The ancient Greeks built the water wheel, and while there isn't an exact year, it was probably developed sometime between the 4rd and 2nd century BC
A dam or a water wheel to produce electricity from the water flow. Hooweestik.
Richard Arkwright had a couple inventions. His first invention was built with a partner, John Kay. The team built the very first water wheel. Eventually, they built a system that could spin four strings of cotton at once, instead of just one. Richard paid for a patent for the cotton spinner in 1769. Even further down the road, Kay and Arkwright built a system that could spin 96 strands of cotton at once! (Since this machine was so powerful, horses had become the employees.) Richard hooked up the water wheel and the cotton system to make a water-powered, famous, factory system.
A water wheel
because.........
The steam engine freed factories from the water wheel, and James Watts double - acting rotative version was also used for pumping water out of mines, and powered locomotives. Factories could then be built almost anywhere, and could be closer to needed resources. Many moved closer to ports, to reduce haulage costs.
1995
It was invented in Florence, Italy. Not Built but invented.
The water wheel dates back to 4,000 years BC.
A dam or a water wheel to produce electricity from the water flow. Hooweestik.
by connecteing a wheel to a chariot.
Gottlieb Daimler built the first four-wheeled motor vehicle in 1885 a year after he built the Reitwagen.
For a wheel to become a car wheel, it has to be to go on a car. So the guy who built the first car wheel must have been working for the guy who built the first car.
It was built for the World Fair held in Chicago
The Bible says the Hebrews watered their gardens "with thy foot". They walked a water wheel to raise water from a canal up to an irrigation ditch or sluice. So as not to walk in the water, they built an inner wheel ("a wheel within a wheel"). The larger-diameter wheel carried buckets down into the canal. These tipped at the appropriate height, spilling water into the ditch which would carry it to the field.
the more force that the water has on the wheel the more work the water wheel do
Falkirk Wheel was created in 2002.
In an undershot water wheel, the wheel turns as a result of the weight of the water. The water flows into the wheel, stops and then when the wheel turns the water flows out underneath the wheel. It is used when you do not have a big head of water. In the overshot wheels the water pushes the wheel and then flows over the top of the wheel. The overshot wheel uses both the weight and the momentum of the water and so are more efficient and powerful.