Inside the power system: from steam-driven pumps to accumulators storing hydraulic energy for bascule lifts.

Victorian steam engines drove pumps that pressurized a hydraulic network. Pressurized fluid fed accumulators—massive weighted devices storing energy on demand.
| Element | Role | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Steam | Primary energy source | Continuous pressure supply |
| Accumulator | Energy buffer | Rapid bascule starts |
| Hydraulic Rams | Actuators | Convert pressure to rotation |
Modernization later replaced steam with electric drives, but the hydraulic logic remained.

[Boilers/Engines] -> Pumps -> Accumulators -> Main Line -> Control Valves -> Rams -> Return
Accumulators act like a mechanical battery. When pumps outpace demand, pressure lifts a weighted ram. On command, that stored energy is released quickly to spin pinions and raise the bascules.
Original steam gave way to electro-hydraulic drives. The control philosophy stayed: store energy, meter flow, protect components.
The bridge’s engine rooms are a masterclass in stored energy: accumulators transform slow steam into fast motion.

I built this to help you enjoy Tower Bridge smartly—clear pacing, better timing, and context that makes each rivet and lift mechanism resonate.
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