Steam crane

Railway steam crane, with vertical cross-tube boiler, at Summerlee Heritage Park
Fairbairn steam crane in Bristol
Derelict Smith (Rodley) crane, on the Manchester Bolton & Bury Canal

A steam crane is a crane powered by a steam engine. It may be fixed or mobile and, if mobile, it may run on rail tracks, caterpillar tracks, road wheels, or be mounted on a barge.[citation needed] It usually has a vertical boiler placed at the back so that the weight of the boiler counterbalances the weight of the jib and load.

They were very common as railway breakdown cranes, and several have been preserved on heritage railways in the United Kingdom.[citation needed]

Manufacturers

  • Black Hawthorn of Gateshead (unrestored example at Beamish Museum[1]
  • Joseph Booth & Bros of Leeds
  • Coles Cranes of Derby (restored example at Beamish Museum)
  • Cowans, Sheldon & Company of Carlisle (rail cranes)
  • Craven Brothers
  • William Fairbairn & Sons of Manchester
  • Ransomes & Rapier of Ipswich
  • Ruston Proctor of Lincoln
  • Stothert & Pitt of Bath
  • Thomas Smith & Sons (Rodley) Ltd. of Leeds

See also

Steam powered Overhead crane from 1875

References

  1. ^ Beamish collections archive search

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to steam cranes.
  • Steam cranes inc. Ransomes & Rapier
  • Cowans & Sheldon steam crane
  • Nine Elms steam crane
  • Ransomes & Rapier wartime-ordered 45-ton Steam Breakdown Cranes
  • Cowans Sheldon 15-ton Steam Cranes
  • Model steam crane


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