10 ANCIENT Heavy Machinery That Are Still Running

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 141

  • @IDT69
    @IDT69 Месяц назад +32

    My gramp had an old bucyrus erie cable shovel in the gravel pit when I was a kid, first machine I learned to operate and work on, it’s actually still there on the tree line, we got it running and moving a couple years ago, aside from needing new cables I believe it could be put back into use

  • @sondangthai4885
    @sondangthai4885 Месяц назад +30

    I’ve been obsessed with steam shovels ever since Captain Kangaroo read "Mike Mulligan and his Steam Shovel" on his morning show when I was a kid! Hooked for life!

    • @jasonalbert9939
      @jasonalbert9939 Месяц назад +1

      I was thinking about that book as I watched this. That was one of my favorite books as a kid.

  • @sdgsuperstar
    @sdgsuperstar 12 дней назад +1

    These achievements remind us of the incredible resourcefulness of earlier civilizations. Without the convenience of modern tools and technology, they laid the foundations of engineering that inspire and guide us to this day. The lessons they left behind still resonate in modern projects, showing that creativity and determination can overcome any obstacle.

    • @1marcelfilms
      @1marcelfilms 12 дней назад

      AI generated comments on AI generated videos.....

  • @muddrudder2656
    @muddrudder2656 Месяц назад +10

    i saw a erie steam excavator working a build site in my small town. i was beyond shocked to see the old wood shed on top still and the old behemoth still working

  • @BrendynRobertson
    @BrendynRobertson 13 дней назад +4

    Who recalls Mike Mulligan and his Steam Shovel?

  • @misterflibble6601
    @misterflibble6601 Месяц назад +20

    Fell in love with steam shovels when a was very young and Captain Kangaroo read "Mike Mulligan and his Steam Shovel" on his morning children's show!

    • @artr8285
      @artr8285 Месяц назад +3

      OMG!! Now at 73 my faintest memories from childhood of the steam shovel in the basement are re-discovered!! I too am a huge fan, and always wondered why I saw the smiling face on the bucket! Thanks so much for this!

    • @dncarac
      @dncarac Месяц назад

      Mary Ann!

    • @sondangthai4885
      @sondangthai4885 Месяц назад

      LOL

  • @kotten9534
    @kotten9534 Месяц назад +73

    Is this AI generated? Most things are correct, but the video is a bit repetitive (especially for Bucyrus) and inconsistent, sometimes referring to specific models and other times just "the dragline"

    • @glamiskid395
      @glamiskid395 Месяц назад +13

      Has to be with the constant repetition

    • @calrob300
      @calrob300 Месяц назад +12

      AI is an infection.
      BTW would any commenters happen to know why these old cable machines had the bucket facing away from the house, whereas the contemporary machines face the bucket towards the house?

    • @kotten9534
      @kotten9534 Месяц назад +10

      @@calrob300 Yes, having the bucket facing away is more efficient for digging into hills and quarries which were many of the early excavators most economical jobs. As machines got more nimble and hydraulics came along, they were able to be used for more purposes without switching the dipper and bucket between digging down or digging "up". Still, many of the worlds biggest excavators work in quarries and have the bucket facing forward to dig into rock walls better.

    • @calrob300
      @calrob300 Месяц назад +5

      @@kotten9534 Super answer. I've wondered about that for years. Thanks!

    • @xuser48
      @xuser48 Месяц назад +2

      And the extensive use of superlatives.

  • @lancebon2931
    @lancebon2931 22 дня назад +2

    I was the oiler, fireman and watertender on a Whiley Wirley driving piles for a large pier in Baltimore back in the early 1970s. I feel blessed to have got to see and be part of an older way of doing work with steam. I also worked on steamships for 7 years while in the SIU and the MEBA

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 20 дней назад

      so 50 years ago

    • @lancebon2931
      @lancebon2931 18 дней назад +1

      Not so long ago, for me, I'm 79, it was like yesterday. I'm in the process of writing my memoirs for my Kids, my Grandkids and my Great Grandcildren..I was born on the cusp of the Silent Generation and the Boomers. While working on the Whiley Wirley, I saw the worst industrial accident in my life, I saw a man lose his legs, and his father was the forman for driving the piles. The dad almost had a heart attack, The kid lost both his legs, I was told he went through therapy, got prosthetic limbs, and the Iron Workers Union paid for his College tuition. He received a very large settlement. I know he would rather have his legs.

    • @heavymaticyt
      @heavymaticyt  9 дней назад

      Thanks for sharing your story Lance!

  • @jamessmith7691
    @jamessmith7691 Месяц назад +7

    This was an awesome video, thanks for showing it.

  • @barriewright2857
    @barriewright2857 Месяц назад +4

    Absolutely fascinating and so interesting. To think what this machine did for society and it's development.

  • @caiuspostumiusturrinus1024
    @caiuspostumiusturrinus1024 Месяц назад +3

    That steam shovel has a literal house on it

  • @petemiller519
    @petemiller519 5 дней назад

    Well done!

  • @tootired76
    @tootired76 Месяц назад +7

    One can see working steam shovels each year at the Western Minnesota Steam Threshers Reunion at Rollag, Minnesota every Labor Day weekend! You briefly showed one there in this video!

  • @BeingRomans829ed
    @BeingRomans829ed Месяц назад +17

    Fred Flintstone was the first crane operator.

  • @iansutton3176
    @iansutton3176 Месяц назад +6

    This is a fascinating video.

  • @marudipudidinesh4061
    @marudipudidinesh4061 Месяц назад +15

    This is beauty of mechanical engineering ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @TOPTECH-r3r
    @TOPTECH-r3r 10 дней назад

    Love watching this kind of video

  • @davebarron5939
    @davebarron5939 26 дней назад +1

    Very enjoyable, Thanks.

  • @torreeric499
    @torreeric499 9 дней назад

    Dragline excavator is the very first non combat mech that humans invented. A machine that is capable of walking almost similar to modern day robots...

  • @hjtmath
    @hjtmath 14 дней назад

    I loved this video! Can you please give some more specific years in the next video? It's a nice context to have. Thank you!

  • @ldnwholesale8552
    @ldnwholesale8552 Месяц назад +4

    I can remember big cable excavators when I was a kid, in the early 60s. Working in quarries though by about the mid 60s most were hydraulic which was faster amd more efficient. Was around those, scrapers, dozers, loaders and excavators in sand pits as well as quarries.
    I have seen old steam excavators on You Tube still working and not as a demonstration either. Plenty of those too

  • @ВасилийХристофоров-н2р

    Спасибо за историческую экскурсию 😊

  • @dinotopher770
    @dinotopher770 16 дней назад

    cool footage thanks

  • @davidkimmel5153
    @davidkimmel5153 25 дней назад +1

    Thanks. Very interesting 😊

  • @Kowyn
    @Kowyn 7 дней назад

    Friend of mine down the road has a Bucyrus Erie 10-B drag line with a Chevy in line 6, it was a runner some years ago, all in all it could pretty easily be working again.

  • @jasonbuck489
    @jasonbuck489 Месяц назад

    Really Cool Footage of Awesome Antique Machines!...

  • @stephenr6913
    @stephenr6913 23 дня назад +2

    Btw the Panama Canal opened in 1913, not 1930.

  • @AndrewC.McPherson-xf5zw
    @AndrewC.McPherson-xf5zw 21 день назад

    Super cool man

  • @kabuti2839
    @kabuti2839 22 дня назад

    I have a picture of my g-grandfather & crew running a steam shovel. They built lots of irrigation canals near here. My dad ran the 'HOPTO'

  • @techristopher8077
    @techristopher8077 Месяц назад +1

    Remember watching the walking beam drag line shovels around Grand Rapids, MI as an youngster as we sailed in my Dad's sailing dingy.

  • @henrycarlson7514
    @henrycarlson7514 Месяц назад +2

    Interesting , Thank You

  • @brendawright5899
    @brendawright5899 Месяц назад +6

    I can remember these pre-hydrolic machines when I was a kid. I was fasinated watching the operator moving those levers

  • @MtrePierre
    @MtrePierre Месяц назад +1

    A lot of steam machines are still working in India and Indonesia( sugar factory...) and also a lot of old diesel motors (pumps etc..)

  • @rln970
    @rln970 21 день назад +3

    Why do all the AI robots have British accents?

    • @keithad6485
      @keithad6485 18 дней назад

      The AIs received private school edumacation in England. ;-)

    • @glennso47
      @glennso47 15 дней назад

      @@keithad6485Along with actors in early sound movies.

  • @stevehill4615
    @stevehill4615 Месяц назад +2

    Interesting video, glad you mentioned the Hooley Ruston steam navvie as I'd seen a video elsewhere on YT about it's recovery and had wondered what had happened to it.

    • @rtv8055
      @rtv8055 Месяц назад

      its at Threlkeld quarry near Penrith UK

  • @aspopulvera9130
    @aspopulvera9130 Месяц назад +5

    steam iron giants that became pillars of our civilization

  • @danielboliva2731
    @danielboliva2731 14 дней назад

    here were i live theres is a dragline escavator, it is a marion 7800, she is on display after it got replaced by modern ones, i think it was made in ohio and traveled all the way down to south brazil to be used in the shale extraction by petrobras.

  • @Oleslawwielki
    @Oleslawwielki 12 дней назад

    Kind of weird saying that this isn’t „modern”. I mean I supposed it depends what standards you use, but this is modern history thus I would consider it modern

  • @toma5153
    @toma5153 Месяц назад +1

    A beautiful Southern Pacific railroad steam crane can be seen at Antique Powerland in Brooks, Oregon. It's a monster!

  • @rickvan102
    @rickvan102 Месяц назад +2

    Was hoping to hear the sounds these machines make.

  • @metallicalloy
    @metallicalloy Месяц назад

    The steam donkeys of the America west coast timber industry would be a fascinating video.

  • @danherrmann8755
    @danherrmann8755 Месяц назад

    Yes thanks for. The video.

  • @Zoie3x8
    @Zoie3x8 19 дней назад

    It's simple - all of these things, were made - Without The Concept of [Planned Obsolescence] and [Bureaucracy].

  • @geoffb108
    @geoffb108 Месяц назад +2

    Such a soft and sickly sugar coated description. How about a bit more truth and grit about these amazing machines. You are not only talking to children. there are a lot of mature intelligent adults out here .

  • @notintohandles
    @notintohandles 12 дней назад

    This isn't ten machines. This is a drag line video. Call it what it is.

  • @Idrinklight44
    @Idrinklight44 Месяц назад +1

    We've done nothing but gotten lazier.....

  • @tihzho
    @tihzho Месяц назад +5

    Did you use a 148 year old microphone?

  • @joeyhartz9213
    @joeyhartz9213 Месяц назад

    May want to check and see if Page actually didn't put the first " walking dragline " in service. Page was a bit ahead of B.E. in some categories.

  • @AndrewC.McPherson-xf5zw
    @AndrewC.McPherson-xf5zw 21 день назад

    I would have small kitchen and bunk in back of the big house shovels.

  • @stevensanicky-up4nc
    @stevensanicky-up4nc 21 день назад

    What about the Saginaw walking dredge

  • @errosionofaccord3429
    @errosionofaccord3429 Месяц назад

    Much of your footage was from Rollag Minnesota where the Wester Minnesota Steam Threshers Reunion is held. Give credit where it is due. Many of these machines are operated there every Labor Day.

  • @symmetry08
    @symmetry08 Месяц назад

    We need to keep this machines running, not only as a historical piece of equipment preservation, but also as a practical mean during transition periods of 2050-2070. During 2050's the last drop of oils will be extracted and conventional equipments will come to halt in mass. So, lack of infrastructure machine will be heightened for many decade until transition to new solution and mode of EVs made available.

    • @richarddietzen3137
      @richarddietzen3137 20 дней назад

      Last drops of oil? Read something not printed in the 1970s.

  • @MT-ek9te
    @MT-ek9te Месяц назад +2

    Its Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel
    🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @calrob300
      @calrob300 Месяц назад +1

      @@MT-ek9te yay! I still have that book!

  • @_scaryberry
    @_scaryberry 7 дней назад

    Erie Pennsylvania is where I live

  • @steveshoemaker6347
    @steveshoemaker6347 Месяц назад

    Thank you for a look back in Heavy Machinery of yesteryear......
    Old F-4 Phantom fighter jet pilot Shoe🇺🇸

  • @gretschcorvette73
    @gretschcorvette73 20 дней назад

    It was much easier back then before we had OH&S.

    • @SynchroScore
      @SynchroScore 20 дней назад

      @@gretschcorvette73 Yeah, the good old days when "A man a million" was the rule of thumb in large construction projects i.e. expecting at least one jobsite fatality for every million dollars spent. When there were no pesky regulations against the use of benzene and asbestos, where mining jobs came with complementary black lung or silicosis. Yeah, much better back then.

  • @AndrewC.McPherson-xf5zw
    @AndrewC.McPherson-xf5zw 21 день назад

    Explosives were used

  • @keithad6485
    @keithad6485 18 дней назад

    There are similar machines in the Western Australia Goldfield, one at Laverton WA has a plate on it stating it was made in USA. There is a similar machine near Maldon Victoria Australia - also a goldfield. Neither are functioning but remain there as sentinels of the past.

  • @christmassnow3465
    @christmassnow3465 29 дней назад

    They're like the machines from the "Mortal engines" series by Phillip Reeve.

  • @derekbatten9236
    @derekbatten9236 Месяц назад +1

    Need to get somebody with clear speech for the voice over

  • @OnlyTheEd
    @OnlyTheEd Месяц назад +1

    Reverse engineering buy making an RC walking dragline? Awesome!

  • @noname2490
    @noname2490 Месяц назад +2

    Epa shut all our industry down. We couldn't hope to achieve this level of American industry today

    • @SynchroScore
      @SynchroScore 24 дня назад

      I'm guessing you've never actually worked in any industry or manufacturing, or you'd know that's complete nonsense. We've got plenty of industry today.

    • @kramnoslaw4474
      @kramnoslaw4474 23 дня назад

      Your another Trumper dummy before you run your mouth how bout doing a little research first dunce

    • @richarddietzen3137
      @richarddietzen3137 20 дней назад

      Corporations sent the business and labor to China and pollute there, so they could sell cheaper at Walmart.

  • @retheisen
    @retheisen Месяц назад

    It may not be exactly what you're looking for, but I could build a little house up there.

  • @maxij7132
    @maxij7132 24 дня назад

    new drinking game, drink when he says Bucyrus

  • @boblovell5789
    @boblovell5789 8 дней назад

    Look up the definition of 'shallow'.

  • @karlmartell9279
    @karlmartell9279 28 дней назад

    No diesel an no hydraulik and it worked as well.

  • @tgeliot
    @tgeliot Месяц назад

    This sounds like it was written by AI.

  • @AndrewC.McPherson-xf5zw
    @AndrewC.McPherson-xf5zw 21 день назад

    Ya, I would have small crib in back if I was operator.

  • @aigslmnop6559
    @aigslmnop6559 7 дней назад

    3:03 lake erie 🌅

  • @AndrewC.McPherson-xf5zw
    @AndrewC.McPherson-xf5zw 21 день назад

    Wooden model is pimp action

  • @calrob300
    @calrob300 Месяц назад

    Would any commenters happen to know why these old cable machines had the bucket facing away from the house, whereas the contemporary hydraulic machines face the bucket towards the house?

    • @adrianchetwynd1334
      @adrianchetwynd1334 Месяц назад +2

      Probably because they are less complicated to achieve high capacity. Their buckets usually discharge from the rear of the bucket without hydraulics.

    • @rtv8055
      @rtv8055 Месяц назад +4

      its because of the way the winches work, hydraulic systems can push and pull. winches can only pull and have to freewheel to reverse. hope this makes sense!

    • @adrianchetwynd1334
      @adrianchetwynd1334 Месяц назад +1

      @@rtv8055 The video demonstrates that some of these old machines had buckets facing the driver and in particular the drag line versions.
      Modern hydraulic excavators are used both push and pull unless they are specifically designed for face work.

    • @calrob300
      @calrob300 Месяц назад

      @@rtv8055 Thanks!

    • @calrob300
      @calrob300 Месяц назад

      @@adrianchetwynd1334 Thanks.

  • @canuckprogressive.3435
    @canuckprogressive.3435 Месяц назад +1

    I was watching but all the annoying sound effects prompted me to click off.

  • @dDAMKErkk
    @dDAMKErkk 24 дня назад

    Pretty voice

  • @clinthowe7629
    @clinthowe7629 Месяц назад

    Marion, where are you maid Marion?

  • @davidraborn3654
    @davidraborn3654 19 дней назад

    Your audio is to deep in bass. Can barley make out the words.

  • @bruceg1845
    @bruceg1845 Месяц назад

    why does this announcer shout, then quiet down till you can barely hear him,, very poor...

  • @illbeback2YT
    @illbeback2YT Месяц назад

    A chain of clichés

  • @DavidRafaelSutton
    @DavidRafaelSutton 15 дней назад

    Well it is somewhat interesting video You're a title is clickbait cuz you said ancient machinery 100 100 120 years ago is not ancient machinery it's not ancient ancient is old thousand years more so so that's it at least get a title that's honest you know it's not really fast sincerely David Raphael AKA Bob the blind bedroom guitarist

  • @Richmode1000
    @Richmode1000 Месяц назад

    Stop using this voice..use jhon deer video one

  • @Preciouspink
    @Preciouspink 20 дней назад

    Uhh body counts

  • @xuser48
    @xuser48 Месяц назад

    AI generated text. :-(

  • @Timothyshannon-fz4jx
    @Timothyshannon-fz4jx Месяц назад

    Wonderful machines, all built by engineers doing honest hard graphed with out computers, sophisticated machinery and all that rubbish, marvels of there time and marvels know, and if we had to build them know like they were then we would throw are arms in the air and say it cannot be done, the Victorians had a can do attitude that we have lost, we would not have our modern age with out them, ok, the belshing smoke would make greta Thunberg wet herself, SO WHAT!!!!!

    • @marionbloom1218
      @marionbloom1218 Месяц назад

      Of course let's not forget the preceding invention that made all of these possible - the slide rule! All the complicated calculations for steam pressure, flow, heat transfer etc would have been impossible just using paper and pen (especially the long division sums). But the slide rule made it easy and quick. Every engineer had one, I learnt how to use one at school in the early 1970's and still have it!
      Mind you, you could equally argue for Napier's inventions of logarithms, the mathematical "trick" that made the slide rule possible.
      Marion (hey, that used to be another big manufacturer of steam shovels that didn't get a mention! I want a vote for Marion Power Shovels, they made even bigger machines than Bucyrus).

  • @davidelkins3229
    @davidelkins3229 Месяц назад

    mix is bad. I had to quit. almost unitelligble

  • @RickaramaTrama-lc1ys
    @RickaramaTrama-lc1ys Месяц назад +1

    The video part is satisfactory but the audio is very hard to hear with the rise in volume on every new sentence.

    • @rtv8055
      @rtv8055 Месяц назад

      its because of the way the winches work, hydraulic systems can push and pull. winches can only pull and have to freewheel to reverse. hope this makes sense!

  • @RodneyPowell-g6m
    @RodneyPowell-g6m Месяц назад +13

    These iron monsters built America 🇺🇸 go Trump

    • @Phuc_Yhou
      @Phuc_Yhou Месяц назад

      What has a very old Mr trump, a 7 x bankrupt, multi convicted sex offender and traitor who can't stop lying got to do with antique machinery that actually works?

    • @MT-ek9te
      @MT-ek9te Месяц назад +4

      Trump 2024
      🇺🇲✊️

    • @user-g9e1b
      @user-g9e1b Месяц назад +1

      🇺🇲💞🇺🇲

    • @edschott4246
      @edschott4246 25 дней назад

      @@user-g9e1b There is a big 2 cylinder Page engine from a shovel or a drag line at Mt Pleasant Iowa Show. ref Page 4days ago.

    • @dDAMKErkk
      @dDAMKErkk 24 дня назад +3

      🔥🔥🔥 no Trump,,,

  • @danielwiley5796
    @danielwiley5796 Месяц назад +1

    I can't stand these RUclips videos when the content creator does not actually do any filming just hijacks other material off the internet and voice over is it