I wonder how many men it took to operate that machine beside the operator at the control station. Those machines were tough and so were the men that operated them. Thanks for showing the old iron.
Its incredible to see this, still looks pretty solid! Ruston-Hornsby were world leaders in heavy oil engines. We used to make things here in the UK....I'm not entirely sure what we do now. Ruston-Hornsby were eventually bought out by Siemens.
Every time that you crawl around a piece of derelict equipment in warm weather I expect you to be swarmed by yellow jackets. Down here they would own that it and you would have to fight them to get in it.
that is one rare machine there, i hope it gets saved some day. Ruston was around at the start. they sold all over the world. they mearge with the USA to make sales in the US area market, thus becaming Ruston Bucyrus after Bucyrus and Erie merged. i have a book on the history. there is alos a bloke in england that can date the machines history from the serial number.
As a “ Young up and coming “ as the truck bay mechanics would refer to us apprentices back in the early 70’s at Cummins Ontario I entered the program about 1971. At 14 my first summer job was as a parts runner ( a job they created for me ) at Harper Detroit Diesel. Saying that my time was taken up around engines. All my close friends were into music, listening, and playing it. Other kids in our circle, the ones more free spirited all made the pilgrimage out west “ Going to thumb a ride to Van man “. I was signed up for 4800 hours so nose to the grindstone. As soon as I could get it together, the west beckoned and in a previously 1966 Chrysler 300 myself and a friend who soon after became best man at my wedding set off to do what every Canadian should do. go on a road trip. With a tent trailer in tow, we followed the sun. When we where kicking around the lower mainland one camp we set was up near Hainey on the old Dewdney Truck Road. One day out on an adventure I noticed there was some logging activity going on at Stave Lake just above the dam. There was boom storage there, and where doing a log sort. I got up early one morning, leaving Jim to slumber and headed over there to observe. The logging outfit was Simpson Brothers. I got talking to a driver who was picking up there and taking them to a mill in Whonnock where they had a log dump. He brought me down there to meet up with another truck driver Bill Eaton who drove a 66 KW LW-924 or the likes with water cooled brakes. Bill drove up the mountain to the steel spar where they where actively logging. Bill didn’t say much, but he was popular with the ladies along the route, they’d be out in the yard tending the garden, or hanging the laundry, old Bill came trundling along, give then a short toot, and tip his hand as a wave in truck driver fashion. When we left the road, it was straight up, and up. The only time Bill ever broke character is when one of the boxes jumped out of gear ! Bill didn’t expect that. The higher we got there were traces of snow in the draws, this was mid July. When we got to the summit it was a brilliant day, lots of patches of snow around, and wondrous scenery, mountain ranges, and lakes, in typical BC fashion. There was a problem however that couldn’t be ignored. Black Flies. Between your swarm, and the other guys swarm, we were lunch. The steel spar was brand new, still had all it’s windows, nice and shiny. In short order we were loaded and down we went. That Cummins 335, with a T-590 turbo, me with my feet half way up the fire wall to stop from sliding forward of the seat, it was a long trip down to study the rawness of the road build, with switchbacks, and log bridges, and me wondering how much water was left in that tank mounted across the frame rails. I didn’t know much about Jake Brakes when we left to go on that trip, but I knew the A to Z by the time I got back. Back down to Whannock, said goodbye to Bill, waited for my connection ride in the new 74 Western Star, back up to my car at Stave Lake, and the camp site, let’s say Jim could have been happier to see me that afternoon. He had thought of reporting me missing. RIP Jim. Soon after I got my ticket at Cummins I left. Drove for a couple of years, then bought a Cabover Kenworth, drove )that for a few years, then in 82 bought a new KW 100 VIT. Hauled meat and produce all over the continent. I was born in Scotland, dad drove his whole life there starting with horses. By the time he was 16 he had his heavy goods license, but found other work when we settled here in the closing days of 65. I was fairly steady hauling pork skins to the Mexican border at various location, and there was a bad freeze one year, that killed everything in “ The Valley “ I snagged a load of frozen orange juice concentrate in 45 gallon drums. Dad was with me on that trip, and we headed up to Vancouver with the load, and took a couple of days off while I got my feelers out for a reload. One of the days, I took my dad up there to Stave Lake. I just felt I wanted to stand on the dam, and take in the memory of my trip up the hill. Just to the west of the dam, is where Simpson Brothers had there shop. It was disheartening to see the equipment sitting there along the roadside, that new 74 Star, it had that west coast patina that comes with Mother Nature adoring everything with green moss. I hadn’t expected to see that outcome, but it’s a hard life for logging equipment, and the men who age with it. While I stood on that dam, I could hear men working with power tools somewhere in the woods, and I noticed a bloody great church ! It looked very old. I thought “ WTF “ I don’t remember seeing that before ? I went to take a look, when I could see in it, the floor was dirt ! Asked one of the worker in my disbelief of what I was looking at, he said it was a set from the remake movie We’re No Angels staring Robert Dinero, Shawn Penn, and Hoyt Axton, Hoyts mom wrote Heart Brake Hotel I heard. I think Bogart was in the original. They set the dam up as a State Line Border Crossing in the remake. The carpenters told me the church structure was sold, and was being moved somewhere up near 100 Mile House to a ski resort to be made into a restaurant/ bar. Thanks for your time, I still live back east, I worked out of Vancouver (Annisis. Island ) for 15 years, drove that 82 KW for 26 years, I’m 71 this week, and still drive ( part time ). Let’s do it all again ! Thanks Skadill ! I know where that comes from.
Thanks for the writing!!! Your a Historian and an author. Happy Birthday too! I know the area completely, I live right there. I have a book that was made about the Simpson families rich history and logging the area.. The Simpson shop was torn down few years ago, it is now a 6 lot subdivison waiting for the lots to sell.
@@skadill it was a pleasure revisiting my memory of the time and place, inspired by your passion for old logging equipment. About 20 years ago I was back at the sawmill in Whannock where the log dump was, it had been closed up for some time. You might not be old enough but do you recall an old woman I think by the name of Mrs Stewart who ran an old two story grocery store that was located on the south side of the road between the dam and Simpson Brothers? She was Scottish. Just curious, I stoped in to see her on a subsequent visit, but there where some sketchy people who where not keen on me having a conversation with her. Enough said. Thank you sir !
@@georgerenton965 I dont know who she was, but the store was called Clarkes General store and even had caulk boot marks on the floor entrance..My dad and I's sawmill was on the old whonnock mill site till through the mid 2000's after the Interfor mill was gone, we were at the far west side of the property.
@@skadill maybe the name was Clarke ? The young driver of the 74 Star had red hair, and had recently moved west from the Ottawa Valley. About 10 years back I picked up a load of cedar shake to take U.S. side. The young guy who was running around getting everything done went by the handle of Happy. Always had a smile. Fire department showed up, as I guess the Mills fire detection system was triggered by the maintenance guy doing hot work on the log ladder bearing. The exit over the tracks you can only enter the highway (7? ) going one direction.
I see a magneto so she’s gas but, yes, diesels were around back then. Working in a steel box full of cables that could snap at any time and cut you into gory little pieces is a terrifying thing.
Complete and restorable. Look at some of the junk machines that Lakeside Sand + Gravel in Ohio turned into showpieces Many were that bad. Example 1926 P+H 206 Crane, came in looking like that Ruston.
I wonder how many men it took to operate that machine beside the operator at the control station. Those machines were tough and so were the men that operated them. Thanks for showing the old iron.
Ruston Hornsby started as a stand alone outfit then Bucyrus bought them out and it became Ruston Bucyrus.
This beast is an excellent find. Not much exists anymore in the 100+ year old range. No " will it start" mess here only great history 🤘
Its incredible to see this, still looks pretty solid! Ruston-Hornsby were world leaders in heavy oil engines. We used to make things here in the UK....I'm not entirely sure what we do now. Ruston-Hornsby were eventually bought out by Siemens.
What a great find . Lots of engineering went into creating that machine a hundred plus years ago . Thanks for another great video 👍
Thanks 👍
What an incredible find! Not much equipment of that vintage around anymore! Thanks for a great video!
She's a big ol girl!! 👍👍
Wow so cool ,,,,someone needs to restore it,,,sadly I believe it would be cost prohibitive so great to see
Those were some tough guys back then. Couldn't you imagine running that thing with a 200 degree engine running right behind you.
That is pretty cool to think about . It makes me wonder .
Every time that you crawl around a piece of derelict equipment in warm weather I expect you to be swarmed by yellow jackets. Down here they would own that it and you would have to fight them to get in it.
It's Amazing the stuff they used compared to now. 😊
that is one rare machine there, i hope it gets saved some day. Ruston was around at the start. they sold all over the world. they mearge with the USA to make sales in the US area market, thus becaming Ruston Bucyrus after Bucyrus and Erie merged. i have a book on the history. there is alos a bloke in england that can date the machines history from the serial number.
I would give a toe to have this! just a property and rope shovel away! AMAZING relic
I can just imagine the sweet smell of old grease. Catnip!
Wow, rite big. Super interesting find. Hahaha, Justin [PA mining] would say "and here we have the name plate where is says...."
As a “ Young up and coming “ as the truck bay mechanics would refer to us apprentices back in the early 70’s at Cummins Ontario I entered the
program about 1971. At 14 my first summer job was as a parts runner ( a job they created for me ) at Harper Detroit Diesel. Saying that my time
was taken up around engines. All my close friends were into music, listening, and playing it. Other kids in our circle, the ones more free spirited
all made the pilgrimage out west “ Going to thumb a ride to Van man “. I was signed up for 4800 hours so nose to the grindstone.
As soon as I could get it together, the west beckoned and in a previously 1966 Chrysler 300 myself and a friend who soon after became best
man at my wedding set off to do what every Canadian should do. go on a road trip. With a tent trailer in tow, we followed the sun. When we where
kicking around the lower mainland one camp we set was up near Hainey on the old Dewdney Truck Road. One day out on an adventure I noticed
there was some logging activity going on at Stave Lake just above the dam. There was boom storage there, and where doing a log sort. I got up
early one morning, leaving Jim to slumber and headed over there to observe. The logging outfit was Simpson Brothers. I got talking to a driver
who was picking up there and taking them to a mill in Whonnock where they had a log dump. He brought me down there to meet up with another
truck driver Bill Eaton who drove a 66 KW LW-924 or the likes with water cooled brakes. Bill drove up the mountain to the steel spar where they
where actively logging. Bill didn’t say much, but he was popular with the ladies along the route, they’d be out in the yard tending the garden, or
hanging the laundry, old Bill came trundling along, give then a short toot, and tip his hand as a wave in truck driver fashion. When we left the
road, it was straight up, and up. The only time Bill ever broke character is when one of the boxes jumped out of gear ! Bill didn’t expect that.
The higher we got there were traces of snow in the draws, this was mid July. When we got to the summit it was a brilliant day, lots of patches
of snow around, and wondrous scenery, mountain ranges, and lakes, in typical BC fashion. There was a problem however that couldn’t be ignored.
Black Flies. Between your swarm, and the other guys swarm, we were lunch. The steel spar was brand new, still had all it’s windows, nice and
shiny. In short order we were loaded and down we went. That Cummins 335, with a T-590 turbo, me with my feet half way up the fire wall to stop
from sliding forward of the seat, it was a long trip down to study the rawness of the road build, with switchbacks, and log bridges, and me
wondering how much water was left in that tank mounted across the frame rails. I didn’t know much about Jake Brakes when we left to go on
that trip, but I knew the A to Z by the time I got back. Back down to Whannock, said goodbye to Bill, waited for my connection ride in the new 74
Western Star, back up to my car at Stave Lake, and the camp site, let’s say Jim could have been happier to see me that afternoon. He had thought
of reporting me missing. RIP Jim.
Soon after I got my ticket at Cummins I left. Drove for a couple of years, then bought a Cabover Kenworth, drove )that for a few years, then in 82
bought a new KW 100 VIT. Hauled meat and produce all over the continent. I was born in Scotland, dad drove his whole life there starting with
horses. By the time he was 16 he had his heavy goods license, but found other work when we settled here in the closing days of 65. I was fairly
steady hauling pork skins to the Mexican border at various location, and there was a bad freeze one year, that killed everything in “ The Valley “
I snagged a load of frozen orange juice concentrate in 45 gallon drums. Dad was with me on that trip, and we headed up to Vancouver with the
load, and took a couple of days off while I got my feelers out for a reload. One of the days, I took my dad up there to Stave Lake. I just felt I
wanted to stand on the dam, and take in the memory of my trip up the hill. Just to the west of the dam, is where Simpson Brothers had there
shop. It was disheartening to see the equipment sitting there along the roadside, that new 74 Star, it had that west coast patina that comes
with Mother Nature adoring everything with green moss. I hadn’t expected to see that outcome, but it’s a hard life for logging equipment, and
the men who age with it. While I stood on that dam, I could hear men working with power tools somewhere in the woods, and I noticed a bloody
great church ! It looked very old. I thought “ WTF “ I don’t remember seeing that before ? I went to take a look, when I could see in it, the floor
was dirt ! Asked one of the worker in my disbelief of what I was looking at, he said it was a set from the remake movie We’re No Angels staring
Robert Dinero, Shawn Penn, and Hoyt Axton, Hoyts mom wrote Heart Brake Hotel I heard. I think Bogart was in the original. They set the dam up
as a State Line Border Crossing in the remake. The carpenters told me the church structure was sold, and was being moved somewhere up near
100 Mile House to a ski resort to be made into a restaurant/ bar. Thanks for your time, I still live back east, I worked out of Vancouver (Annisis. Island ) for 15 years, drove that 82 KW for 26 years, I’m 71 this week, and still drive ( part time ). Let’s do it all again ! Thanks Skadill ! I know
where that comes from.
Thanks for the writing!!! Your a Historian and an author. Happy Birthday too! I know the area completely, I live right there. I have a book that was made about the Simpson families rich history and logging the area.. The Simpson shop was torn down few years ago, it is now a 6 lot subdivison waiting for the lots to sell.
@@skadill it was a pleasure revisiting my memory of the time and place, inspired by your passion for old logging equipment. About 20 years ago
I was back at the sawmill in Whannock where the log dump was, it had been closed up for some time. You might not be old enough but do you
recall an old woman I think by the name of Mrs Stewart who ran an old two story grocery store that was located on the south side of the road
between the dam and Simpson Brothers? She was Scottish. Just curious, I stoped in to see her on a subsequent visit, but there where some
sketchy people who where not keen on me having a conversation with her. Enough said. Thank you sir !
@@georgerenton965 I dont know who she was, but the store was called Clarkes General store and even had caulk boot marks on the floor entrance..My dad and I's sawmill was on the old whonnock mill site till through the mid 2000's after the Interfor mill was gone, we were at the far west side of the property.
@@skadill maybe the name was Clarke ? The young driver of the 74 Star had red hair, and had recently moved west from the Ottawa Valley. About
10 years back I picked up a load of cedar shake to take U.S. side. The young guy who was running around getting everything done went by the
handle of Happy. Always had a smile. Fire department showed up, as I guess the Mills fire detection system was triggered by the maintenance guy
doing hot work on the log ladder bearing. The exit over the tracks you can only enter the highway (7? ) going one direction.
Interesting manufacturing tells from 1913 (casting and rivets) - before welding became the norm. Looks like they were proficient with cast iron.
I'd love to run a cable machine 🤘
I've always wanted to try one to experience life generations ago.
“She is not mining big” No but she is woods big!!
Neat old machine, thanks for sharing it with us.
Thanks again Todd for another great find
Better take it home you need some more yard art for the end of the driveway 😂
Thanks, would be great to see it running again.
With Ruston you typically think of small locomotives
Imagine the noise in that cab!!
I see a magneto so she’s gas but, yes, diesels were around back then. Working in a steel box full of cables that could snap at any time and cut you into gory little pieces is a terrifying thing.
Complete and restorable.
Look at some of the junk machines that Lakeside Sand + Gravel in Ohio turned into showpieces Many were that bad.
Example 1926 P+H 206 Crane, came in looking like that Ruston.
Excellent video!
Glad you liked it!
WOW, that old Dorman engine, bet when it was running, was smooth and sound great. what a find,
Magneto is in it. She may start up with a bit of love. Be a good one for those you tube guys to see if they could get her to run
Wild rig. Blessings
I bet Matt from Diesel Creek can get this running!!
That crank starter has to have broken some arms lol
awesome thank you
That is a rare find and a long way from where it was mfg.
No hook rollers on that machine.
So cool!!!
i think 1913 would be steam
it was converted
You should try a "will it run" on this one...
Knowing the outcome, I'll skip straight to the next find.