dropshaft

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Compound of drop +‎ shaft.

Noun[edit]

dropshaft (plural dropshafts)

  1. A vertical shaft which objects can drop through.
    • 1992 April 3, Gary Washburn, “Great Chicago Loop Flood cripples businesses”, in Chicago Tribune[1], archived from the original on 2023-01-01:
      Melas said that district engineers had located Deep Tunnel dropshafts that were near a portion of the freight tunnels and that they would drill, cut or blast through to the flooded areas "as soon as possible."
    • 2006, Maurizio Brocchini, Filippo Trivellato, Vorticity and Turbulence Effects in Fluid Structure Interaction, WIT Press, →ISBN, page 161:
      The water flows from a large suitably fed tank into the dropshaft through a sharp-edged orifice, whose diameter (Do) is 100mm large.
    • 2022 September 12, Patty Wetli, “Chicago Dries Out From Intense Deluge. ‘We Don’t See Rainfall Rates That High’”, in WTTW[2], archived from the original on 2022-10-10:
      The downpour led to some dramatic images of stranded motorists and geysers bursting through manhole covers. The spouts are a rare effect which occurs when too much water rushes into a dropshaft and traps air that’s normally vented.
    • 2023 January 11, Daniel Beekman, “Seattle’s huge sewage tunnel is halfway drilled. Take a look inside”, in The Seattle Times[3], archived from the original on 2023-01-24:
      The gigantic drill that began digging the deep-bore tunnel from Ballard to Wallingford in 2021 passed its halfway mark last month, chewing through soil that gets hauled away to a Ballard drop shaft (a vertical hole that reaches down to the tunneling site from street level) in 25-ton train carloads.

References[edit]