Until the fuel runs out 😜. I understand what you folks mean though; EXTREMELY well made and very HEAVY DUTY. Not to mention they are heavy in weight too.
@@darinb.3273 I saw a video of one running a set of pumps in a oil field and had been running since the early thirties nonstop, I guess it's fuel was the gas vapor from the wells.
All century as well.Used to sleep near to a 24v generator for Radio Comms in BAOR,on top of some mountain,come back in to camp,wake up in room,Why Gennie not running.Oh,back in camp,go to sleep.Silly sounds you miss.
These machines were obviously constructed for eternity.... still running a hundred ys later with probably the same sound as in the beginning. I am highly impressed. Thx for sharing !
I worked for Fairbanks Scales for 40 years starting in 1974. Was still Fairbanks Morse a division of Colt Industries. Retired in 2014. I'm now 70 and Fairbanks is still making scales.
It's worth noting that, as far as I know, Fairbanks-Morse is still making two-stroke engines for marine, rail, and co-generating applications in Beloit, Wi. Twenty yars ago a college campus I worked at installed a beautiful FB co-generation plant. The engine was an opposing piston, 6 cylinder, 12 piston, (think about that,) 2 stroke, dual fuel diesel/natural gas unit generating 1.3 megawatts. I watched them build it. A magnifecent piece of machinery.
Efficient emissions control is KISS (less fuel consumption, less emissions) Instead they want to feed YET MORE $$$ into the Petroleum Industry needlessly Conservation is wiser The EPA needs to get out of the way as modern diesel hybrids need to flood the highways Forget the Excess battery weight for the US and It's miles of highways ... 60+ years the Electromotive have been saving fuel/maintenance costs in shipping A nice modern opposed piston Multi-fuel series hybrid IS DO ABLE NOW The driving public should have reaped these benefits of economy DECADES AGO...
@@charlesangell_bulmtl That and the geniuses in the EPA decided to ban VW diesels from the US because...reasons. They get 50+ mpg for pete's sake. But no, oh good Lord no, they were cheating on emissions. It's almost like VW didn't offer a big enough bribe to the powers that be. We need to take our country back. All the regulations are destroying the country. China is getting rich off of US regulations driving labor costs through the roof. When you're regulated to the point that you can't manufacture in your own country, that's a problem.
I have always found it rather fascinating when you look at these old engines, they are so simple, reliable and efficient. They all run at such low RPM as compared to today, you take a single cylinder engine and it runs at 400 RPM and I bet if you kept if full of the consumables it needs I bet it run for years straight non stop. NO planed obsolescence in this engineering!
@@marksommers6764 no Mr. Sommers, I’m 75 and love these engines. I coukd be around them all day and enjoy them. True they will run forever if maintained properly. However, that said, I really don’t think they are very efficient for todays needs. Thank you for the reply.
I used to go to a farm owned by a childhood friend's family, they had a very old Fairbanks engine running almost all of the time in the winter, adding electrical energy to their solar batteries for free! The fuel was the methane from bacterial decomposition tanks they had (8 huge tanks). the coolest part was the heat-exchanger, it heated the water in its copper pipes to add extra energy to the houses heating system, all from waste exhaust heat
My father was a welder at Fairbanks in Beloit for over 50 years retiring in 2000. I will show him this video. The company is still in business in Beloit building engines for the Navy.
I think the same. I love the way they sound, but they all are free wheeling without a load. I what to hear one really grunt working hard (or at least under the load they were designed for)
Brings back memories on English country shows with the agricultural machinery classes. These guys liked to show off how slowly they could get their engines to idle
Fairbanks-Morse is still in business in southeast Wisconsin, I know a welding engineer that worked there as recently as a couple years ago. Definitely not defunct.
I used to have a Fairbanks-Morse AM/SW table radio from the late 30's. I refinished the cabinet and sent the chassis to a friend of mine to get the caps/resistors replaced. Sadly he passed away before he could get to it and during his families grieving asking for it would have seemed to me to be in bad taste and so I never asked for it back.
I would said something along the lines of, ''so sad he never got to work on my radio I sent him last year, he was one of a few that I knew I could depend upon to get it working, ''
@@benscoles5085 Since then I've gotten into restoring the electronics of the sets myself and have a good idea I could tackle it now. Usually it just involves changing out all the old leaky paper & wax capacitors, the electrolytic capacitors and any out of tolerance resistors. Tubes themselves seldom ever go bad. It does happen, but not nearly as often as you'd think. I even picked up an RF signal generator to give old sets a good alignment on the RF and IF cans for better gain and to help the dial point true to the station it's receiving. Some day I'll find another set of that make and restore it myself. I did recently find a set like my Grandparents had bought new in 1948, a white plaskon model of a FADA 970.
I love the "sound" of machines and I appreciate videos like these. I just wish someone appreciated them as much as I do and invest in a quality microphone so we can hear these machines properly.
I was a deckhand back in the 80's. If the ship engines quit, I'd wake up. I got so used to the sound and vibrations. Same as today 40 yrs later working in remote exploration camps in Canadas arctic. If the generator quits, i wake up immediately.
Me maravilla ver esos motores hantiguos dicel que en una hepoca rebolucionaron la industria los acerraderos como maquinas de cultibo mi hagradecimiento a todos esos pioneros
Amazing to see those old 2 stroke engines. How massive everything was built on them, like the huge exhaust ports on the first one, where you can watch the pistons move up and down. And despite being very expensive and only having 15 or 20 bhp, it was such a incredible improvement over the previous ways of working, with horses or steam engines. Here in Germany there are a number of enthusiasts, who restored tractors with this kind of engines, mainly the "Lanz Bulldog". ruclips.net/video/M85w9hi-JT8/видео.html
This is incredible! Love these machines- the part I waas most surprised by was the fact that an american company invented that type of windmill, because to me, they are the most stereotypical thing to find on an aussie farm
This is when Engineers were highly skilled, technical people that understood physics, mathematics,log tables,they probably used slide rules to do the calculation,for stuff that will outlast their grandkids.People call themselves engineers if they change parts on a washing machines or computers or toasters.
Imagine relying on one of these behemoths to supply electricity to your small town, and seeing the lights slowly power up when she finally gets up to speed
I lived in a flat once, you'd call it a condominium I think. The lady next door's headboard made the same sound against an adjoining wall when her boyfriend came over, I wonder why.
Nice. But I'd like to see this equipment in actual work. That would give the scale for the power of these engines. Usually those are shown just idling without work load. If you know such exhibit shown in RUclips that presents similar kind of engines in work than in this video, I would be interested. Thank you
We still are using the same piston, crankshaft, internal combustion engines to this day with a bit of dressing on them. What ever happened to rotary and turbine engines for car? I rebuilt some 12 cylinder marine diesels in my day GM 2 cycle super charged 1500hp.
Turbine engines don’t do well with they high dynamic range that cars demand, their efficiency at idle is pretty bad, and car engines idle a lot. Rotary engines have seal leaking issues and aren’t as efficient as a well designed piston engine.
Over 100 year-old machinery that still works fine. And you cant get a Ford, Chevy, Dodge vehicle to run right after 20 years without changing almost everything under the hood (exceptions apply)
They take high speed diesel and low speed diesel oil. All diesel engines are able to run from many vegetable oils. Earlier days groundnut oil was very common.
I understand how diesel and gasoline engines work, but was the diesel an easier engine to build, historically? Or was it that gasoline required a greater amount of refining?
Diesel engines while more expensive, are far more durable and much longer lasting, plus diesel fuel is actually an oil, which helps reduce wear, while gasoline is a solvent.
with ALL THE PROBLEMS HUMANS ARE HAVING WITH, PETROL ENGINES , WE SHOULD CONSIDER GETTING BACK TO STEAM ENGINES,,,THEY ARE SO AWESOME, AND IS PREETY CHEAP,,,TO RUN,,,,,
There is something calming and pleasing about listening to these old engines running. Seems like they could run forever.
Slow speed engines, simple design, over sized mechanical parts. They keep running for ever. Regards.
That's a good comment. I'd never thought of it before, but there is something calming about them.
Until the fuel runs out 😜. I understand what you folks mean though; EXTREMELY well made and very HEAVY DUTY. Not to mention they are heavy in weight too.
@@darinb.3273 I saw a video of one running a set of pumps in a oil field and had been running since the early thirties nonstop, I guess it's fuel was the gas vapor from the wells.
Fairbanks Morse engines have a unique, wonderful, and even comforting sound.
Thanks for posting!
I could sit and listen to that 6-cylinder run all day long... and probably all night as well.
Yep 👌🏼
Here's another one for you. ruclips.net/video/70na7X1AOiU/видео.html (abit smaller, and little out of tune, but still)
@@jayswarrow1196 Yup! thats it! that puts me right to sleep!
All century as well.Used to sleep near to a 24v generator for Radio Comms in BAOR,on top of some mountain,come back in to camp,wake up in room,Why Gennie not running.Oh,back in camp,go to sleep.Silly sounds you miss.
@@randycoolbaugh1408 Well, that's why people sleep on the intercity busses, - the nerve-soothing rhymes of three-by-three, within all the rev range.
These machines were obviously constructed for eternity.... still running a hundred ys later with probably the same sound as in the beginning. I am highly impressed. Thx for sharing !
I worked for Fairbanks Scales for 40 years starting in 1974. Was still Fairbanks Morse a division of Colt Industries. Retired in 2014. I'm now 70 and Fairbanks is still making scales.
It's worth noting that, as far as I know, Fairbanks-Morse is still making two-stroke engines for marine, rail, and co-generating applications in Beloit, Wi. Twenty yars ago a college campus I worked at installed a beautiful FB co-generation plant. The engine was an opposing piston, 6 cylinder, 12 piston, (think about that,) 2 stroke, dual fuel diesel/natural gas unit generating 1.3 megawatts. I watched them build it. A magnifecent piece of machinery.
Efficient emissions control is KISS (less fuel consumption, less emissions) Instead they want to feed YET MORE $$$ into the Petroleum Industry needlessly Conservation is wiser The EPA needs to get out of the way as modern diesel hybrids need to flood the highways
Forget the Excess battery weight for the US and It's miles of highways ... 60+ years the Electromotive have been saving fuel/maintenance costs in shipping A nice modern opposed piston Multi-fuel series hybrid IS DO ABLE NOW
The driving public should have reaped these benefits of economy DECADES AGO...
@@charlesangell_bulmtl That and the geniuses in the EPA decided to ban VW diesels from the US because...reasons. They get 50+ mpg for pete's sake. But no, oh good Lord no, they were cheating on emissions. It's almost like VW didn't offer a big enough bribe to the powers that be. We need to take our country back. All the regulations are destroying the country. China is getting rich off of US regulations driving labor costs through the roof. When you're regulated to the point that you can't manufacture in your own country, that's a problem.
@@richardbrown8794 Call Fairbanks-Morse in Beloit, Wi.
@@richardbrown8794 You can't afford it. Unless you need a VERY large diesel for your tugboat or locomotive. Or you need a megawatt of standby power.
t
Es ist immer wieder schön wenn so alte Motoren laufen.
Headphones cans wide open, much enjoying
I have always found it rather fascinating when you look at these old engines, they are so simple, reliable and efficient. They all run at such low RPM as compared to today, you take a single cylinder engine and it runs at 400 RPM and I bet if you kept if full of the consumables it needs I bet it run for years straight non stop. NO planed obsolescence in this engineering!
Efficient???? I don’t think so.
@@TheMilwaukieDan, you're a young'un aren't you .
@@marksommers6764 no Mr. Sommers, I’m 75 and love these engines. I coukd be around them all day and enjoy them. True they will run forever if maintained properly. However, that said, I really don’t think they are very efficient for todays needs. Thank you for the reply.
I used to go to a farm owned by a childhood friend's family, they had a very old Fairbanks engine running almost all of the time in the winter, adding electrical energy to their solar batteries for free! The fuel was the methane from bacterial decomposition tanks they had (8 huge tanks). the coolest part was the heat-exchanger, it heated the water in its copper pipes to add extra energy to the houses heating system, all from waste exhaust heat
Do you like these Faibanks Morse Engines ?
Yes
Why did you steal two of my videos?
Who doesn’t?
I love seeing these old engines up and running.
Awesome old engines ! 👍
My father was a welder at Fairbanks in Beloit for over 50 years retiring in 2000. I will show him this video. The company is still in business in Beloit building engines for the Navy.
Yup we’re still building massive engines over here.
Pielstick Colt PC2.5/6?
I love watching these old engines, but man I wish I could hear them under load doing their job
I think the same. I love the way they sound, but they all are free wheeling without a load. I what to hear one really grunt working hard (or at least under the load they were designed for)
Great engines, and a perfect illustration of the difference between horsepower and torque.
4:17 music diesel power
Beautiful engines, beautiful music they play ,😊
Brings back memories on English country shows with the agricultural machinery classes. These guys liked to show off how slowly they could get their engines to idle
Awesome bit of history there.
Very big vs strong machine
Fairbanks-Morse is still in business in southeast Wisconsin, I know a welding engineer that worked there as recently as a couple years ago. Definitely not defunct.
When we built these engines we built them to last damn it proud to be at Fairbanks Morse Defense!!
Thank you very informative, love those old time machines
soothing sound,,, I could fall asleep to that!
I used to have a Fairbanks-Morse AM/SW table radio from the late 30's. I refinished the cabinet and sent the chassis to a friend of mine to get the caps/resistors replaced. Sadly he passed away before he could get to it and during his families grieving asking for it would have seemed to me to be in bad taste and so I never asked for it back.
I would said something along the lines of, ''so sad he never got to work on my radio I sent him last year, he was one of a few that I knew I could depend upon to get it working, ''
@@benscoles5085 Since then I've gotten into restoring the electronics of the sets myself and have a good idea I could tackle it now. Usually it just involves changing out all the old leaky paper & wax capacitors, the electrolytic capacitors and any out of tolerance resistors. Tubes themselves seldom ever go bad. It does happen, but not nearly as often as you'd think. I even picked up an RF signal generator to give old sets a good alignment on the RF and IF cans for better gain and to help the dial point true to the station it's receiving. Some day I'll find another set of that make and restore it myself. I did recently find a set like my Grandparents had bought new in 1948, a white plaskon model of a FADA 970.
☹️☹️
Interesting that you can see the scavenging port in each cylinder
Wow. Just plain wonderful.
I love the "sound" of machines and I appreciate videos like these. I just wish someone appreciated them as much as I do and invest in a quality microphone so we can hear these machines properly.
Thanks for posting! I love those old time engines!
اجمل موسيقى /، الة رائعة جدا(( اخوكم من ليبيا))
0:00 That remainds me of when I was young
we used to drive by the Fairbanks morse plant in Beloit, Wis. when we visited my grandparents farm just outside the city.
I love your vids and I'm in the country hills of the great state of Tennessee.
JUST WATCHING THEM ,ON HOW SMOOTH THEY RUN, AND THAT SOUND ,MAKES FEEL LIKE, AN EAGLE FLYING UP IN THE SKY,,,,
I great up in Beloit, WI, I knew about the scales and heard about Fairbanks-Morse engines. Thanks to see about all the other items.
2:35 - Did I see the head lift when that first cylinder commenced knocking?
I was a deckhand back in the 80's. If the ship engines quit, I'd wake up. I got so used to the sound and vibrations. Same as today 40 yrs later working in remote exploration camps in Canadas arctic. If the generator quits, i wake up immediately.
Crankcase scavenging, simple and effective!
Thank you!
Me maravilla ver esos motores hantiguos dicel que en una hepoca rebolucionaron la industria los acerraderos como maquinas de cultibo mi hagradecimiento a todos esos pioneros
Wow
La ilaha ila allah
OH. And like and love any and all kinds of engines
Koreshan State Park in FL has a Fairbanks-Morse they run every Saturday. It runs an alternating current generator. The original was in 1926.
🎵 🎶 OG industrial beats. 🎶 🎵
Good afternoon to all from SE Louisiana 17 Jan 22.
Super 👍
Would love to own a single cylinder unit for a decent price. Nice video
@SittingMoose Shaman Thanks for the information Sir. I look forward to see them in action and try to make a deal too. Peace VF
And jazz was born...
Great Video! Thanks.
Impressive 👍💡🙏thank you 🙏
Awesome
That Fairbanks-Morse music.
Great post. Thanks a bunch for leaving the chat up long enough to read.
Ахренеть, вот это сноповязалка! Вот это я понимаю!
This was very good factory until the year 1958.
Amazing to see those old 2 stroke engines. How massive everything was built on them, like the huge exhaust ports on the first one, where you can watch the pistons move up and down.
And despite being very expensive and only having 15 or 20 bhp, it was such a incredible improvement over the previous ways of working, with horses or steam engines.
Here in Germany there are a number of enthusiasts, who restored tractors with this kind of engines, mainly the "Lanz Bulldog". ruclips.net/video/M85w9hi-JT8/видео.html
Horsepower might not have been high , but the Torque was IMMENSE . The Important number , especially on a Static Engine .
Nice video, thx for sharing! 😀
This is incredible! Love these machines- the part I waas most surprised by was the fact that an american company invented that type of windmill, because to me, they are the most stereotypical thing to find on an aussie farm
Very nice.
Great machines for taking oil and convertingit into noise and carbon
At 2:24, how many KW is the generator?
वाह
And today the company is now known as Fairbanks Morse Duh-fense. It's a sad shadow of its former self.
Somebody should attempt to stick one of these in something resembling a modern pickup truck, just for fun
Motores impressionantes!!
3:42 75hp :)
I feel a litlle Sufi coming on....
Que coisa linda parabéns pelo video.
Pretty imptessive!
When you watch these at 2x speed they sound like normal diesel engines. :)
Pawnee,OK. Steam and gas engine show, first weekend in May...
This is when Engineers were highly skilled, technical people that understood physics, mathematics,log tables,they probably used slide rules to do the calculation,for stuff that will outlast their grandkids.People call themselves engineers if they change parts on a washing machines or computers or toasters.
Imagine relying on one of these behemoths to supply electricity to your small town, and seeing the lights slowly power up when she finally gets up to speed
Every small town should have their own,just incase.
At our festival time there is a Amish group who has their sweet stuff and also make ice cream with a hit an miss engine 😉
Gotta love the straight plagiarism from Wikipedia
That first old motor sounds like my headboard.
Well what it used to sound like. 😬
When your neighbor Jake comes over?
@@RJ1999x That wouldn’t help either, it ain’t me.
@@geneticdisorder1900 lol
I lived in a flat once, you'd call it a condominium I think. The lady next door's headboard made the same sound against an adjoining wall when her boyfriend came over, I wonder why.
Aww Cuté Pútt Pútt Enginês 💓💓💖
Nice. But I'd like to see this equipment in actual work. That would give the scale for the power of these engines. Usually those are shown just idling without work load.
If you know such exhibit shown in RUclips that presents similar kind of engines in work than in this video, I would be interested.
Thank you
I recognize the black 3-cylinder dressed up with a bunting around it it's at Roche Harbor Washington not far from where I live.
get it up to enough speed that you can uses a kiss of friction to stop the flywheel.
We all need a hobby.
the first one sounds like my neighbor's bed knocking on wall
We still are using the same piston, crankshaft, internal combustion engines to this day with a bit of dressing on them. What ever happened to rotary
and turbine engines for car? I rebuilt some 12 cylinder marine diesels in my day GM 2 cycle super charged 1500hp.
Turbine engines don’t do well with they high dynamic range that cars demand, their efficiency at idle is pretty bad, and car engines idle a lot. Rotary engines have seal leaking issues and aren’t as efficient as a well designed piston engine.
what kind of fuel did they use
Over 100 year-old machinery that still works fine. And you cant get a Ford, Chevy, Dodge vehicle to run right after 20 years without changing almost everything under the hood (exceptions apply)
How fuel efficient are these motors? Is it a multi fuel?
They take high speed diesel and low speed diesel oil. All diesel engines are able to run from many vegetable oils. Earlier days groundnut oil was very common.
@@subramaniamchandrasekar1397 Thats Amazing! Thanks for the reply back
I understand how diesel and gasoline engines work, but was the diesel an easier engine to build, historically? Or was it that gasoline required a greater amount of refining?
Diesel engines while more expensive, are far more durable and much longer lasting, plus diesel fuel is actually an oil, which helps reduce wear, while gasoline is a solvent.
The thermal efficiency of a diesel engine is about 15% higher than a gasoline one.
that first one reminds me of my first girl friend
These are wonderful - compare these to the F-M Opposed Cylinder "Rock Crushers" and the Deltics". Not many sweeter sounds...
with ALL THE PROBLEMS HUMANS ARE HAVING WITH, PETROL ENGINES ,
WE SHOULD CONSIDER GETTING BACK TO STEAM ENGINES,,,THEY ARE SO AWESOME, AND IS PREETY CHEAP,,,TO RUN,,,,,
Dang i just got you 28k views from a facebook group in one day.
Why does the last engine rock so much?
Because it’s 9” bit and 11” stroke Diesel engine on a cart. It’s also my engine.
75 HP, and 200,000 FP of torq! LOL
Where are you from guys ? :)
Wisconsin
THAILAND
Australia.
Im hailing from upstate NY. (Ithaca).
Buffalo NY
Maszyna porowa trochę ognia i mamy moc a jeśli zabraknie mocy wszystko padnie 🥶Nie wiem generator +cysterna paliwa masakra😱
I watch a lot of these videos, there is a lot of information included. But I never see anything about fuel consumption. Just very curious.
Where are all these exhibits please?
امهوربه خالص
3 and 4 don't seem to be firing on the second engine.