My Dad was a stoker on a Sentinel in the 30’s as a Teenager for a while, he ran from Birmingham to Holyhead , on one stretch of the A5 from Telford ‘Crackley Bank’ to Weston under lizard he reckons they could hit 60mph , also far faster than most cars of the day ...... 40 odd years later his youngest son slipped streamed coaches on the same stretch on a Honda SS50.... never quite reaching 60 though ! 🤪
@@c.lynnmiller5677 That is actually a credible one. If not a real personal experience, lifted from a period memoir. Birmingham was a major economic centre of the Empire, so its roads were much better than Norfolk, for example. Traffic levels were also very low and there were no speed limits in the countryside, so you could go as quickly as you wanted
@@BigCroca What Neither of those buggers mention is that you have to search for the Second Kryten. Presenter of Scrap Heap Challenge, Robert Llewellyn. His Channel is called Fully Charged
My family had a business in Somerset cutting and sawing timber for pit props in the 20s and 30s . They had a Sentinel to carry the props to Watchet for shipping over to South Wales. My dad recalled how they were a bit lively on start up if you weren't careful. One day someone started off a bit sharpish and the wagon leapt forward and crushed a brand new motorbike. Luckily nobody was injured. Their business was almost totally steam powered with a Burrell traction engine and a Robey stationary engine. My Grandfather being the youngest son had to be up first to get steam up for the day.
I remember seeing one of these steam powered lorries as a kid, I would have been about ten, 1957, was fully loaded, cricklewood Broadway, went off down the A5, might have been on its last journey
The Sentinel was steam's answer to the diesel or petrol truck, by the 1930s making big inroads into the traditional steam traction industry. The Sentinel's design was revolutionary but the steam truck had some *major* disadvantages when compared to the diesel truck: The steam truck was a lot heavier than the equivalent diesel truck which meant that it couldn't carry as much payload before exceeding the gross vehicle weight, it would need a crew of 2, increasing overheads and its range was limited by the water and coal capacity. I accept that a diesel truck also has a finite range before needing refuelling... As a specialist work vehicle, you quite rightly highlight its advantages but as a general carrier, I think it was something of a blind alley. E R Foden's board spent a long time discussing the merits of diesel and steam trucks, ending with a parting of the ways, Foden and ERF companies resulting. Fodens continued to make steam trucks but eventually bowed to the inevitable and followed ERF down the diesel truck manufacturing road. Don't get me wrong, I'm a big fan of steam traction and it's always great to see and hear it in action.
And steam is wasteful. It only uses about 7% of the fuel for traction, the rest goes up the chimney. A diesel engine comes closer to ≈30%. Then there's the extra weight of the boiler, and all the extra fuel and all the water you have to take along. But, yes, steam traction is, well, cool! (Or hot...).😄
@@cieludbjrg4706 Diesel engine thermal efficiency today is 45% in car engines, compared to 35% for the best petrol engines. Two stroke marine diesels can exceed 50% thermal efficiency. More than 3 times the thermal efficiency of the best steam engines.
On TH-cam I'm just a burnt out meathead but I was an electrical engineer once. This was Fascinating to me. I worked at a Steam driven Power Plant way back. They recycled the steam back into water thru basically large radiators. I subscribed.
A Sentinel steam wagon (6 wheeler) has been converted to serve ice cream from in the quarry park in Shrewsbury. Absolutely gorgeous machine and great to see it earning a living all these years later.
They were basically steam locomotives adapted for the roads. that method of tar and gravel is still used in the US. only it's called chip sealing. I owned a five ton 1964 Ford F 750 truck. that was originally used for chip sealing by a paving company. the truck it was three axel tractor that pulled a trailer. that carried the tar the boiler and a system for laying down the tar. which would be followed by a dump truck that would spread the gavel. it took me forever to get all the tar off that thing. chipping it off and using solvent. but I got most all of it off.
@@kevinpeters6709 External combustion engines have lower operating temperatures than the fire itself so are inherently less efficient than internet combustion engines, typically around 10-20% efficient, average gasoline engines are a bit better than that, and the most advanced diesel engine are at about 55% efficient... electric can be around 90% efficeitn at converting stored electricity to motion but total efficiency depends on the power source, A solar system could be somewhere around 15--20% efficient at converting solar energy to EV motion... in the best case of only loosing a few percent in the inverter and charging. if using Grid power they would be some percent less efficient than the nuclear/coal/natural gas or whatever grid supply is.
ages have past, since these machines had been coveted, no longer seen as the wonderous piece of human ingenuity that they are. stained and replaced, rusted and worn, these machines wither in silence and suffering. yet even in the cold, uncaring world, unable to see the perfection in even the oldest of machines. there are the faithful, those that know the centuries of curiosity, and hard work, in each of these relics. these faithful few that rip away the cruel chains of rust, and remind these hardworking machines. that no matter how old they are, they will always be the glorious creations of mankind, deserving of respect and admiration. praise the wheel, praise progress
I had the privilege of riding in a Sentinal "Waggon" at meet sponsored by The Steam Automobile Club of America back in the 1970s. We got to crawl around it as well.It felt really powerful on the road. We were the Young Turks of the SACA, designing vehicles on dune buggy chassis with discarded outboard motor engines modified for steam operation. We didn't change the world, but sure came to understand what 'live steam" means.
Just the job for wartime use when petrol was in short supply and rationed. Fred Dibnah, the famous steeplejack, loved everything steam and would love to have driven one. Maybe he did. The Sentinel must be a valuable collector's item these days.
Btw: Wondering if steam trains cant be "good" in few years. Same reason. "diesel" is bad, fossil fuel. But steam engine can run on "renewable" wood, straw, everything flamable.
It’s actually from a programme that was on the Discovery Channel a few years ago when they used to show proper docs. Chris Barrie used to chart the history of vehicles such as lorries from the earliest ones to todays modern hi tech vehicles.
The Sentinel was successful not only in Britain. Between 1925 and 1935, Škoda Plzeň licence-built 163 Škoda Sentinels in different versions, including a bus. The Old Machines Museum (Muzeum starých strojů) in Žamberk (Czechia) has one, and a couple times a year, they bring out all their steam toys, including the Sentinel, and fire them up. It's really amazing to see (and hear!) this beauty running around.
Unfortunately, Elizabeth the steam bus is no longer in Whitby. The council wanted to charge for the parking and were generally completely unsupportive of the great tourist attraction that was Elizabeth the steam bus. I travelled on her a few times and got to know Vernon, the owner and driver. When he told me he was giving up, he was breaking his heart. Thanks Whitby Council!
@@macjim The last I heard was Elizabeth was in Weston Super Mare. That was a few years ago. I used to be in Whitby regularly as I am a coach tour driver. That's how I got to know Vernon, he also had a vintage charabanc.
@@alistairshaw3206 thank you for that info. Yes, I saw it once in Whitby at the harbour between runs. I was just off the heritage train and didn't have time to take a journey, thinking I'll do it another time... That's life. At least I have a photograph of it simmering away, awaiting its next trip.
That lorry (and a similar 4 wheeler) visited the Cholsey & Wallingford Railway in 2019. I think we are looking at having them visit again. On a sadder but unrelated note, the grand white building by the Thames seen in two of the shots was gutted by fire a couple of months back :-(
Dunno about your country. But the most powerful truck on Australian roads (talking horsepower. But I assume it has the most torque too) is the Scania 770. It has 2730ft-lbs. So not near twice as much. But still more and that’s crazy impressive
G’day, there was a steam driven truck in Tasmania when I was there. The engineer looking after it said that it would wheel stand under power. It was retired in a display.
If you would like to see a working Sentinel Steam Wagon, and perhaps ride on it, the Grampian Transport Museum, in Alford, Aberdeenshire possesses Scotland’s only working example.
DUDE, just the simple fact that its RIMMER hosting this just made it about 10,000 times more AWESOME.....LMAO. It also helps that Jim there sounds just like Michael Caine (Batman's Butler)
So back in the late 1920s a farmer from the UK moved to my area of California. He bought a massive plot of land that nowadays makes up the majority of auburn CA. He brought over a ton of his equipment from the u.k. including an old steam engine he used to haul the product into town. His great great great grandson still has the steam engine sitting in his front yard rotting away.
It's essentially a land mark for when you're pulling into town to let ppl know to slow down. On the other side of town where the property ended, there's a 75 k20 letting you know which exit has the best pies
There were still a few heading through Hampshire towards Southampton Docks in the 1960s… about two or three percent of all the lorries…. And cruising around 45-50 mph before the motorway.
This Michigander wants one, too! Could you imagine pulling into The Southeast Old Threshers Reunion behind the wheel of one of these bad boys? You would be THE talk of the town!
The service road outside my home is concrete, laid in large rectangles, with a layer of Macadam over it made later. I never knew it was added to give extra grip as I presumed it was a later form of road surface. The concrete is still good today but has raised ridges at the borders of the concrete joins which could be harsh to drive if it was a main road. Excellent road.
horsepower has almost zero relation to the actual energy throughput or max load of a system, it's especially deceptive in steam engines since the way it is calculated is pretty much explicitly designed to lowball on anything that isn't trying to crank up it's RPM as high as it will go and bleed energy out to do things loosing max speed in the process (steam engines are the exact opposite) the other thing they are deceptive on is that they basically don't have a max torque: even a tiny little handheld steam engine that only processes a few watts of eat into kinetic potential will just keep pushing harder and harder until some part of the system finally breaks, make it sturdy enough to do the job and it will push that truck...slowly. presumably the uselessness of the "unit" of "measurement" (horsepower does not actually qualify as either a unit or a measurement) as a frame of reference for work done is on purpose because you _also_ have a near-impossible time finding numbers for commercial gas engines that give actual energy throughput...hell, even comparing horsepower to horsepower is usually completely useless since that nonsense number means entirely different things in different energy systems to the point where it's not even the same thing in two identical cars under noticeably different conditions. it is a unit of measurement made up by a salesman in order to sound more convincing when lying to their prospective customers and it has _never_ stopped being exactly that.
whoops! forgot a part there: boiler volume matters a lot: more volume = less required pressure to reach the same torque = lower standing heat required to reach the same torque. a tiny boiler would need to get HOT to push that truck even in a "well, it's moving...sorta" manner.
Surely an S6?? These Sentinels were fabulous - some of the last steam lorries (the Foden O Type, in particular) were really fast - at a time when commercials were limited to 20 mph in the UK.
The modern version would be an artic tractor rather than a rigid six (or eight). It would have a mechanical stoker and water in saddletanks beween the axles with capacity for 250 km. Because of the extra weight in comparison with a diesel, it would have three (or even four) axles giving the same axle load as a diesel. The weight doesn't matter to the steam engine, which has ten times the torque of a diesel.
That's very cool to run thoses old timer machines ^^ dont forget the steam was the begining of every self run mechanic , 2022 we use steam to product electricity ! I want to see thoses machines in real life real time with my eyes not from youtube ! Hello from Belgium ^^
When I mentiion a steam lorry people think I'm bonkers however, an abiding memory from my childhood in London is of a Coal truck chuffing down the street in the very early fifties. I'm told that this is not possible and I've never been able to find evidence of it! Coal in that area was delivered by North Thames Gas.
Imagine the billboards of that age “Don’t drive and shovel coal”, “Shoveling at high speed kills”, “You can afford the fines stop shoveling”
"shovel the coal, don't roll it!"
On low traffic and rural roads I could easily do that 1 person.
If your in a hole, stop shovelling?
"Don't drink and shovel."
ha ha ha funny 😀😁😂😎
Mar Felton Productions music in the background, haha.
lol I will never not associate it with imovie music because that's one of the short music tracks you can use in imovie well spotted by the way
RTCW
I was waiting for mark to be the stoker when i heard it.
First thing I noticed
@@ScienceAlliance What's the name of the track?
My Dad was a stoker on a Sentinel in the 30’s as a Teenager for a while, he ran from Birmingham to Holyhead , on one stretch of the A5 from Telford ‘Crackley Bank’ to Weston under lizard he reckons they could hit 60mph , also far faster than most cars of the day ...... 40 odd years later his youngest son slipped streamed coaches on the same stretch on a Honda SS50.... never quite reaching 60 though ! 🤪
i though your dad sent to australia...
That’s a nice little BS story you got there.
@@c.lynnmiller5677 Your existence is BS.
@@c.lynnmiller5677 That is actually a credible one. If not a real personal experience, lifted from a period memoir. Birmingham was a major economic centre of the Empire, so its roads were much better than Norfolk, for example. Traffic levels were also very low and there were no speed limits in the countryside, so you could go as quickly as you wanted
@@c.lynnmiller5677 Hard to believe people know other people in real life isn't it?
That puddle of tar looks like chocolate syrup with peanut crumbles on it. A forbidden snack indeed.
It was even on an ice cream bar!!!
i would not be surprised if it was actualy chocolate and peanuts lol
Maybe it is?
Ok. Yeah. You're right.
@@berlin36moto oooohhhhhh noooooooooo
Bet the farmers used to love the local steam racers theivin Barnaby's water whenever they weren't lookin
@Emilio Aryan Fuck off spammer
@Owen Wilson Fuck off spammer collaborator
@Emilio Aryan why are you commenting this on a video about a steam lorry?
@@barryscott3327 Because when I watch a video about 1930s steam wagons it naturally causes me to think "Hmm, but can it hack an Instagram account?"
@@nemo6686 What is that not what you use your steam wagons for?
Do you use it for something boring, like "transportation"?
As a Red Dwarf fan I must say what a thrill it is to see Mr. Barrie presenting this piece of British heritage for our enjoyment.
I thought his fucking voice was familiar. Smoke me a kipper.
Can't wait for him to get to Victorian era power poles.
" Steering and stoking was a 2 man operation...and this is my stoker Kryten..."
"OH!...Why thank you sir!.."
Kryten is on another youtube channel about cars, but he never acts like Kryten there 😥
@@lightdark00 don’t say stuff like that if you’re not going to bother naming or linking the video/channel.
@@kishascape Oh come on it should be easy to find. Just searching for his real name might find the channel.
You’re lying
@@BigCroca What Neither of those buggers mention is that you have to search for the Second Kryten. Presenter of Scrap Heap Challenge, Robert Llewellyn. His Channel is called Fully Charged
That 3 axel configuration is very appealing to the eye.
its pretty standard even today, single axle steer with either bogie drive or a single drive and lazy axle
They also came ina 4 axle version
“This is definitely a two man operation”
Zooms out to British Bill Murray
"Jim Sarney" is about the most English working-man's name ever, too.
My family had a business in Somerset cutting and sawing timber for pit props in the 20s and 30s . They had a Sentinel to carry the props to Watchet for shipping over to South Wales. My dad recalled how they were a bit lively on start up if you weren't careful. One day someone started off a bit sharpish and the wagon leapt forward and crushed a brand new motorbike. Luckily nobody was injured. Their business was almost totally steam powered with a Burrell traction engine and a Robey stationary engine. My Grandfather being the youngest son had to be up first to get steam up for the day.
I remember seeing one of these steam powered lorries as a kid, I would have been about ten, 1957, was fully loaded, cricklewood Broadway, went off down the A5, might have been on its last journey
i'M from 1977 too "young" but , i'm happy to know and watch thoses oldtimer engines run again !
The Sentinel was steam's answer to the diesel or petrol truck, by the 1930s making big inroads into the traditional steam traction industry. The Sentinel's design was revolutionary but the steam truck had some *major* disadvantages when compared to the diesel truck: The steam truck was a lot heavier than the equivalent diesel truck which meant that it couldn't carry as much payload before exceeding the gross vehicle weight, it would need a crew of 2, increasing overheads and its range was limited by the water and coal capacity. I accept that a diesel truck also has a finite range before needing refuelling...
As a specialist work vehicle, you quite rightly highlight its advantages but as a general carrier, I think it was something of a blind alley. E R Foden's board spent a long time discussing the merits of diesel and steam trucks, ending with a parting of the ways, Foden and ERF companies resulting. Fodens continued to make steam trucks but eventually bowed to the inevitable and followed ERF down the diesel truck manufacturing road.
Don't get me wrong, I'm a big fan of steam traction and it's always great to see and hear it in action.
Not to mention how long it took to get up steam in the morning ! You can’t just turn the key and off you go with a steam wagon !
Seems like they would put more than 30 miles of water capacity. I guess they just weren't going long distances those days.
And steam is wasteful. It only uses about 7% of the fuel for traction, the rest goes up the chimney. A diesel engine comes closer to ≈30%.
Then there's the extra weight of the boiler, and all the extra fuel and all the water you have to take along.
But, yes, steam traction is, well, cool! (Or hot...).😄
@@cieludbjrg4706 Diesel engine thermal efficiency today is 45% in car engines, compared to 35% for the best petrol engines.
Two stroke marine diesels can exceed 50% thermal efficiency. More than 3 times the thermal efficiency of the best steam engines.
@@hiyadroogs Today, yes. But back then 30% efficiency was more likely for a diesel
On TH-cam I'm just a burnt out meathead but I was an electrical engineer once. This was Fascinating to me. I worked at a Steam driven Power Plant way back. They recycled the steam back into water thru basically large radiators. I subscribed.
2:44 "darn it, no drinking for me today" 🤣
😂😂🤣🤣
I had a pickup that leaked about the same amount of water, but I don't think it was supposed to.
A Sentinel steam wagon (6 wheeler) has been converted to serve ice cream from in the quarry park in Shrewsbury. Absolutely gorgeous machine and great to see it earning a living all these years later.
Haha Jim was definitely miles away when the camera panned to him! Must have been the relaxing sound of the steam lorry.
I've had the pleasure of driving a Foden steam lorry. Amazing experience...... So much torque and turns so many heads on the road!
They were basically steam locomotives adapted for the roads. that method of tar and gravel is still used in the US. only it's called chip sealing. I owned a five ton 1964 Ford F 750 truck. that was originally used for chip sealing by a paving company. the truck it was three axel tractor that pulled a trailer. that carried the tar the boiler and a system for laying down the tar. which would be followed by a dump truck that would spread the gavel. it took me forever to get all the tar off that thing. chipping it off and using solvent. but I got most all of it off.
This machine is incredible, I would loved to have one today.
You still could if you really wanted it
Why?
Imagine one automated and converted for fuel oil as a motor home
@@kevinpeters6709 External combustion engines have lower operating temperatures than the fire itself so are inherently less efficient than internet combustion engines, typically around 10-20% efficient, average gasoline engines are a bit better than that, and the most advanced diesel engine are at about 55% efficient... electric can be around 90% efficeitn at converting stored electricity to motion but total efficiency depends on the power source, A solar system could be somewhere around 15--20% efficient at converting solar energy to EV motion... in the best case of only loosing a few percent in the inverter and charging. if using Grid power they would be some percent less efficient than the nuclear/coal/natural gas or whatever grid supply is.
@@Wingnut353 well.. efficiency
ages have past, since these machines had been coveted, no longer seen as the wonderous piece of human ingenuity that they are.
stained and replaced, rusted and worn, these machines wither in silence and suffering.
yet even in the cold, uncaring world, unable to see the perfection in even the oldest of machines.
there are the faithful, those that know the centuries of curiosity, and hard work, in each of these relics.
these faithful few that rip away the cruel chains of rust, and remind these hardworking machines.
that no matter how old they are, they will always be the glorious creations of mankind, deserving of respect and admiration.
praise the wheel, praise progress
My grandad used to drive em back in the 1930s in South Wales, and had some good stories to tell of the sentinel trucks, and how well they used to run.
I had the privilege of riding in a Sentinal "Waggon" at meet sponsored by The Steam Automobile Club of America back in the 1970s. We got to crawl around it as well.It felt really powerful on the road. We were the Young Turks of the SACA, designing vehicles on dune buggy chassis with discarded outboard motor engines modified for steam operation. We didn't change the world, but sure came to understand what 'live steam" means.
Are you still active in the SACA?
2:44,
That cow be like, selfish human being didn't leave a sip for us.
The cow is thinking wow what a large moving shape, now back to my grass.
0:17 who hears Mark Felton's theme?
Just the job for wartime use when petrol was in short supply and rationed. Fred Dibnah, the famous steeplejack, loved everything steam and would love to have driven one. Maybe he did. The Sentinel must be a valuable collector's item these days.
Btw: Wondering if steam trains cant be "good" in few years. Same reason. "diesel" is bad, fossil fuel. But steam engine can run on "renewable" wood, straw, everything flamable.
mark felton running in to see this.
Had the pleasure of working on a Sentinal at HMS Sultan
I've never seen this program, I like it , its well done and the fact that it's not trying to be a top Gear is refreshing.
It’s actually from a programme that was on the Discovery Channel a few years ago when they used to show proper docs. Chris Barrie used to chart the history of vehicles such as lorries from the earliest ones to todays modern hi tech vehicles.
@@personwhotalkstomuch4898 oh thanks man.
@@personwhotalkstomuch4898 he is also funny in a bbc 90's comedy
Wait, wait, wait!
The first few seconds I have the strange and eerie feeling I'm watching a Mark Felton Productions video...
Me too!
the music!
@@il_vendicatore Indeed
Music gave it away.
So, what is the music?
Fantastic, a 50mph truck in the 1930s, they should have kept developing these!
Not really.. the coal fired trucks are extremely inefficient and polluting
@@Gizmoand23 Did you read ALL of my comment? "They should have kept 'DEVELOPING' it"! Have you ever driven behind a council diesel bus?
@@comicmania2008 developing it wouldn't have changed much.
They had to stop production because there was a drought
@@comicmania2008 they're gone now though aren't they
Fantastic video! Not only did we get to know the steam wagon, but we also got to know how roads in 1930s England were made!
The Sentinel was successful not only in Britain. Between 1925 and 1935, Škoda Plzeň licence-built 163 Škoda Sentinels in different versions, including a bus. The Old Machines Museum (Muzeum starých strojů) in Žamberk (Czechia) has one, and a couple times a year, they bring out all their steam toys, including the Sentinel, and fire them up. It's really amazing to see (and hear!) this beauty running around.
The fact that it looks pretty modern for its age
It's quite a modern looking machine
Totally agree
Beautiful piece of machinery.
When I was last in Whitby, there's was a steam-powered bus doing tourist trips.
Unfortunately, Elizabeth the steam bus is no longer in Whitby.
The council wanted to charge for the parking and were generally completely unsupportive of the great tourist attraction that was Elizabeth the steam bus.
I travelled on her a few times and got to know Vernon, the owner and driver. When he told me he was giving up, he was breaking his heart.
Thanks Whitby Council!
@@alistairshaw3206 where did they go to?
@@macjim The last I heard was Elizabeth was in Weston Super Mare. That was a few years ago.
I used to be in Whitby regularly as I am a coach tour driver. That's how I got to know Vernon, he also had a vintage charabanc.
@@alistairshaw3206 thank you for that info.
Yes, I saw it once in Whitby at the harbour between runs. I was just off the heritage train and didn't have time to take a journey, thinking I'll do it another time... That's life.
At least I have a photograph of it simmering away, awaiting its next trip.
Great being in the cab in winter
I need a steam powered stationwagon. That would be a fun school run.
Imagine doing the school run on the steam truck 😂
It'll do this all day!
Sentinel, the pride and joy of Shrewsbury
Can I just say how underrated this channel is?
@Fredd,
This's an underrated comment.
And you are pretty underrated, too!
Learned about this in our schools syllabus back in early 2000s. Since then I’ve been looking for it over the internet.
These programs with Chris Barrie was so good and I wish programs like this could come back.
The steam coming from the exhaust valve could be diverted condensed and reused in that case they wouldn't have to stop at a pond
A complimentary water stop every 30 miles seems like a good anti-fatigue safety feature.
That lorry (and a similar 4 wheeler) visited the Cholsey & Wallingford Railway in 2019. I think we are looking at having them visit again.
On a sadder but unrelated note, the grand white building by the Thames seen in two of the shots was gutted by fire a couple of months back :-(
Bet that's fun in the summer.
"this is my stoker, Jim Stoni"
Jim: ..............huhwhat?
I sometimes wonder if steam might still be used if it was improved and researched upon as much as gas and diesel engiens
What a Beautifull machine. I love IT.
Far cry from blasting around the galaxy aboard “Red Dwarf”🤣.
not really. it looks like starbug on wheels.
On the contrary dear fellow, very Flash Gordon.
Probably want to look into how rockets operate mate, steam power pal, not that space rockets go anywhere near outer space
Great vehicle.
We want modernised ones with high speed using gear ratio
At least trucking wasn't as lonely back in the day.
Rimmer: "Marvelous machine, marvelous".
3000 ft-lbs of torque. More than twice that of the most powerful modern diesel heavy trucks on the road.
You could haul a cathedral behind it
O sh!t, I come again!
Dunno about your country. But the most powerful truck on Australian roads (talking horsepower. But I assume it has the most torque too) is the Scania 770. It has 2730ft-lbs.
So not near twice as much. But still more and that’s crazy impressive
Steam engine cars were not fast, but boy did they have torque. I heard you could pretty much launch it on top gear. Jay Leno showed this.
@@LudditeK100 He means pickup trucks. Like an F150. Most of those have like 400 ft lbs of torque.
But, speed
beautiful piece of history
Looks badass.
G’day, there was a steam driven truck in Tasmania when I was there. The engineer looking after it said that it would wheel stand under power.
It was retired in a display.
Relatively clean burning.
Wow, I had no idea. Thank you for posting this!
If you would like to see a working Sentinel Steam Wagon, and perhaps ride on it, the Grampian Transport Museum, in Alford, Aberdeenshire possesses Scotland’s only working example.
Stick it on a barge and give it a ride on the Falkirk wheel.
DUDE, just the simple fact that its RIMMER hosting this just made it about 10,000 times more AWESOME.....LMAO. It also helps that Jim there sounds just like Michael Caine (Batman's Butler)
"Time to deploy my water borrowing device." 😆
Now for the real question, is the a/c working?
That voice ... my god, Rimmer, it’s you, mate!
0:52 when the audio comment introduces Jim, he is like "what, who said that?!" :D
Mark felton intro playing in background
please i need a name for the music at the start of the video
My dad used to tell me how great they where!! He remembered them from when he was a boy
Were
So back in the late 1920s a farmer from the UK moved to my area of California. He bought a massive plot of land that nowadays makes up the majority of auburn CA.
He brought over a ton of his equipment from the u.k. including an old steam engine he used to haul the product into town.
His great great great grandson still has the steam engine sitting in his front yard rotting away.
It's essentially a land mark for when you're pulling into town to let ppl know to slow down. On the other side of town where the property ended, there's a 75 k20 letting you know which exit has the best pies
masterful sound effects
There were still a few heading through Hampshire towards Southampton Docks in the 1960s… about two or three percent of all the lorries…. And cruising around 45-50 mph before the motorway.
Tributes to Thomas Savery, Thomas Newcomen & James Watt.. The steam engine inventors and engineers ..
Amazing machine! In USSR tryed to do something like this. Called НАМИ-012
There's a 1 43 scale model of that truck
Crazy low end torque
I see Rimmer has a new job
I'd love to see Clarkson, May, and Hammond do a show on these.
bro has the mark felton theme song
Random Critics: "Please, steampunk is fricken impossible its too unrealisti-"
Sentinal Steam Wagon: "Fricken bet"
I can hear Mark Felton is nearby
This Texan loves and wants three of these bad boys
This Michigander wants one, too!
Could you imagine pulling into The Southeast Old Threshers Reunion behind the wheel of one of these bad boys? You would be THE talk of the town!
Excellent.!! Desde Colonia Uruguay.
The service road outside my home is concrete, laid in large rectangles, with a layer of Macadam over it made later. I never knew it was added to give extra grip as I presumed it was a later form of road surface. The concrete is still good today but has raised ridges at the borders of the concrete joins which could be harsh to drive if it was a main road. Excellent road.
I believe the most powerful ones made 90 horsepower. But at 600rpm this meant tremendous torque.
horsepower has almost zero relation to the actual energy throughput or max load of a system, it's especially deceptive in steam engines since the way it is calculated is pretty much explicitly designed to lowball on anything that isn't trying to crank up it's RPM as high as it will go and bleed energy out to do things loosing max speed in the process (steam engines are the exact opposite) the other thing they are deceptive on is that they basically don't have a max torque: even a tiny little handheld steam engine that only processes a few watts of eat into kinetic potential will just keep pushing harder and harder until some part of the system finally breaks, make it sturdy enough to do the job and it will push that truck...slowly.
presumably the uselessness of the "unit" of "measurement" (horsepower does not actually qualify as either a unit or a measurement) as a frame of reference for work done is on purpose because you _also_ have a near-impossible time finding numbers for commercial gas engines that give actual energy throughput...hell, even comparing horsepower to horsepower is usually completely useless since that nonsense number means entirely different things in different energy systems to the point where it's not even the same thing in two identical cars under noticeably different conditions. it is a unit of measurement made up by a salesman in order to sound more convincing when lying to their prospective customers and it has _never_ stopped being exactly that.
whoops! forgot a part there: boiler volume matters a lot: more volume = less required pressure to reach the same torque = lower standing heat required to reach the same torque.
a tiny boiler would need to get HOT to push that truck even in a "well, it's moving...sorta" manner.
What a marvelous thing.
I wasn't expecting to see Rimmer in a steam truck (yes, I know he's not playing the character here), but I'm happy.
A steam truck is the most British machine ever
No, the most British machine ever is a landrover converted to steam, it's on TH-cam somewhere.
This feels like an episode of Top Gear.
Surely an S6??
These Sentinels were fabulous - some of the last steam lorries (the Foden O Type, in particular) were really fast - at a time when commercials were limited to 20 mph in the UK.
How did this turn up on my Feed in 2023?, i don't know but im glad it did, what amazing vehicles
Thanks for sharing such wonderful content with your audience. It is very interesting stuff. I appreciate all the work put into it. Sincere thanks!
Excellent! 👍 Not many people know that Chris is a real petrol head.
"No Smoke, No Choke, No STOKE no Ride" 🤣
From a distance that truck looks like a modern cabover
What beautiful machine!❤ A dream!
Really great, fun for new generations
The modern version would be an artic tractor rather than a rigid six (or eight). It would have a mechanical stoker and water in saddletanks beween the axles with capacity for 250 km. Because of the extra weight in comparison with a diesel, it would have three (or even four) axles giving the same axle load as a diesel. The weight doesn't matter to the steam engine, which has ten times the torque of a diesel.
That's very cool to run thoses old timer machines ^^ dont forget the steam was the begining of every self run mechanic , 2022 we use steam to product electricity !
I want to see thoses machines in real life real time with my eyes not from youtube !
Hello from Belgium ^^
When I mentiion a steam lorry people think I'm bonkers however, an abiding memory from my childhood in London is of a Coal truck chuffing down the street in the very early fifties. I'm told that this is not possible and I've never been able to find evidence of it! Coal in that area was delivered by North Thames Gas.