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Building a Shaduf Irrigation Lever — Counterweighted Water Lift
Emma

Creado por

Emma

23. March 2026

Building a Shaduf Irrigation Lever — Counterweighted Water Lift

Construct a shaduf — a pivoting beam with a bucket on one end and a clay counterweight on the other, used to lift water from a river or canal onto higher agricultural land. The shaduf appears in Mesopotamian and Egyptian art by approximately 2000 BCE and remains in use in parts of Africa and South Asia today. A single shaduf can raise approximately 2,500 litres of water per day — enough to irrigate a small garden plot.

Intermediate
3-5 hours

Instrucciones

1

Erect the Upright Support

Choose a location on the canal bank or riverbank where you need to lift water to a higher level — typically a rise of 1-3 metres. Erect a sturdy Y-shaped post (or two parallel uprights with a cross-pin) 2-3 metres from the water's edge. Sink the base 50-60 cm into the ground and pack earth firmly around it for stability. The fork of the Y (or the cross-pin between paired uprights) serves as the pivot point for the lever beam. The pivot height should be roughly equal to the lift height plus 1 metre — for a 2-metre lift, the pivot should be approximately 3 metres above ground level.

2

Mount the Lever Beam

Balance a long, straight beam (3-5 metres) across the fork of the upright. The beam divides into a long arm (extending over the water, about two-thirds of the total length) and a short arm (extending inland, about one-third). The beam must pivot freely — grease the contact point with animal fat to reduce friction. The unequal arm lengths create mechanical advantage: the counterweight on the short arm travels a shorter distance but exerts a proportionally greater lifting force on the bucket. This is a class 1 lever with the fulcrum between the effort (counterweight) and the load (bucket of water).

Step 2 - Image 1
3

Attach the Bucket and Counterweight

Attach a leather bucket or woven basket to the end of the long arm using a rope long enough that the bucket can reach the water surface when the long arm is lowered. A bucket capacity of 10-20 litres is manageable for one operator. On the short arm, attach a counterweight — a large lump of dried clay, a stone, or a mud-brick — heavy enough to nearly balance the weight of the full bucket plus the rope. The counterweight should be slightly lighter than the full bucket so the bucket sinks into the water under its own weight, but heavy enough that it lifts the full bucket with only minimal additional effort from the operator.

4

Calibrate the Balance

Test the shaduf by filling the bucket and checking the effort required to lift it. If the counterweight is too light, the operator must pull hard to raise the full bucket — add more weight. If too heavy, the empty bucket rises uncontrollably and the operator must push hard to lower it into the water — remove weight. The ideal balance point requires the operator to exert only a gentle downward pull to submerge the empty bucket and a gentle upward tug to start the full bucket rising, with the counterweight doing most of the lifting work. Fine-tune by adjusting the counterweight mass or its position along the short arm.

5

Operating Technique and Capacity

To operate, pull the long arm down to submerge the bucket, allow it to fill, then release. The counterweight swings the full bucket upward. When the bucket reaches the top of its arc, swing it over the irrigation channel and tip it to empty the water. One operator can complete a cycle every 15-20 seconds, lifting approximately 10-15 litres per cycle. At this rate, a shaduf raises roughly 2,000-3,000 litres per hour — enough to irrigate a small garden plot. For lifting water to greater heights, multiple shadufs can be arranged in series, each lifting water to an intermediate level. Egyptian tomb paintings show teams of shadufs operating in cascaded series along the Nile, lifting water 5-6 metres in three stages. The shaduf is one of the most energy-efficient pre-industrial water-lifting devices ever invented.

Step 5 - Image 1

Materiales

  • Sturdy Y-shaped upright post - 1 post, 2-3 m tall piece
  • Long beam (the lever arm) - 1 beam, 3-5 m long piece
  • Rope - 3-5 m for bucket suspension pieceMarcador de posición
    Ver
  • Leather or woven basket (as bucket) - 1, holding 10-20 litres pieceMarcador de posición
    Ver
  • Clay, stone, or mud-brick counterweight - 15-30 kg pieceMarcador de posición
    Ver

Herramientas requeridas

  • Stone axe or adze (for shaping timber)Marcador de posición
    Ver
  • Cordage (for lashing)Marcador de posición
    Ver

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