(6-1-18) Today, we check out this beautiful, historic hand operated elevator! Please note that this is in a PRIVATE building and this tour was arranged.
Wow that is so unique! That’s the first time I’ve ever seen a non-electric elevator and I gotta say it’s really cool the way they built elevators like this before they started using electricity
I think this solves a mystery for me. Sometime around 1972, when I was about 4 years old, my mother took me to a furniture store in Steubenville, Ohio. She was looking for something specific (I have no memory of what it was), and they didn't have what she wanted. The salesman (presumably working on commission), said, "We just might have something in the warehouse upstairs." He took us over to an elevator and we got in. There was a rope running right through the middle of the elevator. He gave the rope a jerk and the elevator moved on its own up to the second floor (with the rope moving rapidly downward through the elevator). I was amazed by the whole thing, but I didn't mention this to anyone due to the fact that at 4 years old I was still encountering new and amazing things often and the adults could be quite condescending whenever I mentioned wonder or astonishment.. This is the one thing I encountered as a small child that I have never seen again, and I have wondered for the last 47 years (or so) how the thing worked. Even at 4 years old I could tell this thing looked old and didn't seem to involve electricity because he just gave the rope a jerk and didn't flip a switch or push a button. This video probably explains it: Because it was a freight elevator, the counterweight was heavier than the weight of the salesman, my mom, and me. This caused us to be raised without any effort. The jerk on the rope probably released the brake. I think we came down the stairs and not on the elevator. This would be because the elevator was now stuck at the top and would need to be lowered again with effort (or maybe by loading a bunch of heavy furniture that needed to come down anyway). I still have no idea why it was designed with the rope running right through the middle of the elevator, and there was only the one rope not 2, so, it couldn't have been the same exact design as this and I will continue looking for a better example.
That is amazing lol I love that you just had this mystery solved! Something from your childhood that was a core memory, but a memory jaded by confusion about what it was, mixed with the stifled feeling of not bringing it up for so long I can imagine how fulfilling it felt to finally see what was at the back of your mind all these years! Awesome. ☺️💚
I'm installing a dumbwaiter version of this system in my new house build. They actually still make these for dumbwaiters and commercial cargo lifts. I plan to use an open mount at the top so the beautiful pulley system is exposed in the room. House has an industrial farmhouse design so it will look great and it's a split level design with 3 levels so really needs a dumbwaiter.
The old Thomas Kay Woolen Mill museum in Salem, OR has a similar elevator. Its not in service anymore, though. Probably hasn't run since the mill closed in the early 1960s.
@@stlelevators I let one of my tenants use it, and now it's very difficult to move and it won't brake effectively. I've gone up and checked the brake, but it's fine. I suspect the counter weight is not attached.
Thats funny even though this is meant to be kind of a gravity powered elevator the counterweight only barely does half of the work the weight of whatever you load it with and whatever muscles the operator has does the other half
Wow that is so unique! That’s the first time I’ve ever seen a non-electric elevator and I gotta say it’s really cool the way they built elevators like this before they started using electricity
I think this solves a mystery for me. Sometime around 1972, when I was about 4 years old, my mother took me to a furniture store in Steubenville, Ohio. She was looking for something specific (I have no memory of what it was), and they didn't have what she wanted. The salesman (presumably working on commission), said, "We just might have something in the warehouse upstairs." He took us over to an elevator and we got in. There was a rope running right through the middle of the elevator. He gave the rope a jerk and the elevator moved on its own up to the second floor (with the rope moving rapidly downward through the elevator). I was amazed by the whole thing, but I didn't mention this to anyone due to the fact that at 4 years old I was still encountering new and amazing things often and the adults could be quite condescending whenever I mentioned wonder or astonishment..
This is the one thing I encountered as a small child that I have never seen again, and I have wondered for the last 47 years (or so) how the thing worked. Even at 4 years old I could tell this thing looked old and didn't seem to involve electricity because he just gave the rope a jerk and didn't flip a switch or push a button.
This video probably explains it: Because it was a freight elevator, the counterweight was heavier than the weight of the salesman, my mom, and me. This caused us to be raised without any effort. The jerk on the rope probably released the brake. I think we came down the stairs and not on the elevator. This would be because the elevator was now stuck at the top and would need to be lowered again with effort (or maybe by loading a bunch of heavy furniture that needed to come down anyway).
I still have no idea why it was designed with the rope running right through the middle of the elevator, and there was only the one rope not 2, so, it couldn't have been the same exact design as this and I will continue looking for a better example.
You have a memory like mine. Cool story.
@@juancarlosmontes That, or it's just because we remember things that made a big impression on us for whatever reason, so it sticks with us.
What about this one? th-cam.com/users/shortsRyMN7KVO0HA
That is amazing lol
I love that you just had this mystery solved! Something from your childhood that was a core memory, but a memory jaded by confusion about what it was, mixed with the stifled feeling of not bringing it up for so long I can imagine how fulfilling it felt to finally see what was at the back of your mind all these years! Awesome. ☺️💚
It may have been a shifter rope elevator.
I rode one of these in the 1970s. It was in a pipe organ factory. I'll never forget it!
Awesome!
That is the coolest and oldest elevator I have ever seen in my life! Absolutely awesome video! 👍
This is too cool for words ✌️💙
That's really cool!
I'm installing a dumbwaiter version of this system in my new house build. They actually still make these for dumbwaiters and commercial cargo lifts. I plan to use an open mount at the top so the beautiful pulley system is exposed in the room. House has an industrial farmhouse design so it will look great and it's a split level design with 3 levels so really needs a dumbwaiter.
That's awesome!
Please post the video of it to see the mechanical marvels🙏🪔🇮🇳
AMAZING!
The old Thomas Kay Woolen Mill museum in Salem, OR has a similar elevator. Its not in service anymore, though. Probably hasn't run since the mill closed in the early 1960s.
this is 10000 likes worth - at least... great find
This is insanely cool!
I thought so too!
Soooo, this video was super awesome but did I spot a Klansman’s hood in the upper right corner at 3:14 or have my eyes deceived me?!
omg that's funny. I don't think that's what it is xD
That's so cool
AWESOME!
Pretty cool
dam i love that's old school
I have never seen a manual elevator as new as this
as new?
@@stlelevators Usually the rope powered elevators stopped being made in the 1890s
I made a servant hand made rope elevator and I love it
I have one of these. Trying to figure out what's wrong with the counter weight
What’s happening with it?
@@stlelevators I let one of my tenants use it, and now it's very difficult to move and it won't brake effectively.
I've gone up and checked the brake, but it's fine.
I suspect the counter weight is not attached.
That's possible. Are you able to check and verify the connection?
@@stlelevators I think I've got to rip off a bunch of wood to get at the weights.
@@stlelevators
Here's what I found :
th-cam.com/users/shortshYO3uXKuflg?feature=share
Gonna have to tell my frirnd Sidney about this
What was this formerly
Thats funny even though this is meant to be kind of a gravity powered elevator the counterweight only barely does half of the work the weight of whatever you load it with and whatever muscles the operator has does the other half
Yep
wow!
this is what I call a “man powered elevator”
Not unlike many youtubers who use that term to refer to stairways
Yea me too.
Hi!
Awesome!
AWESOME!
I think so too!! :)