Dave Smith | A Profile In Live Steam | Illinois Live Steamers

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  • Опубликовано: 16 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 3

  • @metalmill52
    @metalmill52 11 месяцев назад +2

    Great interview, truly enjoyed listening to the wisdom and insight from this gentleman!

  • @tomedgar4375
    @tomedgar4375 11 месяцев назад +1

    Smelling the coal burning is part of the experience, managing the coal fire takes more skill and planning than simply turning a dial when more heat is required with a good load and an upcoming grade. The downside is that it takes a lot more time to clean up your engine after running it. Beautiful machine.

    • @TheSteamChannel
      @TheSteamChannel  11 месяцев назад +1

      Smelling the coal is certainly enjoyable…one of the best parts of a coal burning engine…but this is a hobby and not a personal bits measuring contest to see who is more skilled or the purest operator. Coal is becoming harder to find and if the wrong grade (or a bad batch) is purchased…you might as well throw dirt on the fire. I’ve watched coal burners struggle to even keep a fire going because of a bad batch of coal they purchased (in bulk).
      Propane is clean, it keeps the engine clean, and it keeps ash and soot from working its way around/in bearings and bushings which will destroy those surfaces. Another advantage - it’s much easier to let a new hobbyist, friend, or child run a propane fired engine as compared to turning them loose on a coal fired engine. The best advantage - I can buy propane at most any store locally. So if you were at a meet and needed more fuel - it’s a simple drive to the store away. Running out of coal may ground you.
      All four of our steam engines will be fired on propane.