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Came across PD while researching sternwheel paddle steamers and was interested in an earlier thread on Pitman drives back in April. I rather liked Version 6 and thought I would try to create an animation to prove that it worked.
The Pitman drive would be ideal for an electric drive, but I would quite like to make a steam driven unit.
I came across a photograph of the starboard engine for a sternwheeler, I think it was in SteamboatMuseum.com, It looks as though the piston drives the rear paddle directly via a crank, but I can't see how the slide valve is driven. Normally one would expect an eccentric, which would have to be attached to the axle of the paddle. Would this be right? In photographs of sternwheelers there does not appear to be an eccentric visible.
I am thinking of getting some plans of the Thomas Edison from John Fryant, if he is still in business. Eddie
By the way, the engines of the Edison were salvaged after she burned and re-used by Edison's friend Henry Ford in the steamer Suwanee in his open air museum village Greenfield Village (next to the Henry Ford Museum) at Dearborn on the outskirts of Detroit.
Here's how I made my realistic operating pitman drive with an electric motor.
----- Original Message ----- From: gretzschel (paddlewheels@paddleducks.co.uk) To: paddlewheels@paddleducks.co.uk (paddlewheels@paddleducks.co.uk) Sent: Friday, August 10, 2007 3:38 AMSubject: Re: Pitman revistitedPlease allow one more comment on the engines of the Edison: gretzschel wrote:By the way, the engines of the Edison were salvaged after she burned and re-used by Edison's friend Henry Ford in the steamer Suwanee in his open air museum village Greenfield Village (next to the Henry Ford Museum) at Dearborn on the outskirts of Detroit.I had remembered reading this story somewhere (in fact at http://www.steamboats.com/museum/models3.html ), but I get more and more doubts, and maybe it isn't true after all. The Edison had engines with a 36" stroke. But if you compare the Suwanee's engines to the height of the banister on the pictures, they look smaller to me. And finally, http://ul.bgsu.edu/cgi-bin/xvsl2.cgi (usually a totally credible source) tells a total different story if you search for vessel name "Suwanee".Anyway, the design of the engines (and their type of valve gear) is absolutely similar, judging from the Marine Iron Works catalogue.MoritzNo virus found in this incoming message.Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.5.476 / Virus Database: 269.11.10/943 - Release Date: 08/08/2007 17:38