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-   -   is lake lanier really this low? (https://www.offshoreonly.com/forums/general-boating-discussion/173940-lake-lanier-really-low.html)

getchasum111 11-28-2007 10:47 AM

the army corps says 6 more years to fix the dam...there is still plenty of lake and they have extended the ramps to the water on lake cumberland..

Pismo10 11-28-2007 01:57 PM


Originally Posted by getchasum111 (Post 2351209)
the army corps says 6 more years to fix the dam...there is still plenty of lake and they have extended the ramps to the water on lake cumberland..

We defeated Germany, Japan, and Italy in 3 1/2 years and 6 to build a dam? They could do it in a week if they got to it.......

Strip Poker 388 11-28-2007 09:44 PM


Originally Posted by Phantom1 (Post 2349448)
My dock.....................in the mud.

If it gets much lower get a back hoe

Strip Poker 388 11-29-2007 09:11 PM

2 Attachment(s)

Originally Posted by THEJOKER (Post 2350280)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Lanier

This explains alot about Lake Lanier.

Thats a big dam dam:D

Phantom1 11-29-2007 09:53 PM


Originally Posted by Strip Poker 388 (Post 2353505)
Thats a big dam dam:D

That's not a dam...........this is a dam. Actually, Lake Murray has a dam, and a back up dam.:D

http://content.answers.com/main/cont...saluda_dam.jpg

After setting a North American record for the most roller-compacted concrete (RCC) placed in a single day—18,590 cubic yards—the Saluda Dam Remediation Project has been honored with the American Society of Civil Engineers' 2006 Outstanding Civil Engineering Achievement award.

The project involved building a backup replacement dam for Saluda Dam, which impounds the 55,000 acre Lake Murray west of Columbia, S.C. This backup dam is necessary because if another Charleston earthquake occurs, as it did in 1886, the existing dam would fail and put more than 100,000 lives at risk.

When completed in 1930, the 1.5-mile, 200-foot-high dam broke a number of records. It was the world's largest earthen dam, the word's largest hydroelectric dam, and impounded the 78-square-mile Lake Murray, the world's largest man-made lake.

In addition to 1.3 million cubic yards of RCC, workers placed 30,000 cubic yards of conventional mass concrete and 65,000 square yards of precast concrete facing panels using more than 10,000 cubic yards of 5,000-psi concrete. The RCC design mix used 150 pounds of cement per cubic yard and 150 pounds of bottom ash that had been landfilled on site for the last ten years.

Cash Bar 11-29-2007 09:58 PM

It was built that big to keep the S. Carolina homos locked up, but somehow ya'll escaped. Next time it needs a lid. :evilb::grinser010:

Jk.......I think......

Phantom1 11-29-2007 10:03 PM


Originally Posted by Cash Bar (Post 2353574)
It was built that big to keep the S. Carolina homos locked up, but somehow ya'll escaped. Next time it needs a lid. :evilb::grinser010:

Jk.......I think......

Ouch........I think:D

Strip Poker 388 11-29-2007 11:39 PM

Yea now THAT'S a big dam dam:eek:


I didnt know that lake was that big. does it have any sandbars to hand out on?

RumRunner 11-29-2007 11:44 PM


Originally Posted by Strip Poker 388 (Post 2353699)
I didnt know that lake was that big. does it have any sandbars to hand out on?

It's not :angry-smiley-038:

Strip Poker 388 11-30-2007 12:07 AM


Originally Posted by RumRunner (Post 2353704)
It's not :angry-smiley-038:


Ours is 30k acres, about 1/4 or less :(is boater friendly


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