Not really practical but still cool to watch it work. (video)
They also got used in the north woods for logging.

The Phoenix Manufacturing Co. of Eau Claire, Wis. got the rights to build these machines and there are a couple still around. A friend, since deceased, built an operating scale model of one using his measurements of an original machine. I still regret not getting to know him and his projects better. A 2022 video of an original machine at a local steam show:Particularly, there's an engine called a Lombard log hauler. There was once one down the road from us a hundred years ago, long scrap now. The Maine Forest and Logging Museum has a steam up in February that I highly recommend attending: What an incredible machine!
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Mostly used for stationary threshing machines where the shocks of grain were brought to the machine.
Being vague has worked out in my favor; I’d never seen a tripod hoist before someone on here posted a link to someone with several designs. The feedback has been good on here, I’m learning things.Your request is a little unclear, saying you need to get the wheels and engine off, and get this thing in the air. Frankly there are only a few common ways to undertake those tasks, and if you're working on equipment this large it seems like you're probably already aware of the options, already mentioned in this thread. For lifting it's a forklift rated for what you need, a crane, overhead hoist, or workable construction equipment like an excavator or wheel loader. For lifting the whole unit, any of those would work, rated for the load of course, or more likely, jacks and cribbing.
Maybe you're really trying to ask how to accomplish it without those lifting aids available, or without the expense? Based on the picture you provided, I don't see an overhead hoist, nor room to work around it with a crane or forklift.
What equipment do you have at your disposal for lifting? Do you intend to move it to a more suited shop for disassembly?
Made about 35 miles away from me, and a century also!Yes, my understanding is as a more mobile steam donkey powering equipment.
If you have enough room overhead I would reccommend either a 3 ton, 12' span portable gantry crane or better yet build a bolt together (so it can be moved) 3 ton, 12' span (15' if you have the room) overhead crane using S12 40.8 for the bridge. I use S8 for runways, but build a truss underneath to cary bending load in tension. You can hang a 3 ton chain fall from the trolley - and both of those are over-the-counter from a hundred places. Make runways long enough to pick parts off of the engine and load them into a pickup or deck truck/trailer. It is a lot of work and a chunk of change but once you have built and used one, you will never be without.Depending on the anticipated length of the project, I'd be tempted to purchase some steel beams and build them in semi-permanent. Then add a couple chain fall hoists. When the projects done, sell the beams and hoist.
ArchimedesGive me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world.


No; some states have traction engine operators certifications, some states have boiler testing requirements, Vermont has neither. That's besides the point; we will be performing ultrasonic thickness testing, hydraulic pressure test, and safety device certification just like any state with said rules. I have an invested interest in not blowing up.Are you required to have a Boiler's License to operate at public events ?
I believe Ohio requires a Boiler's License... about 15-20 years ago, there was a family that had one at a fair or similar event, basically steam pressure ran away on them and the grandfather was trying to shut it down when it came apart killing him and another.No; some states have traction engine operators certifications, some states have boiler testing requirements, Vermont has neither. That's besides the point; we will be performing ultrasonic thickness testing, hydraulic pressure test, and safety device certification just like any state with said rules. I have an invested interest in not blowing up.
That was the Medina County fair. I am pretty sure you are right about the licenses since then.I believe Ohio requires a Boiler's License... about 15-20 years ago, there was a family that had one at a fair or similar event, basically steam pressure ran away on them and the grandfather was trying to shut it down when it came apart killing him and another.
Sounds great like you know what you're doing and have a procedure to follow.


The original!Classic. I need to make the kids sit through that one.
Here is an absolutely spot on, detailed assessment of the steam explosion at Medina. Everything was wrong: The pressure gage didn't read accurately, the safety valve didn't go off at its set point, and staybolts weren't to specifications. None of that mattered: The crown sheet was thin. 28 million pounds of force, and the pressure was only 90 PSI. That's why we use steam; the energy in expansive steam compared to compressed air is several factors higher. I tried to come up with a TNT equivalent, but it's a different ball game. A cool example is dropping C4 in a puddle vs laying it on the ground; one does nothing, the other makes a 3ft wide crater (made a miserable day at the range interesting). You only have a few cubic feet volume of steam, but combined with heat, shrapnel, the incompressibility of water, steam explosions can be significantly more dangerous than standing near an explosive-explosion. If I had to guess, maybe close to 10kg of TNT, about half what this looks like. Still very violent out in the open.That was the Medina County fair. I am pretty sure you are right about the licenses since then.
There is a decent steam show in Dover every year usually in August.
A couple of pics from a couple years ago, a tractor and the saw it was running with the belt.
I estimate the amount of energy released during the explosion at 90 psi. to be around 28,000,000' lbs of force of which approximately 1,280,000' lbs was used to lift the engine and the remaining was dissipated in the blast area around the engine.
Agree. A simple jack and cribbing.Bottle jack(s) and cribbing, but it would be a fair amount of cribbing to get the axles off.
For this Port Huron, it's 19 HP on the Drawbar and 65 HP on the belt which... makes no sense to me in particular since the engine is geared something like 80:1 when pulling.
Power steering on those.Not really practical but still cool to watch it work.



The next image is a showman's engine. I'm not sure if you guys had these. They towed around travelling funfairs and had generators fitted to power the fun fair once in place.
https://www.thehenryford.org/collections-and-research/digital-collections/artifact/84773Well, it's your tractor, but I don't believe 19 is meaningful. The problem with that tractor being rated 19 at the drawbar was the reason I googled it, and that's not how that number was arrived at.
https://www.thehenryford.org/collections-and-research/digital-collections/artifact/84773
Did the Henry Ford museum get it wrong? Probably. 19 is “nominal” HP, 65 is “brake” HP, as in prony brake. I wish I had a definitive answer for what nominal means: could be based on the boiler, it could be drawbar, I don’t know. Theres so many folks arguing about it on the internet, I just tune it out, and will continue to do so until I meet someone who actually knows what they’re talking about with a logical opinion, maybe even a reference.
On my shelf is “The Encyclopedia of American Steam Traction Engines” which is the best reference on my shelf, and it doesn’t even talk HP. Even mislabels one of the pictures as the wrong rating.
From this point forward when someone says "Herculean effort" this will be what comes to mind. Impressive. Yeah, following....Smiffy,
Never mind the tractor, Thats a Beautiful Series 1 Land Rover in the 3rd picture!!
Love it!!
Cheers,
BN
These were not a thing in the US, probably because the distances are much longer. Our equivalent was the traveling circus, which moved by train. They then used the circus elephants (and horses, but that’s boring) to pull wagons from the train depot to the fairgrounds.
