Great job from one Jersey boy to another. Due to my age, I’m now living in a condo in Florida so your videos are a way I can still tinker without the need for property, stored toys and dirty hands. None of these are a complaint but a relaxing joy!
In July of 1967 my family visited Yosemite National Park in California, at the east entrance near Lee Vining. Since that location is many miles from the nearest power line they had a generator supplying power for the ranger station and the related buildings in the nearby buildings. It was a single-cylinder Diesel running at about 200 RPM with a belt drive to an 1800 RPM generator. What impressed me was the sound and the electrical output, 240 volts at about 200 amperes. The sound was a muffled chug, chug, chug that resonated in my chest lungs. Years later the Park Service expanded the services at that location and brought in a power line from Lee Vining.
I worked the offshore oilfields and mountain oilfields for decades - oil is often drilled for in very remote areas - I had worked on many of those engines & generators - there 1000s still in service today - the muffler makes them very quiet - witty made engines / gens into the 1980s - most areas that there in service have 100s of yrs of replacement parts - there re-ringed every 5 yrs
Grew up using belt driven threshers powered by 40s tractors and small engines like this. Listening to that little lady croon reminds me of good times, hard work, and satisfaction in what you accomplished! People were generally smart enough to stay clear of flywheels, drive lines and other hazardous parts! Warning labels were not needed. There was always the one guy that got complacent. Usually happened before procreation, therefore the gene pool was saved! Now look what we have! Argh!!!
Very nice complete set. Good to see that you kept the original look and not overpainted it as a glossy machine, but just clean and nice to look at. Thats how I like to see these old machines. The real look of an old working engine. Looking at the Hz-meter it runs quite stable.Hz is the indication of right rpms. Maybe the magnetic field has somewhat losses his strenght, just keep it running and will come back.
I like that you're not afraid to make the old engine work. A lot of shows I go to, people never run more than a small water pump or whatever, and the hit and miss gas engines only fire every once in a while. Like they're afraid to put a good load on it. This is cool to hear them with a real load. LOL. Be safe!
That is one well balanced engine. I've seen so many horizontally mounted engines that looked like they were going to shake the cart apart. Yours just sits there and happily runs so smooth.
On those engines the crank shaft has the counter balance - the run far smother than when the counter balance was in the fly wheel also after they started casting or bolting the counter balance into the crank shaft - the could safely increase the HP and speed - early engines turned slower as not to brake the crank shaft - that's a common problem when the counter balance is on the fly wheel - In the 80s there were 1000s of witty engines in serves putting voltage on pipe lined - They were run on diesel crude
Nice job . I love old engines like this . So simple compared to what we have today . I run a 2007 VW Touareg V6 tdi . Service is easy oil and filters etc . Any other issues you have to connect it to a computer and see what's wrong . I've got an old generac generator I was given . That wouldn't start . Got it running last summer . Making power too . Immensely satisfying ressurecting old machinery .
My Dad started work for Oil Well Supply Co in 1937 out of the Ellinwood,Ks store. He was the field man for “OILWELL” pumping units and Witte engines. As a kid seen many new B & C models and later the little 98RC engine come in crates and then go out to the customers.
Witty was still manufacturing engines in the 80s - I've seen many that are still in service - there many that are used to keep voltage on pipe lines - it increase pipelines service life up to 3 times longer - they keep a negative charge on pipe lines
@@gaildimick1831 I'm a third generation mechanic electrician - my grandfather started working on stationary engines in the very early 1900s -- It was before AC generation took over - he started when many power plants were 110 DC - Even the French quarter in New Orleans had a 110v DC power plant on Bourbon street that powered the French Quarter when my grand father was a kid - It was a hybrid power plant - they charged a large Battey bank 2 hours in the morning and evening - it was a 110v DC plant - witty engines were - from the begging my grandfather spoke of them as an excelent engine for driving generators in the oilfields - it's cool that you have some -
@@gaildimick1831 I'm retired now - I started in the oilfield in the early 70s - I had uncle's that were in the communications business also I learned electronic at a young age - My knowledged was recognized from my start about gens and solid-state drive systems - back then we bought old retired locomotives and up graded the engines fro 2 MW to 6 MW sets then we changed the traction motors over from being controlled by resistor Banks to being controlled by solid state DC drives - in the oil field those guys are coined SCR electriciins - you have to be good to do that kind of work - also the crews will ride those guys into the ground if they can - It was as if I had been pre seasoned to work in the oilfields - Also I started at a perfect time - I had the knowledge of the old systems and the new systems - Growing up I was taught all about the old hybrid systems also one of my uncle's was on a sub during WW2 - There were still old farm houses in the 60s that still.had the 32 volt farm light plants - I remember a farmer that refused grid power - he said he could get pole power for 35 cents a kw or he could generate his own power for 1.5 cents a kw - diesel was about 10 cents a gallon for Farmers - his generator had a heavy low speed engine so I guess it generated 12 kws per gallon of fuel it burned to charge his house battery's - I remember those old 32 volt frigidare fridges that were in farm houses back then also the motor driven inverters so they could have 110 v AC appliances lol - Today when I tell guys that some of those engines generated 27 KWs per gallon of fuel there astonished - - running slow there is time to burn all the fuel -
My grandfather and I drove up the Alaska highway in the summer of 1965. The background noise of an old one lung genset could be heard in every little outpost in the sticks before electrification reached everywhere... Brings back memories
There still many of those engines in service west of the Mississippi River - there still portions of the western US that don't have grid power - those are set.up to charge battery's in remote areas were there is no grid - witty made engines into the 1980s or so
That is so sweet to hear that classic diesel engine.run like she did back in the day I elect you as gen tech of the century thank you young man for bringing classic gen set's back to life
The Amish would love this ..... My Great Grandfather had a Delco system on his Farm and house.. Had a bunch of batteries start the gasoline engine once per day and charge the batteries then had lights in the house at night no need for kersene lamps ..
I find your programs fascinating, your descriptions and work is fascinating. You are so lucky in the States having access to ex-Service generators some of which look almost new, In South Africa we have no access to anything like this! Thanks for your efforts.
nice setup, she runs great. lets see a modern genset run in a 100 years. never happen. new stuff fails sitting in the garage. cool video.im a diesel mechanic so i love this stuff.
I love to see old antique machines working. I have a 1938 Singer Industrial sewing machine model number 111W113 for leather work, it came with an antique electric motor with a clutch mechanism that works opposite of how one works in a car. I operate the sewing machine using bicycle pedals. The electric motor would make the sewing machine run faster than I can sew.
Awesome old machine, seems to be running pretty good for being 80 years old, pretty sure the stuff being made now days wont be running in 20 years let alone eighty. Simple and well built, wish we made things like this now!
Those style engines are still made and sold world wide look up lister CS engines - if you need a lead let me know - hey have a listerroid version - it's a clone of the original lister - but has been up graded to roller bearings - also the counter balance is in the crank - They sell them as air compressors - with a kit to change them over to a diesel engine - If your mechanical it's easy to do - Although the burn clean there not EPA compliant - there certified for CHP units in Europe - that is combined heating and power - homes use the during the winter to generate heat during the winter and the power generate is used in the home or sold back to the grid - There is a lister CHP in a hotel in Poland that has been in service for 90 yrs - I've seen the old brass bushing type in the oilfields running with a quarter inch cleares at the mains that had been like that for a long time - brass bushing are perfered in dirty or Sandy areas
I could listen to that bad boy chuff along at full load all day long. Actually want something similar to this to actually work when I get my Empire of Dirt fully set up since 3-phase and 240v supplies are hard to come by. I do want an open case though, wanna see the counterweights, rod, et-al whirling around in there. It'd run my shop air, my lathe, mill, maybe some lineshaft items that don't need to be super precise like bench grinders or bandsaws.
The older engines with the counter balance in the fly wheel do walk all over - the newer engines have the counter balance at the crank jernol and vibrate very little -
Man, that thing is a beast. Sure seems kind of archaic for 1941...looks more like 1900-1920 and it looks like it came right out of a black and white 1920 catalog. Still, I am a bit surprised that by 1941 it's not powered by a flathead four cylinder engine. Of course that wouldn't be half as much fun. That would of course change the footprint and maybe it's all about being a diesel vs gasoline. Nicely done!
I want to say that that is a great running engine. I just came back from our hit miss engine show in cabool MO. This weekend. I had my drag saws and maytag engines. We all had a great time and a safe time to. I do like the engine and the generator it sounds great and runs good. Great video.
We were taught to keep the fuel tanks full in storage on our aircraft to prevent condensate. The manner is , I believe, the reverse of your description, but same effect. Pull in hot humid air, cool, condense. Voila - water! Repeat daily!
Very interesting, I watched a demonstration with a hit and miss engine and how it matained Rpm at different loads just hit more often . You have a very nice demonstrator . Good job
I love how almost all of the controls are inches away from that gigantic spinning flywheel. Makes you wonder how many operators these things maimed back in the day...
Out of all your gen sets, this has to be one of my favorites! Love the sound too. Glad finally see a decent video on it! I was really hoping to make the hike up to the Jacktown summer show this year( would be my first time there) and maybe see this thing, but I'm not so sure that's going to happen this year sadly. Ohh Well!
The cart you build is really nice. I love the fact that it's 100% functional, but it also looks aesthetically pleasing. You guys have exceptional eyes for creating really nice looking machines, be they show pieces or just fun around the yard, bummer that you don't have more time for them, but eh, that's life, right? Again, the cart looks really nice.
The good old days of no safety net, low safety standards, lower life expectancy, and being a man meant to show how little you valued life. Make America great again!
All those slow turning engine burn clean - they also can have up to a 27:1 fuel efficiency - at slower speeds there is time to burn all the fuel or even the oil that slips by the rings - many in the oilfields are run on diesel crude that's about #6;fuel oil - that one will run at 14:1 efficiency or so - that's 14000 watts per gallon of fuel burned - they rarely smoke - If they smoke the valves will carbon and it's difficult to start them - it's easy to change out the rings -
You got the condensation issue backwards. A cold tank warming up will force air out of the tank so no problem there. The problem arises at night when the warm tank cools and draws in humid air which then condenses on the surfaces as they cool. It is hard to prevent as you need a vent in order to get the fuel out, but, as you say, keeping the tank as nearly full as possible is one of the best defenses.
That fuel filter that was on the engine is a Mueller type filter. They were practically standard equipment on heating oil burners from the 1930’s through the 1960’s.
Super neat! Thanks for sharing this. I enjoy it at the show in the past. That early type fuel filter with the brass disks is very interesting. Hopefully some fall shows!
They make one way valves you could add to the fuel cap. That would prevent the water from coming in while still allowing the tank to vent. Something like a simple dirt bike tank vent would probably get the job done.
That is a really cool well built generator but I am glad that I can pickup and carry my 2000 watt Generator .. My 8,000 is on two wheels wiht handles.. It almost takes two people to put it in the back of a pick up .. Would be neat to seem him open the main breaker on his house.. then run his whole house wiht air conditioning
Great video. As for the filter type that is actually pretty common in marine application up til the 60’s and even 70’s. The tug I work on was built in 1958 and it had some oil and fuel filters of that style. They have been mostly replaced by standard modern filters but there is still a couple left
Most of the older engines had a tube or sock filters - it was a cotton sleeve over a mesh wire - You wash them out and reuse them - the cotton sleeve for a fuel filter last for several decades -
hey that case forklift i found on the tractor models if you swap the 2 plugwires on the 2 center cylinders it ran better..it says the right fire order but it really does run better when you swap the plugwires over on the 2 center cylinders on that forklift..thought id share what i found, dont know why it runs better but it does 👍👍
These were oilfield engines, they would run several jacks where electricity was not available. A fella would stop by every so often check the oil and fill with fuel.
load banks are cool but mustie1 will plug in stuff like heat guns and lights, some people dont understand load banks and would be more impressed with lights or drills plugged in and working. love your vids keep up the great work
A guy would be amazed with condensation... I've walked into my shop several times and could tell exactly how much calcium chloride was in my rear tractor tires... Top of the tires dry and the bottom wet right at the fluid level Nice toy. I love old iron
Oh that's my favorite. I used to pray both valve stems we're at the top of the rim before I shut down my 504 international in case they puked. Calcium is great for traction but good god did it eat rims if it leaked.
@@TheOtherBill I saw that, was considering going to it on my Ford 5000 but just have them dry for now. I have noticed that it doesn't have quite as much bite though. If I do fill them it definitely won't be with calcium
@@theodoredugranrut8201 I was thinking miniature tractor - like large lawn mower size - electrically powered of course. So if you see a Tesla with a chunky trailer of batteries, it wasn't Elon's idea ! #range_extension
Nice unit!😉 With all that flywheel mass and the extra flywheel on the generator side, it seems to run *very* stable, even more so than a lot of Lister diesel setups I've seen. When you threw that 6kw load at it, and it started slowing down, it didn't even smoke like it was being loaded heavy. I wonder if your pump is going full stroke for the injection, (or maybe the injector is a bit clogged)? Maybe getting the slack out of the governor linkage will cure most of that. I doubt that the rings or valves are worn too badly, as easy as it started. Even if you put some oil down the intake, it will generally slip past the rings on the first couple rotations, if they're worn badly. Overall it looks and runs great for an almost 70 year old genset.😁⚡️👍
Cool old machine. That type of filter is called a "cuneo" filter, have no idea why. I was taught about them in aircraft maintenance school but have never seen one in actual use, 30 years later.
It's interesting you remember the name of that filter - I had worked on crude oil pumpers in the oilfields - in the marsh country in the deep South were oil started being drilled long ago - many of those old pumping stations were built in the 1920s - in the 80s many had never been upgraded - those old engines had those fuel filters with a bunch of disc - I never knew the name of them till you said the name lol
I could fall asleep listening to that old girl chugging away in the background. What a cool old machine.
I think it's great that people keep old engines like this running, they are quite fascinating to watch.
Great job from one Jersey boy to another. Due to my age, I’m now living in a condo in Florida so your videos are a way I can still tinker without the need for property, stored toys and dirty hands. None of these are a complaint but a relaxing joy!
Appreciate you checking them out Edgar!
There's nothing neater than listening to an old single cylinder compression-ignition motor toiling away! Thanks for posting this!
In July of 1967 my family visited Yosemite National Park in California, at the east entrance near Lee Vining. Since that location is many miles from the nearest power line they had a generator supplying power for the ranger station and the related buildings in the nearby buildings. It was a single-cylinder Diesel running at about 200 RPM with a belt drive to an 1800 RPM generator. What impressed me was the sound and the electrical output, 240 volts at about 200 amperes. The sound was a muffled chug, chug, chug that resonated in my chest lungs. Years later the Park Service expanded the services at that location and brought in a power line from Lee Vining.
I worked the offshore oilfields and mountain oilfields for decades - oil is often drilled for in very remote areas -
I had worked on many of those engines & generators - there 1000s still in service today - the muffler makes them very quiet - witty made engines / gens into the 1980s - most areas that there in service have 100s of yrs of replacement parts - there re-ringed every 5 yrs
Grew up using belt driven threshers powered by 40s tractors and small engines like this. Listening to that little lady croon reminds me of good times, hard work, and satisfaction in what you accomplished! People were generally smart enough to stay clear of flywheels, drive lines and other hazardous parts! Warning labels were not needed. There was always the one guy that got complacent. Usually happened before procreation, therefore the gene pool was saved! Now look what we have! Argh!!!
Very nice complete set. Good to see that you kept the original look and not overpainted it as a glossy machine, but just clean and nice to look at. Thats how I like to see these old machines.
The real look of an old working engine. Looking at the Hz-meter it runs quite stable.Hz is the indication of right rpms. Maybe the magnetic field has somewhat losses his strenght, just keep it running and will come back.
I like that you're not afraid to make the old engine work. A lot of shows I go to, people never run more than a small water pump or whatever, and the hit and miss gas engines only fire every once in a while. Like they're afraid to put a good load on it. This is cool to hear them with a real load. LOL. Be safe!
That is one well balanced engine. I've seen so many horizontally mounted engines that looked like they were going to shake the cart apart. Yours just sits there and happily runs so smooth.
ScubaTiger - They must have been standing on wagons with rubber wheels then.
On those engines the crank shaft has the counter balance - the run far smother than when the counter balance was in the fly wheel also after they started casting or bolting the counter balance into the crank shaft - the could safely increase the HP and speed - early engines turned slower as not to brake the crank shaft - that's a common problem when the counter balance is on the fly wheel -
In the 80s there were 1000s of witty engines in serves putting voltage on pipe lined -
They were run on diesel crude
Cool to look inside the engine. It’s like looking inside the belly of a beast. It even growls when you turn the crankshaft. Awesome!
Its a breath of fresh air to see someone dedicate soo much time to keeping history alive!! Thanks
SMOOOOTH.... I could just listen to this run for hours!!!
Nice job . I love old engines like this . So simple compared to what we have today .
I run a 2007 VW Touareg V6 tdi . Service is easy oil and filters etc . Any other issues you have to connect it to a computer and see what's wrong .
I've got an old generac generator I was given . That wouldn't start . Got it running last summer . Making power too . Immensely satisfying ressurecting old machinery .
Very cool! Thanks for watching!
My Dad started work for Oil Well Supply Co in 1937 out of the Ellinwood,Ks store. He was the field man for “OILWELL” pumping units and Witte engines. As a kid seen many new B & C models and later the little 98RC engine come in crates and then go out to the customers.
Witty was still manufacturing engines in the 80s - I've seen many that are still in service - there many that are used to keep voltage on pipe lines - it increase pipelines service life up to 3 times longer - they keep a negative charge on pipe lines
@@able880 I am now working on the F28, 32, & 42 model engines. Looking for F70 and 90.
@@gaildimick1831 I'm a third generation mechanic electrician - my grandfather started working on stationary engines in the very early 1900s --
It was before AC generation took over - he started when many power plants were 110 DC -
Even the French quarter in New Orleans had a 110v DC power plant on Bourbon street that powered the French Quarter when my grand father was a kid -
It was a hybrid power plant - they charged a large Battey bank 2 hours in the morning and evening - it was a 110v DC plant -
witty engines were - from the begging my grandfather spoke of them as an excelent engine for driving generators in the oilfields - it's cool that you have some -
@@able880 well you have a Heritage you can be proud of. Keep up the mechanics, it’s fun and profitable.
@@gaildimick1831 I'm retired now - I started in the oilfield in the early 70s - I had uncle's that were in the communications business also I learned electronic at a young age -
My knowledged was recognized from my start about gens and solid-state drive systems - back then we bought old retired locomotives and up graded the engines fro 2 MW to 6 MW sets then we changed the traction motors over from being controlled by resistor Banks to being controlled by solid state DC drives - in the oil field those guys are coined SCR electriciins - you have to be good to do that kind of work - also the crews will ride those guys into the ground if they can -
It was as if I had been pre seasoned to work in the oilfields -
Also I started at a perfect time - I had the knowledge of the old systems and the new systems -
Growing up I was taught all about the old hybrid systems also one of my uncle's was on a sub during WW2 -
There were still old farm houses in the 60s that still.had the 32 volt farm light plants - I remember a farmer that refused grid power - he said he could get pole power for 35 cents a kw or he could generate his own power for 1.5 cents a kw - diesel was about 10 cents a gallon for Farmers - his generator had a heavy low speed engine so I guess it generated 12 kws per gallon of fuel it burned to charge his house battery's -
I remember those old 32 volt frigidare fridges that were in farm houses back then also the motor driven inverters so they could have 110 v AC appliances lol -
Today when I tell guys that some of those engines generated 27 KWs per gallon of fuel there astonished - - running slow there is time to burn all the fuel -
That Sir would make Jay Leno proud. So glad you spend your time keeping these parts of history running. 👍👍👌
jay leno is a puppet, so are you.
@@jacobpoucher wtf do you mean?
@@jacobpoucher What kind of assholishness is that? Rude.
I bet the neighbors love you during power outages. That thing sound like a Mack truck. Pretty cool machine thou. Excellent restore job!
My grandfather and I drove up the Alaska highway in the summer of 1965. The background noise of an old one lung genset could be heard in every little outpost in the sticks before electrification reached everywhere... Brings back memories
There still many of those engines in service west of the Mississippi River - there still portions of the western US that don't have grid power - those are set.up to charge battery's in remote areas were there is no grid - witty made engines into the 1980s or so
That is so sweet to hear that classic diesel engine.run like she did back in the day I elect you as gen tech of the century thank you young man for bringing classic gen set's back to life
I don’t know why it took TH-cam this long to recommenced this channel to me, but I’m glad they finally did. Instant subscriber here!
It is fun to see old engines run ...I like the big vertical one you showed a few years back
You do not have to be afraid of power cuts when you have it standing in the shed, a beautiful construction to own.
The Amish would love this ..... My Great Grandfather had a Delco system on his Farm and house.. Had a bunch of batteries start the gasoline engine once per day and charge the batteries then had lights in the house at night no need for kersene lamps ..
I find your programs fascinating, your descriptions and work is fascinating. You are so lucky in the States having access to ex-Service generators some of which look almost new, In South Africa we have no access to anything like this! Thanks for your efforts.
👍 Danke fürs Hochladen!
👍 Thanks for uploading!
👍 Very good and beautiful, thank you!
👍 Sehr gut und schön, danke!
nice setup, she runs great. lets see a modern genset run in a 100 years. never happen. new stuff fails sitting in the garage.
cool video.im a diesel mechanic so i love this stuff.
It would lull me to sleep in no time. What a great sound. Thanks for keeping the old machines running.
I love to see old antique machines working. I have a 1938 Singer Industrial sewing machine model number 111W113 for leather work, it came with an antique electric motor with a clutch mechanism that works opposite of how one works in a car. I operate the sewing machine using bicycle pedals. The electric motor would make the sewing machine run faster than I can sew.
That is awesome, and very good on the repowering
Awesome old machine, seems to be running pretty good for being 80 years old, pretty sure the stuff being made now days wont be running in 20 years let alone eighty. Simple and well built, wish we made things like this now!
If I could give you more thumbs up I would , to day I agree is a understatement.
Those style engines are still made and sold world wide look up lister CS engines - if you need a lead let me know - hey have a listerroid version - it's a clone of the original lister - but has been up graded to roller bearings - also the counter balance is in the crank -
They sell them as air compressors - with a kit to change them over to a diesel engine -
If your mechanical it's easy to do -
Although the burn clean there not EPA compliant - there certified for CHP units in Europe - that is combined heating and power - homes use the during the winter to generate heat during the winter and the power generate is used in the home or sold back to the grid -
There is a lister CHP in a hotel in Poland that has been in service for 90 yrs - I've seen the old brass bushing type in the oilfields running with a quarter inch cleares at the mains that had been like that for a long time - brass bushing are perfered in dirty or Sandy areas
I could listen to that bad boy chuff along at full load all day long. Actually want something similar to this to actually work when I get my Empire of Dirt fully set up since 3-phase and 240v supplies are hard to come by. I do want an open case though, wanna see the counterweights, rod, et-al whirling around in there. It'd run my shop air, my lathe, mill, maybe some lineshaft items that don't need to be super precise like bench grinders or bandsaws.
I am very impressed with your intrest and intelligent on the antique engines and generators and keep up the good work you are a smart young man
That is a sweet motor, i loved the lack of shake, to often they just seem to want to walk away sometimes run, beautiful set up.
The older engines with the counter balance in the fly wheel do walk all over - the newer engines have the counter balance at the crank jernol and vibrate very little -
Man, that thing is a beast. Sure seems kind of archaic for 1941...looks more like 1900-1920 and it looks like it came right out of a black and white 1920 catalog. Still, I am a bit surprised that by 1941 it's not powered by a flathead four cylinder engine. Of course that wouldn't be half as much fun. That would of course change the footprint and maybe it's all about being a diesel vs gasoline. Nicely done!
I want to say that that is a great running engine. I just came back from our hit miss engine show in cabool MO. This weekend. I had my drag saws and maytag engines. We all had a great time and a safe time to. I do like the engine and the generator it sounds great and runs good. Great video.
Dude, that little dial panel with that little lamp over it just made me feel so comfy, can't even say why.
Surprisingly little vibration! Running nice!
Beautiful old machine, and great video presentation! Thanks! Much enjoyed.
That engine does run nicely and in such original looking order. You have a nice one there.
That's a lovely clean running engine, I've worked on engines 20 years younger than that and don't run as well ,very impressive, keep it up
Love this old iron...can't wait for the world to get sane again......
Same here love the way they sound could fall asleep to them running
We were taught to keep the fuel tanks full in storage on our aircraft to prevent condensate. The manner is , I believe, the reverse of your description, but same effect. Pull in hot humid air, cool, condense. Voila - water! Repeat daily!
Very interesting, I watched a demonstration with a hit and miss engine and how it matained Rpm at different loads just hit more often . You have a very nice demonstrator . Good job
This was a masterpiece! Very thorough. And as always, cant thank you enough for dedicating your time to us in the form of these videos.
What a beautiful setup, Mike! That Witte is one of my favorite engines that you have. What a bull! Thank you for sharing this wonderful display!
What a lovely old piece, great job!!!
I love how almost all of the controls are inches away from that gigantic spinning flywheel. Makes you wonder how many operators these things maimed back in the day...
Glade I’m not only one taken care of these old girls. I have lots of them. Saved most from going to scrap yard.
Out of all your gen sets, this has to be one of my favorites! Love the sound too. Glad finally see a decent video on it! I was really hoping to make the hike up to the Jacktown summer show this year( would be my first time there) and maybe see this thing, but I'm not so sure that's going to happen this year sadly. Ohh Well!
12 hp and what, like 120,000 ft lbs of torque? What a beast!
I have a little droop too. The wife calls it "brewer's droop".
Engine worn out or not, it is pure magic to see the engineering that went into the making of this old girl.
The cart you build is really nice. I love the fact that it's 100% functional, but it also looks aesthetically pleasing. You guys have exceptional eyes for creating really nice looking machines, be they show pieces or just fun around the yard, bummer that you don't have more time for them, but eh, that's life, right? Again, the cart looks really nice.
I bet your neighbors love you during blackouts!
Oh man when you finally got it running.. That beautiful sound, I could fall asleep to the sound of that engine running.
Modern big box store 8k-watt generator mean time between failure -100 hours. Whitte MTBF... I'm still here, 70 years and counting junior. Eat it!
This is from back in the day when there was no nanny state, men were men and flywheels didn’t need a guard lol. Sure runs really smooth.
That's why all the old timers were missing fingers and limbs lol.
Boomer
The good old days of no safety net, low safety standards, lower life expectancy, and being a man meant to show how little you valued life. Make America great again!
@@Dogpool and be an unhappy regulated sissy. You young ‘uns never lived your lives to the full. Regrets
Just great to hear her run, unless you were trying to take a nap! 8-)) LOL!
I am amazed at how clean the exhaust is. I would have thought that a might smoke a fair bit given its age.
All those slow turning engine burn clean - they also can have up to a 27:1 fuel efficiency - at slower speeds there is time to burn all the fuel or even the oil that slips by the rings - many in the oilfields are run on diesel crude that's about #6;fuel oil - that one will run at 14:1 efficiency or so - that's 14000 watts per gallon of fuel burned - they rarely smoke -
If they smoke the valves will carbon and it's difficult to start them - it's easy to change out the rings -
That is awesome good to see people still interested in such things
You got the condensation issue backwards. A cold tank warming up will force air out of the tank so no problem there. The problem arises at night when the warm tank cools and draws in humid air which then condenses on the surfaces as they cool. It is hard to prevent as you need a vent in order to get the fuel out, but, as you say, keeping the tank as nearly full as possible is one of the best defenses.
Nice running old "WITTY" I LIKE THAT!
That fuel filter that was on the engine is a Mueller type filter. They were practically standard equipment on heating oil burners from the 1930’s through the 1960’s.
Super neat! Thanks for sharing this. I enjoy it at the show in the past. That early type fuel filter with the brass disks is very interesting. Hopefully some fall shows!
Cool engine! Thanks for sharing. Could listen to them run all day
They make one way valves you could add to the fuel cap. That would prevent the water from coming in while still allowing the tank to vent. Something like a simple dirt bike tank vent would probably get the job done.
That filter with the shims is a Cuno filter. In 1945 they were used on the Alco 539 diesel engine for oil filtration.
The sound of that Witte diesel reminds me of a YB southern cross diesel. There is nothing like old iron 👍
Go one step further and run that on free vegi-oil. One deep fryer could run this for a week.
Beautiful engine/genny thanks for posting.
That is a really cool well built generator but I am glad that I can pickup and carry my 2000 watt Generator .. My 8,000 is on two wheels wiht handles.. It almost takes two people to put it in the back of a pick up ..
Would be neat to seem him open the main breaker on his house.. then run his whole house wiht air conditioning
There's something about a single cylinder diesel engine, just music to my ears 😊
Same with the hit and miss engines👌👌👌👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Hi from the uk. What a superb engine. Love your videos. You have a great way of presenting and keeping it interesting. Good on ya.
Great video. As for the filter type that is actually pretty common in marine application up til the 60’s and even 70’s. The tug I work on was built in 1958 and it had some oil and fuel filters of that style. They have been mostly replaced by standard modern filters but there is still a couple left
Most of the older engines had a tube or sock filters - it was a cotton sleeve over a mesh wire -
You wash them out and reuse them - the cotton sleeve for a fuel filter last for several decades -
hey that case forklift i found on the tractor models if you swap the 2 plugwires on the 2 center cylinders it ran better..it says the right fire order but it really does run better when you swap the plugwires over on the 2 center cylinders on that forklift..thought id share what i found, dont know why it runs better but it does 👍👍
Has a nice healthy chug to it. Not too dissimilar to an old Lister.
Great video, love these old machines. Thanks
Never thought of using an air compressor silencer and filter element on my old engines. Good thing being I have a few laying around 👍
80 years old and runs cleaner than most of the brodozers on the road.
What lovely crisp sounding engine. Superb!
best wishes from George
Gotta love an ole Witte .. ENJOYED Mike !!
Your Racor is a 500 model. The disc type filter for the fuel and oil, where common on milling machines of that vintage as well.
Best wishes
I used to make ( help make) those separators for Racor manufacturing of Modesto California
That type fuel filter was common and lot of military trucks in the forties and fifties even into the sixties.
Love that fork lift . We need a video on that please.
i think i had a ford tempo powered by the same engine. Man what a power HORSE! got almost 1 smile per gallon of golden grape juice!
We had that on the homestead ran a three-foot circular buzz saw flat belt-driven.
Suprised to see you have used copper for the fuel lines. Due to the presence of sulphur in diesel copper is a poor choice. Beautiful engine I love it!
This is awesome. Thank you for sharing this beautiful Piece of History. I like old Diesel Engines. Greetings from Germany :-)
These were oilfield engines, they would run several jacks where electricity was not available. A fella would stop by every so often check the oil and fill with fuel.
load banks are cool but mustie1 will plug in stuff like heat guns and lights, some people dont understand load banks and would be more impressed with lights or drills plugged in and working. love your vids keep up the great work
mustie is an idiot
It's 30 years older than me but it runs a whole lot better than I do. I think I'm due for a rebuild 😃
fillg Maybe not a full rebuild.......you might just need re-bushed! LOL.
Cheers!
Whipple
Just needs a handy-dandy crank holder & it's good to go!
I’ve seen those stacked filters on Falk reduction gearboxes on a tugboat. We had always called the “cutter”. Like twist the cutter a turn once a watch
great video. i'd watch that engine run for an hour straight at a show.
A guy would be amazed with condensation... I've walked into my shop several times and could tell exactly how much calcium chloride was in my rear tractor tires... Top of the tires dry and the bottom wet right at the fluid level
Nice toy. I love old iron
You can see those 'frost lines' in some cold winter days too, can't you?
Oh that's my favorite. I used to pray both valve stems we're at the top of the rim before I shut down my 504 international in case they puked. Calcium is great for traction but good god did it eat rims if it leaked.
@@dangoldbach6570 That's why beet juice is so popular now.
@@TheOtherBill I saw that, was considering going to it on my Ford 5000 but just have them dry for now. I have noticed that it doesn't have quite as much bite though. If I do fill them it definitely won't be with calcium
I'd suggest modifying the drawbar so it can be towed - with a home made electric tractor powered by this gen set !
That would be great, wild but great idea. Good thinking
@@theodoredugranrut8201 I was thinking miniature tractor - like large lawn mower size - electrically powered of course.
So if you see a Tesla with a chunky trailer of batteries, it wasn't Elon's idea ! #range_extension
Diesel-electric tractor, not bad
I've got a Hercules-Ajax lathe with a stacked oil filter on it, OEM, 1964 Japanese.
What a neat set up.
Love the sound and looks cool besides !
Sounds real sweet when she starts doing some work
Beautiful gen-set and720 rpm is a convenient speed for a generator.
Nice unit!😉 With all that flywheel mass and the extra flywheel on the generator side, it seems to run *very* stable, even more so than a lot of Lister diesel setups I've seen. When you threw that 6kw load at it, and it started slowing down, it didn't even smoke like it was being loaded heavy. I wonder if your pump is going full stroke for the injection, (or maybe the injector is a bit clogged)? Maybe getting the slack out of the governor linkage will cure most of that. I doubt that the rings or valves are worn too badly, as easy as it started. Even if you put some oil down the intake, it will generally slip past the rings on the first couple rotations, if they're worn badly. Overall it looks and runs great for an almost 70 year old genset.😁⚡️👍
If you notice the fuel pump rack does not move when he applied more load. His governor is not working.
If the rings are wore to were it lacks compression or the valves don't seat - that engine will be imposable to start
Lovely old machine. I'd love to make a miniature version.
They have miniture vertions on the net that run
Cool old machine. That type of filter is called a "cuneo" filter, have no idea why. I was taught about them in aircraft maintenance school but have never seen one in actual use, 30 years later.
It's interesting you remember the name of that filter - I had worked on crude oil pumpers in the oilfields - in the marsh country in the deep South were oil started being drilled long ago - many of those old pumping stations were built in the 1920s - in the 80s many had never been upgraded - those old engines had those fuel filters with a bunch of disc - I never knew the name of them till you said the name lol
Mike, there is supposedly an NOS Witte injector pump on eBay. Thought I'd give you a heads up in case you're looking for one.