Sentinel DG4 Waggon to Coleham Pumping Station

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  • Опубликовано: 16 дек 2024

Комментарии • 43

  • @paulpaul5606
    @paulpaul5606 15 дней назад

    It’s amazes me that these Places were so important for the growth of our country. to imagine so many people Would’ve been working down there. And so busy every day

  • @gustavoguti27
    @gustavoguti27 4 года назад +5

    I don't know why youtube decided to show this on my feed but here I am. I had no idea about those amazing machines!

  • @iksexplorationsfollower2588
    @iksexplorationsfollower2588 5 лет назад +4

    That is one beautiful truck.

  • @richardteale8203
    @richardteale8203 5 лет назад +7

    Wow! Nice!👌 It can sure do some speed on the highway hey! Well done for preserving these awesome machines!
    Nice to see the other steam engines at that museum too etc. Thanks.😀
    Rich.😃 in Perth.

  • @BlanCamCZ
    @BlanCamCZ 4 года назад +3

    Wow, this car is great! I love the sound of steam :) Very nice video, thanks for sharing. Big thumbs-up!

  • @mendhamsmusicmoviesmovemen8075
    @mendhamsmusicmoviesmovemen8075 5 лет назад +8

    This frantastic wagon was re-built by Channel 4's TV programme, Salvage Squad. A recommended watch.

    • @matthewselby4524
      @matthewselby4524 Год назад

      Ah well, there’s another programme it appeared on with a three way tipper behind the cab
      I’ll give you a few clues
      1. Sir Charles topham hatt got him as a congratulate gift for earning his driver’s license
      2. However, while they got on Charles wanted to drive fast, but she didn’t like it one bit
      3. Years later when she crashed into and old shed, the titular e2 broke his coupling rods
      4. It was all too much when his boss beamed with delight & the man who owned him after Charles discovered a dark truth of what would’ve been a new friend for the skarloey railway after (she helped to clear up after her storm)
      5. Her name is Elizabeth

  • @Andre_Thomasson
    @Andre_Thomasson Год назад

    I like how this one still has the original (right?) looking barrels on the back instead of just nothing

  • @GetsugaTensho85
    @GetsugaTensho85 5 лет назад +7

    Surprisingly quiet at times!
    Wonder what one could do with fully modern recreation!

  • @juliangoodacre
    @juliangoodacre Год назад

    Brings back memories as I used to steam Sentinel DG 4 Callow Rock YD6587 which was sold to Walter Fearnley in the early 1980's. Does anyone know where this waggon is now?

  • @zacharyrollick6169
    @zacharyrollick6169 3 года назад +1

    I love these things.

  • @robert-oq9jq
    @robert-oq9jq Год назад

    The great civilization that created these wonderfully machines and everything else this world enjoys is under attack, now who would be behind a thing like that?

  • @roadpanzir
    @roadpanzir 5 лет назад

    There is something special about quiet machinery

  • @douro20
    @douro20 6 лет назад +4

    Not much horsepower but lots and lots of torque.

  • @fabrizioviscardi40
    @fabrizioviscardi40 Год назад +1

    Great movie, I subscribed your interesting channel! Cheers, Fabrizio like 554

  • @Threadoflength
    @Threadoflength 5 лет назад +6

    0:58 you can tell that man has never cleaned a window properly in his life, lol

    • @NathanEddington
      @NathanEddington 3 года назад

      Exactly what I thought! Then uses the greasiest, dirtiest rag possible on it!

  • @jacobhaussmann90
    @jacobhaussmann90 7 месяцев назад

    it gos faster that i thought it would

    • @IACooper
      @IACooper  7 месяцев назад

      probably 30-40mph on fairly level road. The later "S-type" model Sentinel steam waggons can trundle on nearer 50mph on fairly level roads.
      They all slow to a crawl up steep hills though! lol

  • @JoseLuis-ob8bn
    @JoseLuis-ob8bn 5 лет назад +2

    que bueno que mantengan funcionando esta maquinas , salidos desde ARGENTINA

  • @leepalmer1210
    @leepalmer1210 5 лет назад +3

    Someone please tell me how to buy one here in the United States.

    • @IACooper
      @IACooper  5 лет назад +1

      There are a few Sentinel Waggons in the US, but probably your quickest way of getting one is to buy from the UK and export it yourself.

    • @kristafoster7190
      @kristafoster7190 5 лет назад

      @@IACooper how much one cost for me I'm looking for one for sale all restored

  • @ronnieg6358
    @ronnieg6358 3 года назад

    Where was the town in the last bit?

    • @IACooper
      @IACooper  3 года назад

      Shrewsbury town centre

  • @stevethegreasemonkey
    @stevethegreasemonkey 4 года назад +2

    I have a model of this lovely old waggon

  • @mechanicalmoron2251
    @mechanicalmoron2251 4 года назад

    was this the one salvage squod restored?

    • @IACooper
      @IACooper  4 года назад

      Yes ...ish.
      The waggon was already "restored" - it was running before "Salvage Squad" were involved, but they did help with the over-winter job of replacing the firebox on the boiler of this waggon in 2004.

  • @Pamudder
    @Pamudder 4 года назад

    What a marvelous display of steam! Did the Sentinel waggons (which were technically quite advanced for their day) have power-assisted brakes or steering using either steam or compressed air? I'd be scared to death to drive through town without some kind of assist on the brakes. Also, were the barrels on the back just decorative, or do they contain extra boiler water?

    • @IACooper
      @IACooper  4 года назад +1

      They do have steam brakes alongside the manual hand brake, ...seem to work fairly well.
      No assistance on the steering though, very heavy when stationary or maneuvering slowly.
      The barrels on this one are empty and serve as both a useful seat and a means of keeping the 'service' equipment such as tools, extra coal, packed lunch etc. hidden and stop them falling off.

    • @keithwelton
      @keithwelton 3 года назад

      The wagon is sign written as Morrison’s oil company, still going in Shrewsbury with associated businesses, so the barrels probably were originally used to deliver their oils.

  • @anonymousthomasfan1111
    @anonymousthomasfan1111 3 года назад

    This lorry belong's to my friend's family

  • @quentingriffin1592
    @quentingriffin1592 2 года назад +1

    It's Elizabeth

    • @MrTrainerProductions
      @MrTrainerProductions 2 года назад +2

      Don't forget Isobella.

    • @finnsheridan836
      @finnsheridan836 2 года назад +1

      I see they’re both sisters you know we all know steam lorries don’t we

  • @buster76246
    @buster76246 3 года назад

    CLEANING THE WINDOWS WITH A FILTHY RAG AND AN OLD WIPER BLADE,?

    • @IACooper
      @IACooper  3 года назад

      The *new* spare wiper blade carried in the Series IIa Land Rover not seen here by the camera operator makes a very effective squeegee for cleaning condensation and dirt from Landy windows.
      ...alas, the eager volunteer who set to trying to clean the waggon windows clearly hadn't learnt the knack of using a squeegee for cleaning windows, so makes a fairly simple operation appear very difficult! - That in itself takes some level of skill Lol

  • @Barmaley80x
    @Barmaley80x 2 года назад

    Not need gas station.

  • @AsTheWheelsTurn
    @AsTheWheelsTurn 5 лет назад +1

    cool except for the fake cheesy looking barrels on the bed.once you start putting fake decorative things on a historic vehicle it gets cheesy and not so cool. id rather just see an empty bed or some old rotting barrels strapped down appropriately not red painted fake barrels that are bolted down. it is not historically accurate and is just kind of disgraceful.

    • @IACooper
      @IACooper  5 лет назад +11

      The barrels are definitely real, although were originally used for carrying spirits rather than oil. They occasionally have to be soaked in water to get them to expand and tighten up again as these days they are empty rather than full, so the wood dries out and shrinks. They are bolted to the bed, this stops them getting stolen when the waggon is left unattended for periods of time (as old barrels have become rather desirable these days). Being secured also makes them stable to sit on and means they don't move about.
      Clearly as you're interested in historical accuracy you will have already referred to the company's advertising literature from the early 1930's which shows the company's Sentinel waggons looking much like this, albeit with a second layer of barrels stacked horizontally on top of the first layer, and in some cases showing a DG6 on solids rather than a DG4 on air. The weight of the barrels alone was originally used to keep them in place, so strapping down would not be historically accurate and would be verging on just kind of disgraceful. The principle still remains that as seen today it is a pretty close match to the promotional photographs from 85 years ago. This particular waggon has been in the current family's ownership for over 40 years, so close to half of its existence and use has been in this ownership and form, which is longer than any of its previous owners.

    • @artrandy
      @artrandy 3 года назад +1

      @@IACooper Your reply was very interesting, and I presume this was the only reason you didn't give the written equivalent of the two fingered salute, that many of us think this ignorant fool actually deserved..........

    • @trainsimulatordriver
      @trainsimulatordriver 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@IACooperit's grand someone with the name Cooper is giving us knowledge of barrels 😁