We had a station that had 17 of these same compressors, built in 1920's I think. 4 pistons, 8 cylinders (fired on both top and bottom of piston), one flywheel. Whole station was shut down and cut up for scrap several years ago. What a shame. Time marches on, however, and these were just too labor intensive to keep going and inefficient to be kept in service. That sound brings back lots of memories!
Great vid. The old horizontal large gas engines are in a league of their own. Slow speed but, insane amounts of torque, and great ruggedness. The look and sound just perfect. Maybe inefficient but who cares, I sure as hell don't!!!!!!:)
If you look at the Henry Ford Museum collection of clips on here, you'll see an early version of the same engine in Ford's Highland Park Plant, powering the factory to make Model Ts. Ford was VERY proud of it, but never gave credit to Cooper-Bessemer for building the engine. It ran on coal gas.
Cool picture, I got to tour a station with one of these (but they'd already upgraded to a new compression station). I think the company I work for has one station left that uses this kind of compression.
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We had a station that had 17 of these same compressors, built in 1920's I think. 4 pistons, 8 cylinders (fired on both top and bottom of piston), one flywheel. Whole station was shut down and cut up for scrap several years ago. What a shame. Time marches on, however, and these were just too labor intensive to keep going and inefficient to be kept in service. That sound brings back lots of memories!
waffleone3 2 weeks ago
Like out of the comic books with the strange shapes, pipes, wonderful sound.
Fredthornton 2 months ago
Great vid. The old horizontal large gas engines are in a league of their own. Slow speed but, insane amounts of torque, and great ruggedness. The look and sound just perfect. Maybe inefficient but who cares, I sure as hell don't!!!!!!:)
stormlord5500 7 months ago
Brings back many found memories. Great friends, good times, entertaining stories.
I grew up around these (some older) at Ogden, Ia., Beatrice, Ne., Palmyra, Ne., and many other compressor stations.
Thanks for the memories.
dbowmaster1 7 months ago
If you look at the Henry Ford Museum collection of clips on here, you'll see an early version of the same engine in Ford's Highland Park Plant, powering the factory to make Model Ts. Ford was VERY proud of it, but never gave credit to Cooper-Bessemer for building the engine. It ran on coal gas.
DeserTBoB93535 1 year ago
Do you happen to know where this compressor station is located? Is it still running these days or has it been shut down?
caterpillarnut 1 year ago
all those great engines.........
bonzo874 1 year ago
Cool picture, I got to tour a station with one of these (but they'd already upgraded to a new compression station). I think the company I work for has one station left that uses this kind of compression.
headpickle 2 years ago
its in LA
jcoopercj7 2 years ago
I think its cool how at about 54 sec the camera picks up our timing mark on the flywheel. Can't see that with the naked eye.
72hotrod 1 year ago
Looks like Ogden, Ia
tadpole482 2 years ago
@tadpole482 Does Ogden have such a station? Would like to drive on down and take a look-see.
otef434 1 year ago
where is this station located at?
ilkjdsflkfj 2 years ago
Comment removed
cedars4 2 years ago
The "26" in Type 26 refers to the engine's cylinder diameter...26 inches.
I am intimately familiar with this particular engine.
Good job J!
72hotrod 2 years ago