selectomatic
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2007
- Messages
- 483
Well, it's sixty years later, and I'm certainly no h
The conjectures I made earlier are just that -- conjecutes. I love interesting old buildings and the interesting old equipment you find in them. I guess I just associate the little swinging doors with the sliding vents with solid-fuel type burners.
It also seems obvious that the blower shown at the bottom was added later. Both the apparently added-on, welded brackets and the fact that the blower blocks the boiler-room door so that it can't open fully lead me to this conclusion.
This thread has prompted me to do a little exploring once again, and I can't see any obvious location for coal storage. Of course, the passage of time can obscure a lot.
And Toggle, I guess you're right. One could break the boiler into pieces and carry it out that way. I just can't imagine doing such a thing to anything this impressive (and scary). I spend much of my time fixing and preserving. Destroying isn't an option I usually consider.
-kevin
The conjectures I made earlier are just that -- conjecutes. I love interesting old buildings and the interesting old equipment you find in them. I guess I just associate the little swinging doors with the sliding vents with solid-fuel type burners.
It also seems obvious that the blower shown at the bottom was added later. Both the apparently added-on, welded brackets and the fact that the blower blocks the boiler-room door so that it can't open fully lead me to this conclusion.
This thread has prompted me to do a little exploring once again, and I can't see any obvious location for coal storage. Of course, the passage of time can obscure a lot.
And Toggle, I guess you're right. One could break the boiler into pieces and carry it out that way. I just can't imagine doing such a thing to anything this impressive (and scary). I spend much of my time fixing and preserving. Destroying isn't an option I usually consider.
-kevin