When I was five, my mum used to take me to see Ruston Bucyrus shovels working in the quarry. She sketched them from the cliff top. Easel and watercolor. One day, we got spotted. Big guys turned up and started shouting. Then, they saw her drawings. They took their caps off and departed. Apologised. Carried on. Great men.
@@loopwithers Yes, and yes, but rarely used. Are they on there? I really would like to see them. It's not often you hear about people doing water colors of heavy equipment.
I don’t think anyone in the earthmoving industry did until hydraulics took over from cables. I helped rebuild a Northwest shovel in 1966 and it was powered by a DOHC 6-cylinder Murphy diesel.
Steam, electric or diesel, if the mechanical action is like this old girl's, it's a shovel. (It replicates the action of a hand shovel) as opposed to a dragline, (self descriptive) or excavator, which have different soil moving actions.
Yes, indeed, anything powered by steam whether it’s a steam shovel, steam truck, steam crane, steam traction engine, or a steam locomotive is the closest thing man has come to creating life
I saw union pacifics Big Boy Locomotive in Denver recently. That is one helluva steam machine if you haven't seen it. I'd been waiting 40 years for 1 to be restored. So glad they did. I love the ground shaking as it rolls up. So much power its almost unfathomable.
I kinda wonder if there is a way of modernizing this without adding electronics. Natural gas fired boiler, closed loop steam. Kinda like a Doble steam car but with more modern materials.
Definitely took a lot of know how or you'd be messing up a lot of stuff lol. Not only do they not make equipment like this but they don't make men like that either.
Pretty cool to see an old shovel running that at one time built the Panama Canal by the dozens. Imagine running one down in Panama in all that heat and all the noise they make in a canyon.
Love these old machines, so much nicer than modern stuff! OK, since no one else seems to have said it, here goes...LOOK It's Mike Mulligan and Mary Ann!
I said that under a Caterpillar video about the Bucyrus Erie shovels building the Panama Canal. I would love to have one of these smaller ones. Somewhere I read that the last steam shovels made was just after WW II. A California company ordered two from the Lima Locomotive Works. One it put to work while the other was stored so that future generations could see a steam shovels the way they came from the factory.
I knew I should have scrolled down a bit farther, because I just made a similar comment referring to Mike Mulligan! As someone born in the early '70s, that was one of my most favorite stories as a young boy. 😊
@@QuadMochaMatti As someone born in the late ‘40s, it was one of my favorites man and boy. Still is. Wish I could find a detailed schematic if one so I could try to build one of wood for my grandson. Friends of ours in South Georgia had an ancient wooden model of one. It must have been built from at least 200 parts. Absolutely gorgeous.
I am in awe. I guess I always thought the term steam shovel was just a saying. That’s a second guy in the back running the boiler isn’t he? What a machine!
You never read the story pf the steam shovel that dug the basement for a school. Then could not het out. So they use it as the furnace. Read ot in 1st grade.
@@chucklipka3215 Mary-Ann is the name you are looking for. (and no, I didn't have to go look it up. Is a town hall, not a school. 50 trucks to carry away the dirt :).
To those comments about "this thing should be in a museum", it is. The Roots of Motive Power is a working and restoring museum in Willits, Ca. Comprised of a group of people who have over many years put together a pretty big stable of steam operated logging and construction equipment (as well as some gas and diesel antique stuff) that has been salvaged after years of abandonment in the woods, or as they explained at one their shows, this shovel last worked on the San Francisco Oakland Bay Bridge and was left in the mud flats for years (at least that's what I think they said, don't quote though LOL). They do their own restoration work and used to put on classes where you could join up, and learn all about these machines and do hands on work. They generally have a big show once a year, used to be on Labor Day weekend I think. Anyway, if you have interest in this stuff you really need to go to their show.
So GOOD this old girl Did NOT end up on the Scrap like so many others, a similar machine is not too far from me in town Not in running order, this machine MUST be at LEAST 150 years old the fact that it is still here is a miracle but it runs drives under its OWN POWER QUITE INCREDIBLE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Panama canal machines I recall? I ran a BE 66 shovel Murphy Diesel at our antique show . Compare to my 325 CAT 1998 excavator.. Operator got some workout in those friction shovels. Wow!
I think that is a work around. I’ve done that on much newer diesel machines. I mean look for yourself. The new has worn off this machine eons ago. And it is obviously nowhere near restored. It’s probably pretty dangerous. If you are reading this, you have some sort of computer. Look up steam explosions.
The guys who invented the steam shovel said......."let's make a giant mechanical digging machine.....but how shall we do it ?" "I know ! lets copy the way a man uses a long handled shovel to shift dirt" ........and there you have it, watch these things working and that's exactly what it is.
My back makes the sounds of those tracks every morning when I roll out of bed. i hope that old guy running that thing teaches some young buck how to do it. kudos to the guy in the back keeping that boiler running correctly. looks like they were using the wood blocks to lock the left track for the turn.
Wow that's older than my mom 🤣 TRULY A DINOSAUR!!!! just imagine being drunk or high and seeing this scary ass old Beast coming at u?? 😂 Way different than the trackhoes we run at my job...
Such fun. Would be a great model build. You would of course have to bury a RC system in it to properly use it. But say in one of the live steam railroad scales, say at about 1/5 scale.
Why? Why would you want it sitting dead in a building instead of being outside, alive and doing what it was built to do? What a messed up POV you have sir.
Can't swing when traveling. Both functions use same clutches. I worked on these machines and when the teeth break off the swing gear you can get underneath and weld the back in. No mechanic that I know ever did a decent job. Just to difficult.
This is the stuff of my books as a kid in the 70s. Steam shovel this, steam shovel that. Very cool, or hot - literally. Let's see, an external combustion engine with exposed firebox, pressurized steam, cables, pulleys. Gutsy people back then.