Apparently Lorain is now owned by Terex. You should make a reaction video of you at the local Terex dealership trying to order parts for this rig...
@MayaPosch2 жыл бұрын
Makes one wonder in how far people restoring these old machines going keeps up demand for spare parts. With old (vintage) cars there's a significant demand because it's a common hobby, but you don't see too many folk who are going on that Sunday cruise in their ol' steam shovel or such. I'm assuming it's mostly a matter of how 'obsolete' and collection-worthy. Still quite a few people who need parts for e.g. Cat D6 dozers, as those machines are still in regular use, LetsDig18 included :)
@Rorschach10242 жыл бұрын
Ha!
@Rorschach10242 жыл бұрын
getting parts for older vehicles is much much harder these days. with the exception of very popular collectable vehicles that have significant aftermarket support, parts for anything more than 10 years old are almost nonexistent.
@Rorschach10242 жыл бұрын
I own an 04 tundra. finding normal maintenance parts (brake pads, belts, hoses, etc.) for it is very hard. which kind of undermines the longevity of the brand.
@billtheunjust2 жыл бұрын
@@Rorschach1024 it's amazing the difference the model makes, I have a 95 ranger and so far haven't had problems finding parts.
@RRRIBEYE2 жыл бұрын
Years ago, when I was an apprentice operator for our local Operating Engineers, I was shown very briefly how to start an old "Cable-8" (D-8) dozer that had the pony motor setup. Once I showed I could get it running, I was let loose on clearing an old growth area on a river bottom that was to be a new soccer complex for kids. That was my 'break in' to operating heavy equipment! After the dozer, I was then put on a Cable-8 with a scraper and taught how to scrape and stock pile the black dirt and then how to follow grade for cuts and fills. It was the beginning of learning the basics before I was put with a company that had nothing but the newest, greatest CAT equipment with AC/heat cabs, tunes, etc. This was all before GPS and all that, but it was an incredible 13 years of my life! I enjoyed not only running all those big, yella toys, but especially NOT having to be the guy repairing them, lol! That said, I was a very good operator and I never thrashed the equipment - treated it as it were my own. The mechanics appreciated that, as there were other operators that (wonder why) their equipment was always breaking down. Love this video! Thanks for sharing. I can't imagine at 6'2" crawling in under there like you did!
@airplanemaniacgaming78772 жыл бұрын
That sounds like how I would run my rigs, is treating them like my own, as though they're my baby. Treat 'em right, and they won't fight. Then again, I'm the type of schmuck who'd have my own machine that only I do the fiddlin' around on, just so I know if I screw things up........
@davidsellars6462 жыл бұрын
The community college where I went for some classes in heavy equipment operation had a D8-2U cable Cat. I learned how to run it building a pond one summer. There was a Wooldridge can in the yard and I figured out how to run it behind the Cat. Later, we acquired a LeTourneau LS which was much better than the Wooldridge. A few years later, the old Cat was auctioned off. Yea, I'm still running it and a different LS, that I found, and a Cat #80 can. I love those old cans. I can load, haul, place, and compact all by myself. I do need a 21.24 20 ply tire for the Cat can. Anybody know of one?
@Hoaxer512 жыл бұрын
@@davidsellars646, Gotta love the old iron, I have 1967 Case backhoe that I’ve been nursing for years. Everybody kids me about how it looks, I just tell them it beats a pick and shovel! I still like working on that thing.
@beakittelscherz54192 жыл бұрын
Man I love those story's.. thx 4 sharing! Greetings from Germany 👍🇩🇪
@hazyincolour2 жыл бұрын
the mechanical engineering of all those clutch assemblys, cable windings and output shafts is an absolute thing of beauty. thanks for sharing!
@jeanewhiteside14902 жыл бұрын
I’m 81 and watch you often. It’s encouraging to see a young man with a work ethic and business sense. I’m looking for to watching you get your new shed up and especially your home in the woods.
@cydery2 жыл бұрын
Hi Mat, I grew up in a small country town and when I was a kid back in the early 1950's they put a new bypass road through the paddock between our place and the neighbours, and they used the block behind our house as their vehicle park. What I remember most about all this is, every morning all the pony motors starting just after dawn. It was winter and often got down bellow zero so these would run for quite a while, while everything warmed up, then one by one they stated their main engines and trundled off down their new road to work. All those little exhausts pipes blowing into the cold misty air. Magic🙂
@mikebaldwin42202 жыл бұрын
Memory of yours and my younger DAYS,THEY WERE THE BEST YEARS!!!!
@Gunny426HemiPlymouth2 жыл бұрын
No sleeping in, that's for G Damn sure. Was surprised just how quiet the main engine is. Heck it's quieter than a lot of old diesel John Deere tractors I've watched cold start....
@seeker10152 жыл бұрын
I remember well a D9 starting up numerous times on highway project I was working maintenance fitter on. The little 4 banger screaming it's poor head off through the straight out exhaust before engaging the dog clutch, CLUNK, and it just about died, chugga chugga as it slowed to a crawl before the big diesel picked up speed then fired. The driver did tell me what the 4 was, and scratching now, I think he said a Morris Mini motor. Straight out exhausts are common for such short use. That's why Lorraine's is so loud.
@musiquepourmoi112 жыл бұрын
Ó
@genebohannon88202 жыл бұрын
My grandfather ran the cable rigs, starting in the 20's as an oiler. Everyone started as an oiler!
@robertmihalko69492 жыл бұрын
Nostalgia brought to the forefront. I live in Lorain and my Grade School was directly across the street from Thew Lorain. In fact being an old you know what, I was 9 when this was built (1956?) and may have actually seen this unit being tested. At recess, we would often watch the workers run the machines through their paces prior to shipment. Very happy to see you get it going again. Thew was well known throughout the country and the Lorain badge was seen all over the world. Thanks for a great video.
@ronbishop22212 жыл бұрын
That was my dad, He was what they called a (Tester- fitter) He was the one that picked stuff up-down and Spun them around.
@lesterhutchins16212 жыл бұрын
I feel you friend
@bigone96782 жыл бұрын
That is awesome Robert. I worked at US Steel in Lorain. I loved the history just oozing from that dilapidated 100-yr old brick pipe mill. Back in 2011-ish they still had an overhead crane from the 1890's, and the cart-pulling donkey path through the building was still plainly evident. Wish we hadn't all lost our jobs....
@lisablack75482 жыл бұрын
thank you for sharing your memories with us... in my mind i pictured your little faces peering thru the fence ... : }
@يوسفنبيل-و6ج Жыл бұрын
😊
@scottlee9428 Жыл бұрын
I cannot TELL you how much I am enjoying your channel and the videos!! I am a professional archaeologist with a passion for earthmovers - especially the old, rusted iron - and your channel combines my love of both! I'm also an avid collector of antiques, many of which are old rusted earthmover toys (bulldozers, haul trucks, etc.). I've been completely hooked on your videos since discovering them a week ago, and I cannot thank you enough for your ongoing efforts to save these wonderful, old machines. For me, the best I can do is photograph them in my adventures to find them. But it does my heart good knowing that people like you are bringing them back to life, preserving and restoring such an important part of our history. From the bottom of my heart - THANK YOU!!
@reneebeesley9398 Жыл бұрын
Grew up in Lorain, Thew shovel made this . Lorain was a great industrial city, US steel, American shipbuilding , Ford assembly. Than came the rust belt .. Glad someone cares about the old stuff.
@ThePostApocalypticInventor2 жыл бұрын
Love it. I often stop and take a look when I drive by old steel cable shovels/excavators.
@trevornewton70722 жыл бұрын
My second favourite u tuber hope you’re well n safe hi from down under looking forward to your next video hope it’s a exploring one
@WH32R2 жыл бұрын
If you're ever in New York, look up the Marion Steam Shovel in Le Roy. It's a beast!
@aleksandersats95772 жыл бұрын
This is a surprise seeing you here
@73DiamondReo2 жыл бұрын
@@WH32R i was just working in LeRoy and would have loved to check it out when i was then. maybe next time i guess
@andljoy2 жыл бұрын
Did not expect to bump into you on this channel mate. You both rock!
@geraldschilli8870 Жыл бұрын
This is fantastic. It’s always good to revive an old piece of history. There’s nothing like an old piece of mechanical equipment with no electronics or computers. Keep up the good work.
@cliffordkinnear97052 жыл бұрын
All of these Antique Catipillars, Lorains, Shovels are immune to EMP blasts! Amazing that something that looks so ancient can be brought back to life!
@makingithappen51782 жыл бұрын
The old Caterpillars used here in northernmost Sweden had a rule. When you have run the pony engine with the diesel engine engaged for 25 minutes and it has not started, then it is too cold to work.
@OLDBEAR1234562 жыл бұрын
Good one.
@makingithappen51782 жыл бұрын
@@OLDBEAR123456 Jeupp.
@dk26142 жыл бұрын
My grandfather started as a machine operator on steam shovels working in a granite pit in VT. He passed away in 2010. Seeing these kinds of machines make me think he's likely used a machine like this sometime during his career. I got to see him cut in a road on a mountain side in 1996. He had that excavator rocking and rolling. It was pretty awesome to see even as an older man he still had what it took.
@denissharp247110 ай бұрын
There was a company , Ruston & Hornsby based in Lincoln, England, and they went into partnership with Bucyrus-Erie based in South Milwaukee, Wisconsin USA. The resultant product bearing the name 'Ruston Bucyrus' we kids used to call them Rusty Piecrusts 🤣 . I remember seeing their cable draglines and shovels working in the nearby quarry here in the UK, when I was a small kid back in the late 1950's, early 60's, great to watch your resurrection of this venerable old girl, another great easy to understand video Matt, well done.
@edwarddavis5072 жыл бұрын
Gives a whole new meaning to pre-inspection. Next time I am complaining about checking and greasing my machine I’m going to think twice about this Lorain. Matt, thank you so much for sharing this video with us. Knowing how near and dear this old machine is to you and seeing you guys working on it so diligently and carefully really made me feel like part of the family.
@chriscampbell23272 жыл бұрын
It amazes me how these were designed with only a pencil, paper and a slide ruler! Before the age computers and they performed the jobs required of them.
@paulrapp62 жыл бұрын
Excellent video Matt. Keeping old and older equipment running is about like opening a restaurant; 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year and you still need another 12 hours a day to catch up on all the things you didn’t get to because you were taking care of other things that also require your immediate attention 😱. Thank you for sharing your story with us. Keep the aspidistra flying!
@brianw89632 жыл бұрын
Glad I found Your channel,been a heavy equip. Operator going on 45 years, about 15 on draglines. I just love this old stuff and happy to see people like You saving history. That Lorain is a beauty!
@TuckerMinney Жыл бұрын
Mr.Matt I love watching your channel you have a lot of knowledge. I'm 13 years old and I love small engine repair. I like to watch your videos and get your knowledge. I have a 2003 Honda Rancher 350 with a warn 3000 pound winch an led light bar led headlights and itp midnight tires. I mow and weedeat to get money to work on it. I'm saving for an international cub to use for a roughcut mower.keep up the good work,and God bless you.
@CrimeVid2 жыл бұрын
Damn ! I remember starting the day filling oil cups and grease caps on a gravel pit shore plant, 52 years ago, how time flies ! Now I think about it, the very first thing was priming the priming pump, with a rope and bucket about 7’ above the water, you had to go fast, you got wet, lovely about 6.30 in he morning !
@SalvageWorkshop2 жыл бұрын
I love that old shovel! Great save! It's got the same motor as the one in "Old Red"! Great motors!
@TheChaztor2 жыл бұрын
When he said pony motor I thought of you. 🙂
@douglasrodrigues83612 жыл бұрын
It's not a shovel. It's a backhoe.
@Simon-dm8zv2 жыл бұрын
@@douglasrodrigues8361 Or excavator?
@SteveTheFordGuy9852 жыл бұрын
Matt you did a great job loading the shovel, even with no experience with the old girl, what a day you had. Job well done😊👍👍👍
@UncaDave2 жыл бұрын
As a boy I remember seeing these. I’m 75. In HS I worked in a shipyard in CT that had a similar one. An old mechanic kept it running. It was used to cable lift cabin cruisers on cradles. Loved watching it work. Great video. Go for it!
@tonyburdick22982 жыл бұрын
Years ago, I used a cable driven backhoe to dig in a water line at my FIL's salvage yard. It was truck mounted, with the truck having a frozen engine, so we pulled it around with a wrecker. It had a bit of a learning curve as you have figured out, but it was fun to operate. The issue was to coordinate the foot brakes' engagement with the cable drums' disengagement. Get it wrong and the boom will do a lot of slamming. Fortunately, I didn't break it while learning. It won't be nearly as convenient as a hydraulic backhoe, but it's a novel way to get the job done. Enjoy!
@douglasrodrigues83612 жыл бұрын
The old military Garwood cable backhoes were truck mounted.
@oscarprendergast7295 Жыл бұрын
Not as strong and efficient as a Modern hydraulic backhoe either tony
@whotknots2 жыл бұрын
My mother's dad used to be a 'steam engineer' who at one point in the early 20th century operated a steam shovel preparing earthworks for a new railway junction in a regional center.
@oacartg21832 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing my dad is a little younger he was in he worked for rocket time but I love these shovels they're more fun than a a shuttle
@richardgreenlaw14422 жыл бұрын
Love seeing the old school equipment that has sat for years run and operating again. Nice job guys. 👍👍
@mikeabbott23962 жыл бұрын
Considering how her diesel started and ran, and how she broke loose, I'd say Sweet Lorain is a good name for her.
@TheProudNorth2 жыл бұрын
Or loose lorain
@Hoaxer512 жыл бұрын
@@TheProudNorth, 😊
@notajp2 жыл бұрын
Takes me back to my teen years……only Uriah Heep spelled Lorain differently…..
@dannaumann97582 жыл бұрын
What a treat to see that old dog even close to functional! My dad had an old D4 with that pony motor, had a rope pull starter on it! Always a thrill to hear that Diesel engine take off!
@markdyer61662 жыл бұрын
My uncle has a D6 with a manual start pony, 1956 I think. One of my favorite memories with him is going out to run it and we couldn't find the hand crank. He told me to go get the 1/2" socket set behind the seat of the truck. He put a 12-pt socket on the stub to start the pony, turned it just so, and with 1 good yank the pony fired right off. There is something really neat about coming up to a dozer and being able to start it without a battery anywhere.
@Rorschach10242 жыл бұрын
Matt, be very careful and replace those cables before too long. if one of those cables breaks, it could quite literally rip you in two. there was a reason why they were replaced by hydraulics.
@juliesoane73992 жыл бұрын
I cannot be the only one of your subs to have let out a cheer when you finally got the Larain loaded! Just waiting to see more of the same entertainment Matt. Both yourself and @SalvageWorkshop have an amazing gift of restoring these great old machines. Keep it coming😊
@Ugnaught822 жыл бұрын
We want to see a full restoration on this one, like you did for Christine!
@avalon19952 жыл бұрын
I really appreciated your video for a number of reasons and chief among them is the fact I was born in Lorain, OH where this excavator was manufactured by the Thew Shovel Co. Although the company ceased operations many decades ago some of the equipment they built is still around as you've shown us. So whenever I see a "Lorain" it always holds a special place in my heart.
@homabizachi Жыл бұрын
You guys just Rock. Unbelievable, you managed to turn it on and make it work and role and so on. What a powerful knowledge you have got. Simply Bravo!
@pamike48732 жыл бұрын
Never had a doubt!! It's always a good day when you can save a piece of history. Now it's safe and reunited with its family at its forever home. Freaking fantastic! It's not every day you get to rescue something that helped build our country. Excellent job Matt.
@cyumadbrosummit35342 жыл бұрын
Be careful, Ive known two equipment operators in my lifetime who were killed by cable snap on similar machines. Operator safety and reliability were the main reasons everything switched to hydraulic.
@lolatmyage2 жыл бұрын
I wouldn't run this without a heavy expanded metal windshield and plenty of extra guards...
@lolatmyage2 жыл бұрын
@George Jones Don't confuse caution with fear. Being foolhardy and not comprehending the risks involved is a great way to get got by the machine
@ronicard2 жыл бұрын
Matt, it's a testament to the kind of person you are that you have friends like Mike, a guy who would come over to help a buddy multiple times. Great videos. Keep up the good work. It's a great thing you're doing as you're preserving all of this old steel.
@lutsifer5847 Жыл бұрын
33:41 The good old technique. That was still engine building art. The current engines work themselves no better when new than these old engines. However, they are much more sensitive.
@Fabulouxbazzwrld Жыл бұрын
⬆️📩
@bachtomin213 Жыл бұрын
Amazing job Matt and Mike!. Nice to see someone who can turn an actual wrench. Too many players on KZbin break everything down with a Milwaukee fuel impact, and don't show the ins and outs like getting a 6'2" person over the drag link clutches.
@roberthocking91382 жыл бұрын
When you crawled in the machine on top of those clutches, I got cramp in both my legs just watching 😂😂 great video, good to see another one saved
@stefanbuscaylet2 жыл бұрын
Lol glad its not just me then that had that thought.
@hydro2wheel2 жыл бұрын
Watching this brought back memories of my childhood when I volunteered at a railroad museum. I will never forget the day when they finally got the diesel locomotive to start. It used a pony motor as well.
@RobertFay2 жыл бұрын
*- Wonderful ! ! !* *- 3366 hours **8:51* *- Congratulations to you, Matt, and to Lorain for finding a happy home to live with ! ! !*
@kzbuster2 жыл бұрын
In 1974 I worked as a shovel oiler in an open pit iron mine in northern Minnesota. The operator taught me how to run them. We were stripping the Earth off of the iron ore with old electric Bucyrus-Erie and Marion shovels. You shovel video reminded me of those days when I was learning to operate them. Greatest worry was knotting or twisting the cables on the reels. Your shovel is difficult with all the levers, I just had two swing foot pedals, left and right and two levers, one for hoist and one for crowd, with buttons one them for horn and dump. Was fun.
@CS_Blitzen2 жыл бұрын
I am so glad that there are people out there that still care about these old machines like yourself Matt. You put blood sweat (maybe even a tear or two off camera) into every machine and video, it's clear as day that you're passionate about what you do and it makes it all the more enjoyable to watch along, Diesel Creek cap on my head. Keep it up man.
@PoteauCowboy2 жыл бұрын
Getting this machine moving and functioning is a huge accomplishment. I think this old girl needs to keep her battle scars, each one is a story. Fix her joints, tune the moving parts and mechanics as close to factory as possible. Use something to stop the rust. Then let those who enjoy heavy equipment appreciate her history and beauty. She had a life, keep it going. Imagine the operators in the seat. Imagine the job sites. Imagine the work she was built to do. True beauty is more than paint deep. Jon...
@marcomcdowell88612 жыл бұрын
Crazy. Thew-Lorain was a company that made these in my hometown of...Lorain, Ohio. Now the city is another casualty of the rust belt.
@airplanemaniacgaming78772 жыл бұрын
That always seems to be the case for some of the great hometowns of the 20th century that got North America up & at 'em for modernisation (for the time period). Just look at the old plants in good ol' Flint. Now people only know that place as "oh hey, that's the city with horrible crime stats and no clean city water!"
@opengchris182 жыл бұрын
know it well, they just tore down the old original works (most of pc campana factory) down on 28th over the last couple years
@Hoaxer512 жыл бұрын
All right, some fellow Buckeyes, O-H!
@ronbishop22212 жыл бұрын
Yep, and the Ford Co. is gone also
@ronbishop22212 жыл бұрын
@@opengchris18 Yep I saw the Pictures of them tearing down the Thew Shovel Plant
@maverick50062 жыл бұрын
When I was a boy, I remember watching these machines dig trenches for sewer lines. They are poetry in motion!! Watched them for hours.
@PoconoJoe132 жыл бұрын
My uncle was an oiler on drag lines and cables shovels. He was 64 and 265 lbs. he use to have hand crank pony motors. He taught me how to engage the clutch’s to start the main motor. That was in the mid 60’s. And some coal mines were still open then
@joser31842 жыл бұрын
From 1960 to 1978, I was raised across the street from the Thew Shovel factory, in Lorain Ohio. I watched them roll by as they were shipped out world wide. Thanks to 1980-82 and imports, that all came to an end. Nice to see some of them being given life again.
@arlodewald53782 жыл бұрын
Back in my day there was a lot of places that would cook the tops and bottoms off , run the core and tanks throw acid bath . Fix almost any radiator , unless a person ran the fan or meteor though it . Look amazingly like new . Painted and leak free , for less than a third of the cost of new one ! Oh the old days ! Looks like a very comfortable seat to spend eight to ten hour days in , plus air conditioning ! Machines that were way ahead of its time .
@airplanemaniacgaming78772 жыл бұрын
>or meteor through it That makes me think of the engine I want several of (in working condition, with as much prime power left as possible for the age they have): Rolls-Royce's "grounded" version of the Merlin after salvaging shot down the engines from aircraft like Supermarine Spitfires: The Rolls-Royce Meteor. The beauty that powered my favourite armoured vehicle of all time.........The venerable Centurion Main Battle Tank.
@greypoet22 жыл бұрын
I've been watching your, Mike's and Chris's videos on this and Christine's build up to the show. Fascinating! So much time, work and love(hate?) has gone into them. So happy to see them showing off. Well done.
@npsit12 жыл бұрын
57:08 I think one of the nicer features of this old machine, mostly for the sanity of the operator, is the lack of beeping...
@michamikekit2 жыл бұрын
I watched this episode 3 times. Love these old cable machine. I remember when I was a young kid seeing these machines in old cartoons.
@derekstocker66612 жыл бұрын
So very well done guys, keeping this elderly lady in good fettle and letting us see what went into the task of bringing her back to life. Thanks for this, look forward to more of same, hopefully a full restoration maybe.
@Randy4112 жыл бұрын
Brings back memories of sitting in my dads lap while he operated a machine like this. Thanks!
@robwilson28752 жыл бұрын
Make sure you turn the fuel off to the pony motor to kill it. Otherwise fuel will leak down and contaminate the oil.
@tmscheum2 жыл бұрын
If you know Squatch253 you are preaching to the choir!!!
@1977islander2 жыл бұрын
The coolest thing about this in my opinion is that you now own a piece of equipment with it's own engine room!
@tetreaulthank40682 жыл бұрын
Great Job guy’s ! Really enjoyed how you made this happen from the trade all the way to getting it to the show 👍👍. One thing that sets your channel up from many out their is just that, you make things happen with all of your many talented friends from start to finish in one show without dragging it out over 5 or more shows which is torture 🙄. Love that your saving these wonderful pieces of our America’s history. My grandfather was a diesel and heavy equipment mechanic and operator back in the 50’s -70’s. I remember when he was involved building the newest road from route 7 starting outside Troy NY over the mountains through Bennington VT into route 9 into Keene NH. I was in awe Of just what those men and equipment did blasting their way through those mountains with boulders Bigger than the cape cod I’d grow up in ! Those men were tough and knew how to rig equipment to the steep cliffs and repair machines. Our country was built from those mens abilities and that equipment you love so dearly. Thanks again to all of you who are out their saving those amazing machines from the scrappers, plus Why would you want the metal from those machines going to build cars not even made in the USA !!
@andrewschmitt5792 Жыл бұрын
It's amazing to see these still capable of running. Whenever I see worn out and forgotten equipment or cars I really think that they can be brought back only it depends on the perspective of their owners or someone from the outside that has passion to bring it back. Really is fascinating to see a cable driven machine, most people probably wouldn't ever consider using one
@themachinerydoctor91172 жыл бұрын
Sad to hear the Clark wheel loader is gone that was one of if not the first videos of yours that I watched. Glad you were able to save it though and now save this too. Keep up the good work 👍
@SammyFender2 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid, 10 or 12 years old, my step father had a cable shovel, an old cable crane, and a really old D9 with cable pulley for the blade and a crank started pony motor. He taught me how to operate all three, but I wasn’t allowed to run the dozer til I could start the pony Moyer by myself. I’d be honored to lend a hand!
@morgansword2 жыл бұрын
You notice the two levers in front of you are close together for a reason as we used one hand to alternate between those and the other on the swing. Whether loading dirt or converted to load logs, we ran them a good ten hour day average with summers allowing a the twelve to more hours a day. When I got on my first hydraulic machine, called a prentice or something close, it had tons more power than it needed, if you crowded a lever wrong, it blew the hose off of it pronto. It was standard oils buddy. I hated running it till after a year of it got on a brand new cat. It even had the high cab and so went from loading seven to ten loads a day of logs, off highway loads so they made three highway loads to doing from fifteen to a high of thirty five loads in a twelve hour day. I held that record for a few years then a young boy named Butch who his dad like myself a good friend came out and showed me up like a step child. It was just before I got drafted so you can do the math........ after that I figured to never see many cable machines but boy howdy was I ever wrong as alaska and the islands didn't get the message that there was a better machine till some were worn out and then shipped out for us to fix and use.
@anthonyhill503 Жыл бұрын
I learned to drive trucks on an old Autocar and a Brockway 16 ton tri axle.. i love this channel
@CliffManis10 ай бұрын
Hello 1,27,24, Matt and all. I am 84 years old and in 2 months will be 85, and I watch Diesel Creek everyday. new day 3.3 and 738k subs, it is really nice to see that MATT is doing so well. I do enjoy watching and see all he is showing. be well, be safe.
@scott-ww8mw2 жыл бұрын
I also like your ability see beyond the rust. The restoration of the Pony was really interesting!
@letsdig182 жыл бұрын
That sure was a exciting day! Glad it finally made it to the show I was getting worried for a minute haha
@DieselCreek2 жыл бұрын
I was worried for days 😳
@larrylenz77232 жыл бұрын
Chris you and Matt need to restore one as a team. Here lately I have been watching your channel's thinking that looks like fun except the cold!
@JS-wc4xs2 жыл бұрын
This piece of equipment reminds me of the book "Are you my Mother?" By P.D.. Eastman The steam shovel in the book looks kinda similar to this shovel.
@starrionx12 жыл бұрын
@@JS-wc4xs You just named it you realize. Matt: This one is called 'The Snort'.
@philhunt92972 жыл бұрын
Having watched your latest youtube release I'm guessing you'd be borrowing this Lorain just so you can get some normal work done 🤣🤣🤣🤣 Sorry Chris just having a dig......which is more than you can do right now 🤣🤣🤣🤣 Britney Spears - Oops! I did it again 😋
@alandeakin35332 жыл бұрын
Well, after watching for about 5 minutes or so I thought there must be enough video's sorting this out to keep me happy for years, but guess what after an hour she starts on the button lifts up stretches out , runs backwards and forwards, all that's left is a coat of paint and to watch you dig a few trenches. Well sorted as always love everything you do, i'm sure you'll find lots of interesting stuff to keep me and everyone else happy.
@luissantiago95642 жыл бұрын
It's so cool to see these old machines turn back on. It would be nice to clean it up real nice and re paint them.
@GeneMusall3 ай бұрын
I can’t get over the effort you and your buds go through for preserving the old equipment.
@bitsnpieces112 жыл бұрын
When they were building the Alaskan Highway a lot of the Dozers had Pony motors. If needed you could run the Pony motor and spin the diesel engine for an hour or more to get the oil and engine warmed up until it would start. I worked on an old flat head six cylinder gas engine once and the oil on the dipstick looked absolutely fresh from a can, had not been run for years. I was suspicious and checked the oil pan. Condensation on the inside of the engine had run down the inside and pulled all of the chunks, carbon, metal, etc out of the oil and to the bottom of the oil pan. If I had cranked it I would have pumped pure water plus chunks (no oil filter) plus gummed carbon and gum into the bearings. I drained ALL of the oil, with a lot of water, trash and dirt out and put in new oil. Since then I have always checked the bottom of any reservoir in something that has sat for more than about six months.
@airplanemaniacgaming78772 жыл бұрын
Well, at least you knew where all the gummin' gunk was hiding itself! Hope some of the oil was able to be salvaged, if it was in that good a condition.
@bitsnpieces112 жыл бұрын
@@airplanemaniacgaming7877 Well it was CLEAR and looked god but had no additives and had been sitting for 20 or so years. It would have been useful for lubing pins/cables etc. Point being don't trust the oil sitting on top for so many years.
@jasonkuehl6392 жыл бұрын
I love those old Cat diesels, hands down the best sounding engine around! The pony motors are a bit harsh on the eardrums, but I wouldn't mind having one to play with, might be fun to fit one in an old Cub Cadet garden tractor like the Original or 100 series.
@The.Bees.Knees.2 жыл бұрын
This reminds me of “Mike Mulligan and his steam shovel”. I loved that book.
@stevemcrae6882 жыл бұрын
That was my son's favorite book I must have read it to him over a thousand times and now he works for John Deere after being a machine operator for a few years
@Heretic_Dezign2 жыл бұрын
Matt, I have in recent times been in locations where its so cold that the pony motor has its own detachable pony motor which you keep inside to stop it from freezing and both the main and pony motor has built in heaters again to stop the oil in them from freezing solid
@Ian-yf7cj Жыл бұрын
You have yourself a museum folk would pay to come and see the old machines working both young and old to reminisce. Very good you certainly now your stuff
@scott-ww8mw2 жыл бұрын
Were there actually Steam Shovels at the show? A coat of Rust Oleum yellow implement paint would surely both protect and beautify this fine piece of equipment until you restore it. You are a great showman presenting your stuff and getting the old iron running again! Thanks Matt!
@MadonnaJune2 жыл бұрын
Matt, I agree the Autocar should come first. 🙂 But just to throw in my two cents about restoring this ol’ shovel - I think mechanically do a full restoration. But the patina suits her, and a shiny new paint job would look odd.
@Bugdriver492 жыл бұрын
What happened to that old drag line you bought, Matt?? Thought this vid was about that old drag line at first.......I'm not mad, love seeing old hunks of iron come back to life....your happiness is infectious and spills over to us, your fans. Same effect Muste1has, hearing his cackle of mirth driving around an ATV, golf cart, moped, go cart, or boat he just resurrected from a "free" junk pile. I've never worked on a diesel engine, but after hours watching vids from you and others that also rescue abandoned iron...like Marty T, down in NZ or Northwest Pacific Hillbilly, who is restoring an old CAT D-4...from a manual. Reminds me of me.....if I don't know how to do something...I read how, and I do.......Mostly because I'm poor and can't afford to pay someone...but more like I'd just rather do it myself. I'm encouraged to go out , find some old broken down hunk of junk and breathe life back into it..................................................................HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH, RIGHT, IM 72 AND POOR AS A CHURCH MOUSE...Thanks , Matt for allowing all of us to vicariously live your life. (Couldn't do it without you...lol)
@terrymiler216411 ай бұрын
Chris,and Mike two of the best when it comes to moving dirt.
@grantgoodson8002 жыл бұрын
Tuning up old engines and giving them the care they deserve is my happy place! Seeing yall rebuild the carb right off the bat was so satisfying
@iwouldrathernot42742 жыл бұрын
Theres an old cable shovel like this waaaay out on a trail near a local Ochre mining company. Its definitely much older though, I would guess 40's. Still perched up on top of the dirt on the side of the trail that it was digging in when it was left to sleep. It'd be cool to see that one come back to life but it's just as cool to see where it lay. Youre still absolutely right though, these drag cranes and cable shovels are what built this country. We have amenities now and hydraulics can do so much more than the cables, but this country was built with twisted steel and black smoke.
@matterantimatter12 жыл бұрын
wow there's a lot of sentimental value in this episode, a lot of first time getting to know this thing ,its a job for the ages, great job matt !
@dorightal49652 жыл бұрын
When I was a child, I wanted a toy version of a "Steam Shovel"!! That would take you back to a different age of power, but still in the cable control and power transmission. Are there any steam powered equipment units still running, besides the tractors and stationary engines? Steam Rollers would be neat to see as well! It amazes me how much utility still lives in these abandoned tools!
@robertlang77172 жыл бұрын
The Panama Canal still has a few, super lifting "steam driven" monsters, but they have shut down the boilers and use diesel driven compressed air, for safety. Old boilers are time bombs.
@alexanderw63092 жыл бұрын
I can remember them using steam powered rollers in India when I was growing up. Since they never throw things away there I suspect there are still some there that run.
@rayscrafield2106 Жыл бұрын
Outstanding video. Very interesting for this old 80 year old. I've never been exposed to heavy equipment in my lifetime. Especially these old gals. Thanks for the ride. I'd love to see some footage of the show.
@billding32052 жыл бұрын
After spending warm Saturdays for a couple years working with my dad in high school to restore a Bucyrus Erie 10B with crowd shovel front, this brought back a lot of memories. Very similar sounds when the tracks are turning. It's cool to see these things being saved.
@v6turbo2312 жыл бұрын
This and the autocar restored together going to the steam show together. Good luck and love your content, Matt
@essexfarmer96102 жыл бұрын
In the UK, we call the small starter engine a "donkey engine" where you in the States call in a "pony engine". We could only afford a donkey to your classy pony! I always like noticing the small local differences in technical names. Nice job in saving the old girl there Matt. A very worthwhile thing. In many years to come, people will loook back at this video to appreciate that it would likely have been lost forever if you had not taken her into the Diesel Creek stable. As you say, she helped build the world.
@karguy17202 жыл бұрын
In US usage a donkey engine is the name for a steam-powered winch which was used for logging, mining and other industrial applications.
@colddiesel2 жыл бұрын
I think that originally a Donkey engine had a marine application because it was used as "muscle" to move heavy cargo, so in that sense the meaning is very similar to American usage.
@geoffmesser50912 жыл бұрын
It was called a donkey engine in Australia too.
@essexfarmer96102 жыл бұрын
@@geoffmesser5091 I guess that might be due to a lot of equipment coming from the UK back in the day? Maybe the terminology came with it?
@HANKTHEDANKEST2 жыл бұрын
@@karguy1720 Canada, too--always knew it as a steam donkey. Lots of them still in bits, out in the woods near the town I grew up in. Once in a while, you find a big pulley or bits of boiler lurking in the weeds. Other times, you just find devil's club and get bitten by a million mosquitoes. Ah, the woods!
@kenball85262 жыл бұрын
Love to see you make this historical unit operable.
@darronshirley78862 жыл бұрын
I'm with you this is totally cool things like this is what built our country
@owenness6146 Жыл бұрын
Listening to you talk plus the grass, trees, and the dampness of everything I could sense another Pennsylvanian. Take care, and be well
@jaysanders74722 жыл бұрын
You need to get you a cord 9N muffler and weld on to the stack for that pony motor
@stevehork91932 жыл бұрын
Never a dull moment 😆 looking forward to seeing the interaction with you guys at the exhibition
@GARDENER422 жыл бұрын
Good to see the back story to Chris & Mike's videos of this machine. The exhaust on that pony motor will destroy your hearing in not time at all.
@briantilton40252 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for all the work you do putting this content together for us to sit in air conditioned/heated rooms and enjoy. I for one am very grateful. Again, thank you!
@willb30182 жыл бұрын
That old shovel is a treasure. And so are guys like Matt and his buddy who save these old machines. 👍
@norwegiangadgetman2 жыл бұрын
Sweet looking machine, and you can see the beginnings of todays modern hydraulic diggers. I just love the look of those little spring-loaded oil cups so when I came across some on a Chinese site, while ordering some stuff(I always check what else a reseller has, that I can add to pad an order out with) I just had to order a few.
@Bread9962 жыл бұрын
They’re still made by Gits Manufacturing in the US.
@tellyfaulkner34662 жыл бұрын
@@Bread996 Now you tell him lol
@drunkdunc87382 жыл бұрын
I’d be fabricating a simple , removable tight mesh cage for behind the seat of death there , awesome addition to the collection, cheers Matt 👍🍻
@pfistor2 жыл бұрын
I was thinking clear acrylic, but had the same basic idea. It's crazy to think there's all those wheels and clutches spinning right behind you just waiting to grab hold of anything hanging off the driver.
@danmackintosh63252 жыл бұрын
it's not a seat, you operate the machine standing & that contraption is where the operator rests their huge nuts...
@tracywraley68922 жыл бұрын
Very cool old shovel only suggestion I have is turn the fuel off on the starting engine and allow it to run out of fuel old cat pony engines can flood and wash the cylinders
@jjock3239 Жыл бұрын
Great save. I'm happy to know that it won't be scrapped. Those were the machines I watched for hours as a kid. Yeah, I'm 80, and there is no going back.
@FabFunty2 жыл бұрын
It's ALIVE ! Awesome video, impressive how good this engine runs. I love seeing such old stuff renovated .