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Steam shovel

 
Steam Shovel

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Steam shovel



 
 
A steam shovel is a large steam-powered
Steam engine

File:Steam-powered fire engine.jpgA steam engine is a heat engine that performs mechanical work using steam as its working fluid.Steam engines have a long history, going back at least 2000 years....
 excavating machine designed for lifting and moving material such as rock and soil
Soil

Soil is the naturally occurring, unconsolidated or loose covering on the Earth's surface. Soil is composed of particles of broken rock that have been altered by chemical and environmental processes including weathering and erosion....
. It is the earliest type of power shovel.

steam shovel was invented by William Otis
William Otis

William Otis was an American inventor of the steam shovel. Otis received a patent for his creation on February 24, 1839.In 1839, Mr. William Smith Otis, civil engineer of Philadelphia, Penn., was issued a U.S....
, who received a patent
Patent

A patent is a set of exclusive rights granted by a state to an inventor or his assignee for a term of patent in exchange for a disclosure of an invention....
 for his design in 1839.

The first machines were known as 'partial-swing', since the dipper arm could not rotate through 360 degrees.






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Shovel1
A steam shovel is a large steam-powered
Steam engine

File:Steam-powered fire engine.jpgA steam engine is a heat engine that performs mechanical work using steam as its working fluid.Steam engines have a long history, going back at least 2000 years....
 excavating machine designed for lifting and moving material such as rock and soil
Soil

Soil is the naturally occurring, unconsolidated or loose covering on the Earth's surface. Soil is composed of particles of broken rock that have been altered by chemical and environmental processes including weathering and erosion....
. It is the earliest type of power shovel.

Origins and development

The steam shovel was invented by William Otis
William Otis

William Otis was an American inventor of the steam shovel. Otis received a patent for his creation on February 24, 1839.In 1839, Mr. William Smith Otis, civil engineer of Philadelphia, Penn., was issued a U.S....
, who received a patent
Patent

A patent is a set of exclusive rights granted by a state to an inventor or his assignee for a term of patent in exchange for a disclosure of an invention....
 for his design in 1839.

The first machines were known as 'partial-swing', since the dipper arm could not rotate through 360 degrees. They were built on a railway chassis, on which the boiler and movement engines were mounted. The shovel arm and driving engines were mounted at one end of the chassis, which accounts for the limited swing. Bogie
Bogie

A bogie is a wheeled wagon or trolley. In Machine terms, a bogie is a chassis or framework carrying wheels, attached to a vehicle. It can be fixed in place, as on a cargo truck, mounted on a swivel, as on a railway carriage or locomotive, or sprung as in the suspension of a caterpillar tracked vehicle....
s with flanged wheels were fitted, and power was taken to the wheels by a chain drive to the axles. Temporary rail tracks were laid by workers where the shovel was expected to work, and repositioned as required.

Steam shovels became more popular in the latter half of the nineteenth century. Originally configured with chain hoists, the advent of steel cable
Wire rope

Wire rope consists of several strands laid together like a helix. Each strand is likewise made of metal wires laid together like a helix. Initially wrought iron wires were used, but today steel is the main material used for wire ropes....
 in the 1870s allowed for easier rigging to the winches.

Later machines were supplied with caterpillar tracks, obviating the need for rails to be laid.

The full-swing, revolving shovel was developed in England
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
 in 1884, and this became the preferred format for these machines.

Expanding railway networks (in the US and the UK) fostered a demand for steam shovels; it can be said that the extensive mileage of railways, and corresponding volume of material to be moved, forced the technological leap. As a result, steam shovels became commonplace.

During the 1930s steam shovels lost out to the simpler, cheaper diesel-powered
Diesel engine

A diesel engine is an internal combustion engine which operates using the diesel cycle . Diesel engines have the highest thermal efficiency compared to any internal combustion or external combustion engine....
 excavating
Excavator

An excavator is an engineering vehicle consisting of an articulated arm , bucket and cab mounted on a pivot atop an undercarriage with Caterpillar track or wheels....
 shovels that were the forerunners of those still in use today. Open-pit mines were electrified at this time. Only after the Second World War, with the advent of robust high-pressure hydraulic hoses, did the more versatile hydraulic backhoe shovels take pre-eminence over the cable-hoisting winch shovels.

Many steam shovels remained quietly at work on the railways of developing nations until diesel engines supplanted them. Most have since been scrapped.

History (US)

American manufacturers included the Marion Steam Shovel Company
Marion Power Shovel

Marion Power Shovel was a Marion, Ohio based manufacturer of earth moving shovels and draglines, mainly used in construction and resource extraction....
, which was founded in 1884, Erie, P and H, and Bucyrus-Erie Shovel Companies.

The booming cities in North America used shovels to dig foundations and basements for the early skyscraper
Skyscraper

A skyscraper is a tall, continuously habitable building. There is no official definition nor height above which a building may clearly be classified as a skyscraper....
s. New York's Grand Central Station could not have been built without shovels.

The Panama Canal

Perhaps the most famous application of steam shovels is the digging of the Panama Canal
Panama Canal

The Panama Canal is a man-made canal which joins the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Ocean oceans. One of the largest and most difficult engineering projects ever undertaken, it had an enormous impact on shipping between the two oceans, replacing the long and treacherous route via the Drake Passage and Cape Horn at the southernmost tip of South Am...
 across the Isthmus of Panama
Isthmus of Panama

The Isthmus of Panama, also historically known as the Isthmus of Darien, is the narrow strip of land that lies between the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean, linking North America and South America....
. One hundred and two shovels worked in that decade-long dig. Seventy-seven were Bucyrus railway shovels, whose booms could rotate less than 180 degrees, the remainder were Marion shovels. These behemoths 'moved mountains' in their labours. The shovel crews would race to see who could move the most dirt.

Mining

Mining also benefitted from steam shovels: the iron mines of Minnesota, the copper mines of Chile and Montana, placer mines of the Klondike
Klondike

Klondike may refer to one of the following:...
 – all had earth-moving equipment. But it was with the burgeoning open-pit mines – first in Bingham Canyon, Utah – that shovels came into their own. The shovels systematically removed hillsides. As a result, steam shovels were used around the world from Australia to Russia to coal mines in China. Shovels were also used for construction, road and quarry work.

Later history (US)

Steam shovels came into their own in the 1920s with the publicly-funded road building programmes around North America. Thousands of miles of State Highways were built in this time period, together with new factories, such as Henry Ford's River Rouge Plant
River Rouge Plant

The Ford River Rouge Complex is a Ford Motor Company automobile factory complex located in Dearborn, Michigan, along the River Rouge , upstream from its confluence with the Detroit River at Zug Island....
, and many docks, ports, buildings, and grain elevators. Dams such as the Hoover or Boulder dam
Hoover Dam

Hoover Dam, originally known as Boulder Dam, is a concrete arch-gravity dam in the Black Canyon of the Colorado of the Colorado River , on the border between the United States U.S....
 could not have been built without steam shovels.

Preservation

Most steam shovels have been scrapped, although a few can still be found in industrial museums and private collections.

Ruston Proctor Steam Navvy No 306

This machine was originally used at a chalk pit at Arlesey
Arlesey

Arlesey is a small industrial town and civil parish in the district of Mid Bedfordshire in Bedfordshire. It is located on the border with Hertfordshire, about three miles north-west of Letchworth Garden City, four miles north of Hitchin and six miles south of Biggleswade....
, in Bedfordshire
Bedfordshire

Bedfordshire is a county in England that forms part of the East of England Regions of England.Its county town is Bedford, Bedfordshire. It borders Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire, Buckinghamshire and Hertfordshire....
, England. After the pit was closed, the steam navvy was simply abandoned and 'lost' as the pit became flooded with water. By the mid-1970s, the area had become a local beauty spot, known as The Blue Lagoon (from chemicals from the quarry colouring the water), and after long periods of drought, the top of the rusty navvy could be seen protruding from the water. Ruston & Hornsby expert Ray Hooley heard of its existence, and organised the difficult task of rescuing it from the water-filled pit. Hooley arranged for its complete restoration to working order by apprentices at the Ruston-Bucyrus
Ruston-Bucyrus

Ruston-Bucyrus Ltd was an engineering company established in 1930 and jointly owned by Ruston and Hornsby based in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England and Bucyrus-Erie based in Bucyrus, Ohio, the latter of which had operational control and into which the excavator manufacturing operation of Ruston and Hornsby was transferred....
 works. Subsequently it passed into the care of the Museum of Lincolnshire Life
Museum of Lincolnshire Life

The Museum of Lincolnshire Life is a museum in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, in the United Kingdom. The museum collection is a varied social history that reflects and celebrates the culture of Lincolnshire and its people from 1750 to the present day....
 , although it is not known whether it remains in operational condition.

Operation

A steam shovel comprises:
  • a bucket
  • boom and 'dipper stick'
  • boiler
  • water tank and coal bunker
  • steam engines and winches
  • operator's controls
  • a rotating platform on a truck, on which everything is mounted
  • wheels (or sometimes caterpillar tracks or railroad wheels)
  • a house (on the platform) to contain and protect 'the works'


The shovel has several individual operations: it can raise or luff the boom, rotate the house, or extend the dipper stick with the boom or crowd engine, and raise or lower the dipper stick.

When digging at a rockface, the operator simultaneously raises and extends the dipper stick to fill the bucket with material. When the bucket is full, the shovel is rotated to load a railway car or motor truck. The locking pin on the bucket flap is released and the load drops away. The operator lowers the dipper stick, the bucket mouth self-closes, the pin relocks automatically and the process repeats.

Steam shovels usually had a three-man crew: engineer, fireman and ground man. There was much jockeying to do to move shovels: rails and timber blocks to move; cables and block purchases to attach; chains and slings to rig; and so on. On soft ground, shovels used timber mats to help steady and level the ground. The early models were not self-propelled, rather they would use the boom to manoeuvre themselves.

Steam shovel manufacturers

Meccano Model Steam Shovel Excavator
North American manufacturers:
  • Ball Engine Co.
  • Bucyrus
    Bucyrus International

    Bucyrus International, Inc. is a manufacturer of heavy mining equipment. Founded in Bucyrus, Ohio in 1880, the headquarters were moved to its current location in South Milwaukee, Wisconsin in 1893....
  • Erie
  • Marion Steam Shovel Dredge Company
    Marion Power Shovel

    Marion Power Shovel was a Marion, Ohio based manufacturer of earth moving shovels and draglines, mainly used in construction and resource extraction....
  • Moore Speedcrane (later Manitowoc Cranes
    Manitowoc Cranes

    Manitowoc Cranes is a division of The Manitowoc Company. Manitowoc Cranes produces four brands of crane s and has two service brands, Manitowoc Crane Care and Manitowoc Finance....
    )
  • Northwest Shovels
  • Vulcan Iron Works
    Vulcan Iron Works

    Vulcan Iron Works, based in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, manufactured railroad locomotives. The company was established in 1849 by Richard Jones, and ceased operation in 1954....


European manufacturers:
  • Demag
    Demag

    Demag is a German heavy equipment manufacturer. Its business began in 1906 as a dock cranes manufacturer, under the name Deutsche Maschinenfabrik AG, or simply Demag....
     (Germany)
  • Fiorentini
    Fiorentini

    The Fiorentini are a noble Italian family from the Borgo Valsugana.Engineer Filippo Fiorentini founded the Fiorentini & C. S.p.A. factory of excavators in 1919 in Rome, Italy....
     (Italy)
  • Lubecker
  • Menck
    Menck

    Menck & Hambrock was a Hamburg-based German steam and diesel shovel builder....
  • Newton & Chambers (UK)
  • Orenstein and Koppel GmbH
    Orenstein and Koppel GmbH

    Orenstein & Koppel , is a major Germany engineering company, and was founded on April 1, 1876 in Berlin by Benno Orenstein and Arthur Koppel....
     (Germany)
  • Ruston & Hornsby (UK)


Power shovels


Large, multi-ton mining shovels still use the cable-lift shovel arrangement.

In the 1950s and 1960s Marion Shovel built massive stripping shovels for coal operations in the Eastern US. Shovels of note were the Marion 360, the Marion 5900, and the Marion 6360 – with a bucket – while Bucyrus constructed one of the most famous monsters: the Big Brutus
Big Brutus

Big Brutus is the nickname of the Bucyrus-Erie model 1850B electric Power shovel, which was the second largest of its type in operation in the 1960s and 1970s....
, the largest power shovel ever built and the largest still in existence. The GEM of Egypt (GEM standing for "Giant Excavating Machine" and Egypt referring to the Egypt Valley in Belmont County
Belmont County, Ohio

Belmont County is a county located in the U.S. state of Ohio. It is part of the Wheeling, West Virginia Wheeling metropolitan area. As of 2000, the population was 70,226....
, eastern Ohio where it was first put to use), which operated from 1967 to 1988, was of comparable size; it has since been dismantled.

Although these big machines are still called steam shovels, they are more correctly known as power shovels since they use electricity to wind their winches.

Power shovel/dragline manufacturers

  • Bucyrus International
    Bucyrus International

    Bucyrus International, Inc. is a manufacturer of heavy mining equipment. Founded in Bucyrus, Ohio in 1880, the headquarters were moved to its current location in South Milwaukee, Wisconsin in 1893....
  • Lima Locomotive Works
    Lima Locomotive Works

    Lima Locomotive Works was an American firm that manufactured railroad locomotives from the 1870s through the 1950s. The company took the most distinctive part of its name from its main shops location in Lima, Ohio....
  • Link Belt
  • Insley
  • Komatsu
  • Marion Power Shovel
    Marion Power Shovel

    Marion Power Shovel was a Marion, Ohio based manufacturer of earth moving shovels and draglines, mainly used in construction and resource extraction....
  • P&H
  • Priestman Bros (UK)
  • Ransomes & Rapier (UK)
  • Ruston Bucyrus (UK)


In Fiction


In the Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends
Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends

Thomas and Friends is a United Kingdom children's television series, first broadcast on Central Television in June 1984. Until Season 7, which premiered in 2003, it was named Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends....
 TV series, a steam shovel called Ned
Non-rail vehicles (Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends)

The television series Thomas and Friends and the original Railway Series books are well known for its anthropomorphism railway engines. This article lists the characters over the years who are not rail-based....
 appears as a minor character.

In the Australian children's TV series Mr. Squiggle
Mister Squiggle

Mr. Squiggle was Australia's longest-running children's series, and the name of the title character from that ABC TV show. Mr. Squiggle was a marionette string puppet with a pencil for a nose who visited his friends from his home on the moon , flying in his pet rocket ....
, Bill the Steam Shovel provides comic relief and produces steam from his "nose" when he laughs.

Steam shovels have also found literary fame with the children's classic 'Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel
Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel

Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel, 1939 is a classic children's book by Virginia Lee Burton, the author and illustrator of the Caldecott Medal-winning The Little House....
.

Miscellanea


  • During the Spanish flu
    Spanish flu

    The 1918 flu pandemic was an influenza pandemic that spread to nearly every part of the world. It was caused by an unusually severe and deadly Influenza A virus Strain of subtype H1N1....
     epidemic in 1918, so many people were dying that steam shovels were needed to dig the plague pits.


See also


  • Backhoe
    Backhoe

    A backhoe, also called a rear actor or back actor, is a piece of excavating equipment consisting of a digging bucket on the end of a two-part articulated arm....
  • Bucket-wheel excavator
    Bucket-wheel excavator

    Bucket-wheel excavators are heavy equipment used in surface mining and civil engineering. They are among the largest vehicles ever constructed, and the biggest bucket-wheel excavator ever built, the MAN Takraf RB293, is the largest terrestrial vehicle in human history....
  • Conveyor
  • Steam crane
    Steam crane

    A steam crane is a crane powered by a steam engine. It may be fixed or mobile and, if mobile, it may run on rail tracks, caterpillar tracks, or road wheels....
  • Crane (railroad)
    Crane (railroad)

    File:1917 Toronto TTC Queen and Bond.jpgA railroad crane, is a type of crane used on a rail transport for one of three primary uses: freight handling in goods yards, maintenance of way, and accident recovery work....
  • Dragline excavator
    Dragline excavator

    Dragline excavation systems are heavy equipment used in civil engineering and surface mining. In civil engineering the smaller types are used for road construction and port construction....
  • Dredge
    Dredge

    Dredging is an excavation activity or operation usually carried out at least partly underwater, in shallow seas or fresh water areas with the purpose of gathering up bottom sediments and disposing of them at a different location....
  • Power shovel
  • Excavator
    Excavator

    An excavator is an engineering vehicle consisting of an articulated arm , bucket and cab mounted on a pivot atop an undercarriage with Caterpillar track or wheels....
  • Loader (equipment)
    Loader (equipment)

    A loader is an engineering vehicle that is primarily used to "load" material into or onto another type of machinery ....
  • Bagger 288
    Bagger 288

    The Bagger 288 , built by the German company Krupp for the energy and mining firm Rheinbraun, is a bucket-wheel excavator.More specifically, it is a mobile strip mining machine....


External links

  • the story of a preserved Ruston-Bucyrus
    Ruston-Bucyrus

    Ruston-Bucyrus Ltd was an engineering company established in 1930 and jointly owned by Ruston and Hornsby based in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England and Bucyrus-Erie based in Bucyrus, Ohio, the latter of which had operational control and into which the excavator manufacturing operation of Ruston and Hornsby was transferred....
     steam shovel in Spain
  • , including many working shovels.