Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Tungatinah Power Station

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Country
  
Australia

Status
  
Operational

Type of dam
  
Embankment dam

Opened
  
1953

Catchment area
  
52 kmĀ²

Owner
  
Hydro Tasmania

Purpose
  
Power

Opening date
  
1953 (1953)

Height
  
10 m

Length
  
1,262 m

Create
  
Tungatinah Lagoon

Tungatinah Power Station

Location
  
Central Highlands, Tasmania

Similar
  
Liapootah Power Station, Wayatinah Power Station, Meadowbank Power Station, Tarraleah Power Station, Poatina Power Station

The Tungatinah Power Station is a conventional hydroelectric power station located in the Central Highlands region of Tasmania, Australia. The power station is situated on the Upper River Derwent catchment and is owned and operated by Hydro Tasmania.

Technical details

Part of the Derwent scheme that comprises eleven hydroelectric power stations, the Tungatinah Power Station is the second station in the scheme, adjacent to the Nive River. The power station is located aboveground adjacent to the Nive River. The headworks are quite complex with several dams (including the Bronte Lagoon formed by Bronte Dam, Bradys Lake formed by Bradys Dam, Lake Binney and the Tungatinah Lagoon), a tunnel, canals, pipelines, flumes their associated control gates and a pump station. Water is diverted from the Tungatinah Lagoon by a short tunnel with surge shaft and then descends 290 metres (950 ft) through five steel penstocks to the power station.

The power station was commissioned between 1953 and 1956 by the Hydro Electric Corporation (TAS) and the station has five Boving Francis turbines, with a total generating capacity of 125 megawatts (168,000 hp) of electricity. Within the station building, each turbine has a semi-embedded spiral casing and water flow is controlled via a spherical rotary inlet valve and a relief valve designed to prevent spiral casing over pressure. The station output, estimated to be 579 gigawatt-hours (2,080 TJ) annually, is fed to Tasetworks' transmission grid via five 11 kV/110 kV three-phase GEC generator transformer to the outdoor switchyard.

After passing through the five turbines, water is discharged into the Nive River where it combines with the water from the Tarraleah Power Station to supply the six Lower Derwent stations.

References

Tungatinah Power Station Wikipedia