The Museum website www.ellenroad.org.uk/index.htm Membership phil@ellenroad.org.uk Enquiries enquiries@ellenroad.org.uk to contact Jake jake.addelman02@gmail.com
@hond654Ай бұрын
I would send coal, but probably a bank account number would be easier if they would like to have donation. @MarinZero, can you please change the @ to _at_ so spambots would not flood them...
@dinnerdude50Ай бұрын
Hi Martin. Do you know who was the woman with the white hair who was in the video quite a bit.?
@AEKarnesАй бұрын
Thank you very much for interviewing my friend Jake, this is exactly what he needed. He's an unbelievably qualified and self taught steam engineer, anyone who employs him for that is lucky
@garethparr9482Ай бұрын
@@AEKarnes seems like a really good bloke and proper loves it and knows his stuff. Dying breed unfortunately now 👍
@Johnketes54Ай бұрын
Coal 34p a pound £750 divided by 2240 pounds
@AEKarnesАй бұрын
@@garethparr9482 Never a dying breed. We are everywhere, we are just crushed down by the world.
@ascasc9957Ай бұрын
@@Johnketes54 we also have to pay for insurance
@alfwedarf7764Ай бұрын
Well said
@causewaykayakАй бұрын
What a great bunch of volunteers. All the best to them and their trust. Great video you three!!
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Yep, totally agree
@bobduncalf6468Ай бұрын
Still got my grandad's shovel he used to fire a Lancashire boiler in Failsworth. I had the pleasure of seeing the Dee mill engine running a couple of times, another beautiful machine.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thats brilliant, keep that shovel 😄👍🏻
@richardswinson4381Ай бұрын
Absolutely phenomenal engineering. Dibnah will be so pleased to know that the Mill is being looked after.
@sadie77711Ай бұрын
Fred Dibnah. He sure made excellent videos. Surely missed.
@johnhankinson1929Ай бұрын
That massive machine so gentle it never moved those old coins , great stuff again lads
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Yeah, very impressive
@paulswift700Ай бұрын
Real engineer. No CAD just pencil paper and a straight ruler. Fantastic stuff. Thanks for sharing with us. Paul Thailand.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Cheers Paul
@julianmetcalfe1070Ай бұрын
So great to see them keeping history alive, fantastic machines they are
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Yeah, really good job the volunteers do 👍🏻
@julianmetcalfe1070Ай бұрын
@@MartinZero they really do very impressive
@ray-wm7ydАй бұрын
I saw this mill running in early 1975 as part of a fire brigade course on cotton mill constuction and fire risks. There were 8 boilers all fired up then to make enough steam to run the spinning machines. The rope race was an amazing and scary sight.
@wacholder5690Ай бұрын
Hats off for the volunteers ! Good to know that industrial heritage is still preserved even by comparatively young people & Thanks for sharing !
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Yeah, they do a great job
@martin4787Ай бұрын
That was fantastic to see. Thank you Martin, James, Roy and to all the volunteers who make it all possible.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Cheers Martin, great place
@martin4787Ай бұрын
@@MartinZero It certainly looks it Martin🙂
@rideswiftАй бұрын
I work on, and operate, process steam boilers for a living, and although they are gas fired and PLC controlled these days, there is still something very visceral about them. I truly love my job
@alsonbergАй бұрын
Fair play to the guys running the engine house, keeping our heritage alive. I wish them every success for the future. Thanks for posting Martin. Great video.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thank you
@briwire138Ай бұрын
That's a place I'll be going next year. In the 70s, I worked a night shift in the boiler house that provided the heating for Burtonwood airbase. The old boilerman took me round, showed me the coal hoppers and above the boilers, explained all about forced draught flues, calorifiers, boiler tubes etc with great passion.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
That sounds brilliant 👍🏻
@highpath4776Ай бұрын
@@MartinZero for fluing and the re-start of this engine see the story written by stanley challenger graham on oneguyfrom barlick website - also covers a lot of of other mill engines (inc the Whiteless rebuild at the site) and the ltp (lancashire textile project of transcripted audio reminiscences).
@robertdodd2087Ай бұрын
Yes, worked on those, very different to Lancashire boilers, can’t remember the name of them, but they were huge in comparison , all automatic. They did replace one of them with a more modern, but still coal fired boiler, around 1980.
@briwire138Ай бұрын
@@robertdodd2087 All gone apart from those in museums. As an Electrician, I kept fairly clean, but I remember seeing welders replacing leaking tubes, welding each end onto the faceplates. The one who got the short straw had to squeeze through a small hatch and came out of the boiler looking like a Panda.
@jetsons101Ай бұрын
Nothing Like Vintage Steam...... Martin, this was such a great watch --- and as a licensed mechanic I fully approve of this video. Thanks to Martin and team "and" all the volunteers at the Steam Museum.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thanks very much. We loved it there
@jetsons101Ай бұрын
@@MartinZero I could be a docent there and enjoy every day I was there. Hmmm That would be kinda of funny a docent in the UK with an American "Californian" accent.... LOL
@davidberlanny3308Ай бұрын
Hi Martin and team. What a great visit this was, really enjoyed it. Next to no vibrations that's amazing, that 2p was going nowhere. No better place for a bacon butty too!! Great to see and hear the enthusiasm of Jake and the rest of the team. Toreador from Bizet's Carmen worked really well👌👌 Cracking outro!! All the best!!
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thanks very much David
@ashleystyles6888Ай бұрын
You certainly did the museum justice. Great video and thank you for making my visit to Lancashire such a joy. You never mentioned about Avro at Chadderton. My father worked on the Avro Lincoln in Singapore during his national service and I have worked for BAE Systems on a few occasions as a contractor both here and abroad. Thank you very much Martin. This was a unique experience everyone should visit.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thanks Ashley
@ImranKhan-dk8boАй бұрын
Another great video Martin , showed my 9 year old son what it used to be like , highly amazed, thanks Martin
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
@@ImranKhan-dk8bo Cheers Imran 👍
@0richbikeАй бұрын
"run of the mill" ...nicely done!
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Cheers
@philippabaker1078Ай бұрын
What a fabulous place to visit. Jake is a nice chap and dedicated to the museum too. I loved the metalworking toolshop. Great video!
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
One for your bucket list Philippa
@elainemclellandАй бұрын
Doesn't the fact someone actually dreamed up the idea, designed the equipment and got it working blow your mind? If I'm not mistaken I think one of the boilers on Titanic was a Lancashire Boiler The big fly wheel looks like a massive liquorice wheel you used to get as a kid, with a horse-cake in the middle!!. Well done all the volunteers who keep this bit of history alive. 👏
@effinogАй бұрын
'Doesn't the fact someone actually dreamed up the idea, designed the equipment and got it working blow your mind?' Exactly what I was thinking. The scale of it all is almost beyond comprehension.
@Richard-o6hАй бұрын
Ho Martin in the 60,s I worked for a firm that used to put new boilers in and take the Lanky boilers outer said we could move anything into anywhere without using a crane. I used to go to Glasgow. John Thomson made the new boilers and it was brought back by low,- loaders,to take the boiler out the Lanky the lagging had been taken off so we could cut it out with gas axes they had plenty of heavy boiler plate and we would load up the trucks and take it to the Smelters there was one in Leeds I always was sorry when we got a job just cutting the Lankies out and no boiler put back that meant the end of the mill ,you do a good job Martin and Team
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
That sounds fascinating Richard
@robertdodd2087Ай бұрын
My Dad used to work for John Thompson, commissioning them once in place, his name was Norman Dodd, he loved his job.
@MartinBrennerАй бұрын
Very cool! It is very rare to see any of these old steam engines being operated with real steam. We have quite a few formerly operating for coal mines here in the Ruhr area but the museums operate them with compressed air. So my first thought seeing that big drum was drive a cable to hoist a cage up and down a mine shaft. What an amazing machine and museum staff!
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Yes , so much better with steam
@markavis7232Ай бұрын
hi there - not so far from the engine in this video we have the Astley Green colliery engine. The drum looks a bit like this rope drum, but it took the cable for the cage as you describe. On this one, the drum spirals down to small radius at both ends so it gives the engine a hand (change in ratio) to get the cage moving, and then slows it down towards the end of the run. Clever stuff! That one runs on compressed air - and a few big tanks full at 100 psi or more only gives it a minute or so running - it is huge.
@MartinBrennerАй бұрын
@@markavis7232 Non native English speaker, colliery was the word I was looking for. Heard it many times on this channel and finally looked up the exact definition. Definitely have to look for this detail when I visit one in the area here next time.
@williamparry9314Ай бұрын
Thank you, love the old stuff.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Me to thank you
@norfolknchance.500Ай бұрын
@@williamparry9314 I like James as well as Martin and Roy though! Haha!
@cecilwilson5442Ай бұрын
That's a national treasure right there absolutely fantastic 🤩,, when I was 16 and started serving my time,, I was on a factory job with steam blow heaters and the steam trap /condensation sets up ,,steam boiler still used in big Hospitals and large factory's oil fired,, great place to visit ☘️☘️☘️☘️☘️☘️ from northern Ireland
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thanks very much Cecil 👍🏻👍🏻
@robertdodd2087Ай бұрын
Excellent film. I worked on these beasts at Sutton Manor colliery, we had five of them. The air compressors were like the mill engine and worked at a steady speed. But for drama, watching a winding engine go from zero to full speed, back to zero, reverse and do it again, and again and again. The power, the speed, the steam escaping, the smell of hot oil, the air moving, the building shaking. Will never be seen again.
@carlbentley80Ай бұрын
What a fantastic place, on the bucket list. Jake and those volunteers are great, keeping the past alive.
@malcolmrichardson3881Ай бұрын
Great video of an astonishing piece of engineering. They've done a magnificent job of restoration and preservation. Thank you.
@barbaraprest783Ай бұрын
Steam engines are just wonderful - the noise, the smell 🎉🎉🎉
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
They are, the smells in there are amazing
@shekwh99Ай бұрын
Bf loved the steam, oil..coal fire smell
@AlbertBenajam-ww1db19 күн бұрын
Note the scene where coins are balanced on edge on a machine in operation at full speed. Steam power involved EXPANSION of steam, in cylinder rather then the EXPLOSION that happens in internal combustion motors. Steam power is as it were SMOOTH.
@TheNapalmFTWАй бұрын
This is bittersweet. I used to be a member of the Ellenroad Engine House radio club. We met in the generator room upstairs. We had keys to the place and would go exploring the whole place. Seen the bottom of the flywheel and been all over the boilers. Great place. One of the things I miss from the UK.
@douglasskaalrud6865Ай бұрын
Convert to natural gas?
@bottommanАй бұрын
That must be the best video I've seen, great enthusiasm, the best of British
@ScaleSoarer13 күн бұрын
When I was a young teenager, I used to go into the steam engine house where my parents worked in the Mill. The smell of the hot steam I remember to this day and I was allowed to stoke the boiler. Hard work!! Later, the flywheel broke free and went straight through the wall of the building
@officialbritishtaxpayer5609Ай бұрын
Can I say that as a steam enthusiast in his sixties, how pleased and encouraged I am to see such enthusiasm from a bunch of people who are younger than me! Great video - please make more!
@KevinRudd-w8sАй бұрын
Great video lads. The first place I ever worked had a blacksmiths shop like that, except the steam engine had been taken out and replaced with an electric motor. That was fifty three years ago, it's long since gone. Good to see those volunteers have managed to save that engine house and restore it to working condition.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thanks Kevin 👍🏻
@robertlee48092 күн бұрын
Absolute genius, this video was! Jake himself, is a national treasure! Thoroughly enjoyed the video, gentlemen. Thank you!
@rogerbarton1790Ай бұрын
Reminds me of when I was a nipper in 1950s. I used to "help" the stoker in Accrington laundry, they had a small boiler fed by a hopper like the ones shown in this video.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Great stuff !!!
@mikerushford6365Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thank you very much Mike. I will donate it to the Museum
@doodlesbugАй бұрын
I watched this over an hour ago and ended up down an historic rabbit hole I had no idea existed - The Lancashire Cotton Famine. My lungs are grateful for the Clean Air Act, but I'd love to time travel back for just a day to see and hear what it must have been like with the mills at full strength with the air filled with smoke and steam with the bustle of people on cobbled streets beneath. Like a Lowry come to life I guess. Thank you :-)
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Yep, all fascinating stuff
@AndyFletcherX31Ай бұрын
I've just read the Wikipedia page on "The Lancashire Cotton Famine". I never realised how interconnected the American civil war and other international politics were with it. Fascinating read.
@davidaspinall496Ай бұрын
Lowry captured what it was really like very well. Just look at his pictures ...
@jetsons101Ай бұрын
Is that Fred Dibnah at 8:09 Still watching vid..... Great so far.....
@robertschemonia5617Ай бұрын
What a LEGEND he is/was! I would have loved to have spent an afternoon talking steam with him!
@jetsons101Ай бұрын
@@robertschemonia5617 I wasn't sure if it was Fred as I'm 5000 miles away in CA..... LOL
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
His Photo was on that wall. i think he visited at some point
@robertschemonia5617Ай бұрын
@@MartinZero I believe there was a documentary series made that he hosted that an episode was filmed possibly there.
@robertschemonia5617Ай бұрын
@jetsons101 hell, I'm in Southern Illinois. So, only a few miles closer than you! Lol
@hughmnyks25 күн бұрын
Absolutely brilliant piece of film. Lovely people, superb machinery. It warmed the cockles of my heart. A man with a passion and a calling is what keeps the good things turning!
@andyjoyce878Ай бұрын
Hi Martin , thank you so much for putting this video together. We’ve just been to visit today,1st dec , brilliant day out ⚒️
@mrbillmacneillАй бұрын
Martin , i used to work in a sawmill on the fraser river. It still had steam driven equipment. Some of the saws were originally belt drive driven by individual steam engines but had been converted to electric motors. Log handling was all by steam even in my time as was the #2 head saw log carriage . These old steam pots and lines were an excellent way of drying out your gloves in the winter. Excellent video! Full steam ahead!
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Hi Bill, cant beat a steam engine and its multiple uses 😄
@codyunderwood95674 күн бұрын
Thank you for your content Martin. I have watched you for years. Greeting from Kansas
@kevinthegerbil2708Ай бұрын
Credit to all, and top marks for the volunteers. Great job lads. From down here in London. Bless you all in keeping the country's heritage.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thanks Kevin
@duron700rАй бұрын
You guys know how to preserve your engines! Here in the states, we get close (privileged to run a 350 horse engine), but you guys take the win on preservation. Thank you!
@andyshacks7812Ай бұрын
What a beautiful machine ! I remember Queen Street Mill in Burnley as a working mill and used to talk nicely to the engine man who’d let me in to see the engine during school holidays. My gran was also a weaver there when she was young. I’m definitely having a day out at Ellen Road soon !
@highpath4776Ай бұрын
did he live opp Queen Street -
@andyshacks7812Ай бұрын
@ Not sure tbh
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Worth it Andy 👍🏻
@mkendallpk4321Ай бұрын
Fantastic video and I love how the old time steam engines look. All that wonderful brass and paint. They really knew how to make beautiful equipment back in the day.
@willhansen532117 күн бұрын
Thank you, gentleman. Great video!
@JamesWheeler-c3o17 күн бұрын
Such a beautiful piece of industrial engineering I would actually call it a work of art so powerful and inspiring
@davidjames9775Ай бұрын
Amazing video. Just top class. Jake and the volunteers total respect for what you do..
@grahamridley103Ай бұрын
A great video Martin. Your enthusiasm and that of Jake is infectious! If you want another dose of steam and oil get yerself over to Bancroft Mill Engine Museum in Barnoldswick on Sunday 24th. It's their final steaming for this year until March next year. They might even let you start the engine!
@RailsandRadios-nr2kdАй бұрын
Excellent program! Thank you for doing this.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thank you
@johnt478916 күн бұрын
Thanks 4 sharing, and saving a little of History. I am amazed the environmentalist nut would let you fire it up!
@toucan221Ай бұрын
Great to see these wonderful old steam engine houses keep on going, its all of our heritage, thanks you all
@NarnianRailwayАй бұрын
Amazing to see some of the preserved industrial history and architectural craftsmanship of the past. British do a wonderful job of preserving bits of history. Thanks from Across the Pond for all the history tour videos you share.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thanks very much, glad you enjoyed
@keith800Ай бұрын
That is fantastic Martin , 9000 views and I hope your video boosts their visitors and donations , we are just so blessed this engine house has been saved for posterity .
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Lets hope so Keith
@MrTylerStrickerАй бұрын
Just incredible that the steam plant literally provided EVERYTHING for the mill... electricicity, heat, motive power...we could relearn a lot from beautiful examples like this. Would love to visit one day.
@ralphwest8156Ай бұрын
Amazing video Martin, great bunch of people care taking this wonderful heritage '
@frankwilson2607Ай бұрын
Splendid explanation and production Martin and lads! Well worth support. Cheers to all the drivers and other volunteers. Right - no, on me bike!
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thanks very much Frank
@bakertamАй бұрын
Incredible machines. They are so smooth and quiet, considering their size and weight. There's a much smaller almost identical version used in Balloch on loch lomond. They used it to pull the paddle steamers out of the water and up the slipway for maintenance. It's kept in pristine condition, and they fire it up once a month so everyone can watch it's truly a magnificent experience
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
That be worth seeing 👍👍
@trevorhardy651Ай бұрын
that's just because it is only ticking over. in the early 70's i visited a working mill still powered by steam , you could feel the power . all the moving parts were just a blur.
@paulmerrymanАй бұрын
Lovely to see Martin, thanks for showing it to us.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thanks very much Paul
@julielowe746227 күн бұрын
What a Marvellous place to visit, so nice to see a young man so interested and knowledgeable on this technology, we must visit, one of my favourite subjects industrial archeology and I Love Steam 😊Julie
@paulfidler3710Ай бұрын
I come from Milnrow, and the various mills of Rochdale are very much a part of my childhood. There’s still some of them left, Moss Mill Kingsway, for example, but it’s a shame that they are falling into ruin. Thank you for highlighting the obviously brilliant work that the volunteers do in keeping this heritage alive.
@Sprintcup1Ай бұрын
Another great video Martin and the Lads, great to see the enthusiastic team working on this. The Mather & Platt water pump was great to see, as my dad served his time there in the foundry casting those . I'm working in Liverpo at the moment on Mersey Tunnels elevators, it would be great if they would let you into the Woodside Ventilation building, they have 6 x 100 tonne fans over 3 floors 60 meters high driven by the original David Brown gearboxes think DBS ? Again great video, will have to visit this , good to see Fred Dibnah had been there. Regards Russ...🙏
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
That would be good to see. We did the Mersey Tunnel tour earlier in the year
@Sprintcup1Ай бұрын
Yes we work in the George's Dock building as well, and the Ferry terminal, I can email a couple of photos to you of Woodside if you have email, I don't use Facebook or Twittr etc.
@Wulfbear99Ай бұрын
Great look around the working mill engine, I worked in engineering from the 70s till 5yrs ago and recognise the machinery in the boilersmiths workshop as similar to what we learned on.🙂
@ShawnD1027Ай бұрын
What a wonderful thing to have preserved! Many thanks have to go to everyone who works hard to keep it preserved and operating! As an engineer, I am always intrigued at the multiple ingenious ways old machinery like this was oiled. I've noticed at least two new methods that I'd never seen before!
@SillyPutty3700Ай бұрын
A piece of antique/vintage machinery that you missed was that Rigid 300 threader at 14:00. That threader is likely between 30 & 50 years old. All the parts are still available for it from the original manufacturer (Ridge Tool Company) in Elyria, Ohio-USA. Ridgid threaders are the unsung workhorses of the electrical, plumbing and steam fitter industries. When I first got into the electrical apprenticeship working for Holloway corp at Kennedy Space Center in 1985 a Rigid Threader is one of the 1st pieces of equipment I was taught how to use. I now own a 535 threader for my shop that is likely older than I am (58) and is still used regularly to thread conduit.
@danq.5140Ай бұрын
Thanks for the great video Martin. I'd be in there all day being very annoying since I'm a boilerman myself.
@lindamccaughey6669Ай бұрын
That was absolutely fantastic. It seems to run so smooth, totally fascinating. I would visit if I was over there, I love it. Thanks for taking me along. Please take care
@stuartpittard3153Ай бұрын
In the mid sixties I was an apprentice electrician, the electrician I was working with had worked in the mills, I was taken to see a working mill steam engine in Morley Leeds. The ropes going to the upper floors was quite scary, there was no safety guarding. The video took me right back, even to the 6 gang light switch. Great video Martin.
@uwattieАй бұрын
Absolutely fan****tastic, I do enjoy your videos and this is as so many are, truly amazing. I was born just 2 miles from the mill and fully intend to visit when I'm back home again. Keep up the brilliant content Martin and team.
@kevinoakes1171Ай бұрын
Fantastic to see this kind of heritage being preserved. Great video, Martin and co., never knew this existed, hope to get to see it one day.
@zipperx1865Ай бұрын
Excellent video Martin, Roy & James. I'll definitely be paying the mill a visit next year. Cheers lads!
@malcolmherbert5127Ай бұрын
Seeing how impressed you were with that engine, you really must take a trip to see Bolton Steam Museum. It’s easy to get to, there’s plenty of free parking (it’s next to a Morrisons supermarket) and there are many different types of steam engines demonstrating the evolution from the beginnings of steam power right up to the last types built in the early 20th century. The drive ropes turned what was known as line shafting and each spinning frame had its own drive belt taken from the overhead line shaft. This was turning constantly, so if it was needed to stop the frame for any reason the operator worked a lever which moved the drive belt off the driving pulley onto one which was loose on the shaft. The drive pulley was fast on the shaft, hence the saying “playing fast and loose”.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Ive actually been, but it was just a visit. Great place
@johngell4842Ай бұрын
Local Steeplejacks Peter Tatham and Tom philips rebuilt the drum top on this chimney in the late 80s One guy from Barnoldswick Stanley Graham played a huge part in the saving of this engine house and he had a huge collection of photographs showing the mill demolition and restoration of the engine house The web site one guy in Barnoldswick/steeplejacks corner used to have a lot of these photographs and are well worth seeing Another cracking video lads well done 👏
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
I'd love to see those pics
@highpath4776Ай бұрын
Is Tom steeplejerk on the webforum ?
@johngell4842Ай бұрын
@@highpath4776 yes that Tom who worked with Peter Tatham back in the day regular on steeplejack corner And he's also on the steeplejack fb pages top lad
@ianlambert36939 күн бұрын
@@highpath4776 Tom and Peter used to post in Steeplejacks corner.
@ianlambert36939 күн бұрын
@@MartinZero The Onguyfrombarlick forum also hosts The Lancashire Textile Project 2013. This is an updated version of the original LTP which now has over 650 images embedded within the texts. The LTP was an initiative to record the passing of an industry before it was lost. Stanley Graham was the engine tenter at Bancroft Mill and he interviewed and taped all the operatives of the mill from management to weavers. All these interviews were then transcribed to create the record the LTP. He took on the refurbishment of the Ellenroad engine and that is also fully recorded on the website.
@turboslagАй бұрын
Glorious!!! I can also highly recommend Crossness pumping station in London, magnificent beam engines galore!!!
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
That sounds good 👍🏻
@Munguy-i8jАй бұрын
Thank you Martin and team. That engine could push a very large ship.
@bramcoteelectrical1088Ай бұрын
Lovely to see the volunteers and there pure enthusiasm its fabulous 👌 👏. Great to have these fab machines 😀 preserved Great work and thanks for video
@jeffjones6107Ай бұрын
It's great to see old heritage kept alive thanks to the volunteers. That was a really great video. Thanks, Martin and the crew. 👍
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thank you Jeff
@nigelscott19225 күн бұрын
Fabulous. Every schoolboy should be taken to see these marvels of engineering.
@metrotechguru5863Ай бұрын
What a brilliant adventure. Great machine. Great people. An important piece of history preserved for all to see. Thanks, Martin.
@caminojohn3240Ай бұрын
Great job Martin! 85 tons on the fly wheel gives plenty of momentum to keep things turning. My "light bulb" moment on terms of mill architecture / layout came because of this video. Namely, you have these three to six story mills full of spinning and weaving machines requiring a central power source to run the whole place. This is a PURE example of economies of scale. One large 3000 hp steam engine and drum can power a lot of machinery at the same time and is much cheaper to run per unit than two mills half the size. Until the widespread use of electric motors, this was the only way to scale up.
@TeslaTales59Ай бұрын
Another great video, Martin and gang. Sandwich looked yummy. Greetings from California where it was burning for a while. ❤🔥
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thank you, yep that bacon was good 👌
@teescottageguyproductionsАй бұрын
I was down last Sunday for my first visit to this particular steam engine, absolutely love it there!
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Great isnt it
@RedDeth21 күн бұрын
another wondrfull video. Thanks to all involved!
@danbrit9848Ай бұрын
i love how with steam you see every part almost ...and that oiler with a side cup on an arm spinning around a spigot ...its beautiful
@Lighting_DeskАй бұрын
For me nothing will beat stumbling across Ryhope Engines Museum in Sunderland as a young teen. I was hooked on steam engines at the time and the museum holds a victorian pumping stations. They have regular steam days and have been going from strength to strength in recent years.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Be good to visit 👍
@johnn8244Ай бұрын
This is another fantastic video Martin. I will have to try to get to see this when im down in that area.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Its well worth it
@christopherwhittaker2620Ай бұрын
The sound coming from the working workshop sounds exactly like German industrial techno. Not even joking. Excellent video.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Ha great stuff and thank you
@effinogАй бұрын
Yes I thought who's the insane drummer. Terrific rhythm.
@anthonyhoult152Ай бұрын
Brilliant video and so glad I have found your channel. I'm proud to be Yorkshire and definitely think I was born in the wrong generations. The days these amazing mill engines engines were working was the days people had amazing knowledge/skills and knew how to graft. It's sad to think how many Mills are now closed and demolished - wouldn't it be great to see our Mills working again to produce good quality products for Britain and not importing foreign rubbish. Looking forward to watching more of your videos.
@TheSilmarillianАй бұрын
The ingenuity to build such marvelous machines is mind boggling indeed.
@WilliamHorrocksАй бұрын
Another great video from Martin and team, while watching the video I kept wondering “Fred Dibnah must have visited this place with it being only up the road from Bolton?” And then a photo of him popped up! I’m sure Mr Dibnah would have given this video his full seal of approval, a great video guys and a place I will be visiting now that I know about it.
@niallh8129Ай бұрын
A great video showcasing a magnificent mill engine, there is also one at Queen St mill in Burnley (mentioned in the video) another stand alone engine at Bancroft mill in Barnoldswick which recently celebrated its 100th birthday and there Is one currently under restoration at Grane Mill in Haslingden, all worth a look at! Keep up the great content 😊
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
I need to go visit that one in Burnley
@highpath4776Ай бұрын
@@MartinZero always seemed closed to me (strictly its up the hill in Harle Syke) , had a chat a few years back to someone who lived over the road whose father and uncle (I think) had been engine tenters / cooperative members of the mill prior to closure - inc the other weaving shed on other side of road (I think both strictly, like Bancroft , were weaving sheds). Still worth going to Burnley - site of Burnley Ironworks (how they made so much from such a small site is amazing !) , Leeds and Liverpool Canal and Thompson Park minature railway.along with sites of some of the lancashire coal fields. ( half a wheel on the north side of Thompson Park marking it)
@niallh8129Ай бұрын
@MartinZero you will like Queen St Mill
@markavis7232Ай бұрын
Leigh Spinners also have a big cross-compound mill engine in restoration.
@garethparr9482Ай бұрын
Great video as always Martin and the guys. If my memory serves me I think a certain mr dibnah had some involvement in the restoration of that engine . He certainly scaled that chimney a few times it was featured in one of his old programs 👍
@TonyGoacherАй бұрын
My grandfather was chief engineer for one on Dukinfield in the day. Got hit by the face by the crankshaft while it was running. I was very impressed by the scar when I was a kid!
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Bloody heck !!!
@davidaspinall496Ай бұрын
I worked as a fitter's mate in the 1970s, briefly, dismantling spinning frames in mills around north Manchester. One place we went to had just stopped and was freshly abandoned. An engine house with a huge old electric motor, powering belts up to each floor. Interesting work - saw the inside of lots of old mills.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Bet that was good to see
@TheSadcyclistАй бұрын
Looks a fantasic place with freindly volunteers all doing their bit to keep steam and the machines working, will visit next year hopefully, also dont forget Bolton Steam museum working static engines and other stuff.
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Ive actually been to Bolton but never filmed it
@davidbing4578Ай бұрын
That was excellent Martin. I love steam engines but that giant was wonderful. Looks like a great day out. Thanks
@MartinZeroАй бұрын
Thank you David
@martinnorth2680Ай бұрын
Excellent video and respect for Jake's enthusiasm
@RogerClay-g6wАй бұрын
Fantastic to see this old technology alive.
@ianmckay1780Ай бұрын
Thanks for the education about this mill. Shame I can no longer travel, as stuck here in southern berkshire, with no way to travel independently I have to rely on YT for my travel trips. At least with you guys, I can see and get a proper explanation of what is going on and why things happen when they do. Thanks fo all your work, I now rely on your channel to keep building my knowledge of Victorian engineering, in the field as it were! Keep up the good works.