Hi Bill,
Interesting indeed!
Based on some scrolling around in Google's satellite view, penstocks would clearly be needed for the Kootenay Canal GS, considering how in the main channel of the river the vertical fall is divided between four different cascading sites.
There is a diversion dam and water excess to the needs of the generating station is spilled back into the original river bed.
I'm curious about this statement, Bill; If I was to interpret from what I can see from space, I would guess that KCGS seems to have been a later build, since it seems to contain no provisions for spill [ at least not that I can discern; might you have better local knowledge and be able to tell me where these are? ], these already being present at the original sites and therefore not a requirement at the new one. Again, just my interpretation.
Just reverse operating, for lack of a better description, I'd think the prevailing river flow would be an amount that varies directly with the change in elevation of the water level some distance upstream of this area. [ When I did the job, hourly elevation readings would have been taken to keep constantly aware of how much water was coming toward you so you'd know how best to split it up. Great and frequent operator dereliction of duty would be required to be happening before such a minimum forebay level "float control" scheme would ever be economically justifiable. ]
Said flow would be divided between the two flow paths in such a way as to obtain optimized power generation from the water available; I was privileged to be an operator at the Saunders Generating Station in Cornwall, Ontario from 1990 to 1997, during which time a scheme called Targeted Optimization { TarOpt ] to perform exactly this type of calculation was developed and implemented by what is now Ontario Power Generation. Very precise measurements were taken for variations in head, water flow, and power generated for each type of generating unit in the plant [three different types, at the time ]. Ontario Hydro worked with a mathematics professor out of Queens University in KIngston, Ontario to harness something called quadrential calculus to iteratively perform the calculations and present the recommended load division for a given flow in an easy-to-interpret, almost intuitive human-machine interface [ HMI ] .
The neat thing about TarOpt was that by using this quadrential calculus it was able to derive optimal flow splits in less than two seconds, and if memory serves it ran every six seconds or so; it was reported at the time that other mathematical means, even with high-powered computers would have taken several minutes to perform the same trial-and-error calculations just once. TarOpt therefore enabled very quick plant balancing on the fly, in real time.
I was the single point of contact for this project, and found it fascinating.
But I digress.
The two plants to which I refer that actually had it, had it to address rapid fluctuations in forebay level; if you look at this link
you will see that the distance between Sonoco GS [ power displacement for the factory that produces Sonotubes ] and Sidney GS is quite short, and both are paralleled by sets of locks that are part of the Trent-Severn Waterway. Since the timing of the lockages and the clustering of vessels between the two sites is quite unpredictable, forebay fluctuations at Sidney can be quite violent. Steady control of water elevations greatly assists in ensuring that if vessels remain in the buoyed channel, they will not go aground.
CR
"As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another." [Proverbs 27:17, NIV]