Screenshot from Video |
Some points of interest:
- The frame is built up with thick plates rather than cast as one piece. "By 1930, the company was making one-piece locomotive beds with integral cylinders and cradle..." [Wikipedia]
- I was surprised they were still using sledge hammers in the 1930s. I expected small forge hammers for small hammered forgings.
- You do get to watch them build a big mold, pour the metal, and dismantle the mold and sand to free the casting for the inside cylinders.
- The inside firebox is made of copper.
- When were hardhats invented? When where they ubiquitously required?
- Nobody is wearing glasses, let alone safety glasses. Did they have minimum vision requirements for their employees? Most of that work would not require 20/20 vision. But 20/200 might be a problem for at least some of the work.
- They also show a drive wheel being cast. I assume there is some sort of marker for the hub and crank pin fillers. At first it struck me that they placed the plugs for the hub and crank pin rather causally. Then it struck me that the accuracy is provided by the machining, not the casting.
- Judging by the crankshafts on the axle, this engine had four cylinders, two on the inside and two on the outside.
- What is the guy who is playing chicken with the drop forge hammer doing every time he reaches in? He doesn't have enough time to do much.
- 12:50 "Who will say now that the day of the craftsman is no more." If they thought the craftsman was dying in the 1930s, imagine what they would think about America today?
Screenshot |
owen752 weeks ago