I heard there was a restoration of an old Walker jack going on in here, so I had to stop and look. I wasn't disappointed.
Back when I was in college (and still living in my hometown) I worked at the Racine Water Utility, and they had an old Walker jack just like yours that was still in regular service. It had been there in the service building for decades. I haven't seen the place in about five years, but I'm sure that jack is still there, sitting in it's place near the oil and glycol drums by the east door.
It worked better than any newer jack they had, so I used it all the time on...ahem...personal projects...during downtime (woo municipal employees!).
It seemed appropriate that it was there. The Walker Mfg. factory was once right next door to the water plant, so the jack only had to travel a few hundred yards to it's destination after being built.
The Walker buildings are gone now, divided into marina/boat storage, a combination of green space, parking, and additional buildings for the water plant, and a huge vacant area that will likely be lakefront condominiums one day. Clearing the weeds from that open on a 90+ degree day was no friggin' fun at all believe me...
I was hoping to see what one of these jacks looked like when new, as RWU's was in good working shape, but pretty well-used. Can't wait to see the final, assembled product!
Back when I was in college (and still living in my hometown) I worked at the Racine Water Utility, and they had an old Walker jack just like yours that was still in regular service. It had been there in the service building for decades. I haven't seen the place in about five years, but I'm sure that jack is still there, sitting in it's place near the oil and glycol drums by the east door.
It worked better than any newer jack they had, so I used it all the time on...ahem...personal projects...during downtime (woo municipal employees!).
It seemed appropriate that it was there. The Walker Mfg. factory was once right next door to the water plant, so the jack only had to travel a few hundred yards to it's destination after being built.
The Walker buildings are gone now, divided into marina/boat storage, a combination of green space, parking, and additional buildings for the water plant, and a huge vacant area that will likely be lakefront condominiums one day. Clearing the weeds from that open on a 90+ degree day was no friggin' fun at all believe me...
I was hoping to see what one of these jacks looked like when new, as RWU's was in good working shape, but pretty well-used. Can't wait to see the final, assembled product!
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