous low-technology solution to a vexing 1898 problemhow to water local wagon roads during a drought year and do so cheaply. The winter of 1897-98 had been pretty dry, and as the tourists came into Santa Cruz the follow- ing spring, they were faced with clouds of choking dust as they took their scenic "drives" on the cliff beyond the lighthouse. William and Edward Armstrong offered the Santa Cruz City Council a solution to the problemthey would build a wave-driven device which would pump sea water up to the top of the cliff which could then be sprinkled on the road by the water wagon.
The Armstrong Brothers After studying the history of wave motors and examining many sets of plans, the Armstrongs concluded that most motors failed for two reasons: 1) the motors were usually placed out on the open ocean where, over time, they were destroyed by the very force they were attempting to harness; 2) most of the motors had too many moving parts and were just too complex. The Armstrong solution has the smell of genius about itput a simple machine inside the coastal cliff. Let the rock protect the device. Author's note: OK, the next part of this story may read like something out of Popular Mechanics, but bear with me for a moment, and see if you don't agree that the Armstrongs were very clever guys. The
Motor If you wanted the pump to stop pumping, there was a barrel placed on top of the platform that, when filled with water, counterbalanced the piston and pulled it above the level of the waves. Fill the barrel and the motor stopped; unplug the barrel and let out the water, and the motor started again. The
City of Santa Cruz Buys the Idea When Duncan McPherson, the editor of the Sentinel, went for a drive in July, 1898, he noted that the drive on West Cliff glistened with the salt that was left behind when the sea water evaporated. He also declared, "There was no dust." For about a dozen years the wave motor and the sea salted roads were a familiar Santa Cruz landmark. Pavement eventually put the city's water wagons out of business, and all that remains to remind us of the Armstrong brothers and their ingenuity is this hole which still pulses with the ocean's power. Sources: Santa Cruz Sentinel articles in 1898. The Washington Post newspaper had a nice summary of the wave motor in its October 9, 1910 edition, including photograph.
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