Big Muskie, Big Brutus, The Captain & Silver Spade | An American Story

Автокөліктер мен көлік құралдары

In this video, we're taking a nostalgic look at some of the most amazing pieces of engineering ever built in America.
Big Muskie, the biggest dragline in the world, as well as Big Brutus, the biggest mining shovel still in existence.
We're also reviewing The Captain, a monster shovel that was sadly destroyed by a fire in 1991, and Silver Spade, another shovel that saw its life ending in 2007.
A true american story!
#mining #shovel #dragline #america

Пікірлер: 53

  • @dustywelchcraneman6614
    @dustywelchcraneman6614 Жыл бұрын

    Hello, the organization that tried to save the silver spade is still going strong where the shovel once worked. I became president of this organization and have continued the efforts to save other large pieces of mining equipment and history. Unfortunately our efforts to preserve the silver spade did not go as we had hoped, our mission was not a complete failure, as we do currently have the full operators cabin and breakroom, bucket, dipper door, hoist cables, boom support cables, power cable, crawler pads, house rollers, the enormous signs that said BE Bucyrus eire at the top of the machine, along with countless other artifacts, all on display at our grounds in Harrison county. I would be happy to open the grounds on a weekend give tours of our ever growing collection and promote our continued efforts to preserve the giants that are left!

  • @miningshorts

    @miningshorts

    Жыл бұрын

    Hey there ! Thank you for your message. Glad to see that much passion in your comment, haha. Feel free to send me an email anytime (you'll find my email address in the "About section" here on the channel. I'm in VA/WV right now and I wouldn't mind taking a trip to you at some point to admire the wonders you were able to save 🙂 Thank you. Nick

  • @pachagrun5591

    @pachagrun5591

    3 ай бұрын

    Good job sir, preserve industrial patrimoine …

  • @wmden1
    @wmden110 ай бұрын

    I have never had anything to do with mining, of any kind, except a short tour of a lignite mine. I have always loved machinery like this, however. I can't help but tear up, a little, when I watch the boom and a frame of The Big Muskie being blown off and dropping, and similar activities of destruction of mechanical world wonders like these.

  • @robertzalaker4775
    @robertzalaker4775 Жыл бұрын

    i wish there was more videos of the captain

  • @MarshallRedmon01
    @MarshallRedmon01 Жыл бұрын

    I remember a quote from Modern Marvels *"Just like the flesh and blood monsters that came before them these dinosaurs were destin to become extinct"* Really makes you think about great machines like them. Nothing lives forever not even great marvels of engineering like these

  • @miningshorts

    @miningshorts

    Жыл бұрын

    100% agree 🙂

  • @steeltoeboots9591
    @steeltoeboots959111 ай бұрын

    I just moved nextdoor to the daughter of one of the Captain's engineers. He was just showing me pictures of it today. Just amazing

  • @miningshorts

    @miningshorts

    11 ай бұрын

    Awesome 😍😁

  • @pcap2700
    @pcap27008 ай бұрын

    Just visited the big Brutus museum its a must see awesome !!!

  • @racheldaniels9670

    @racheldaniels9670

    Ай бұрын

    I grew up out side of west mineral and could see the boom from my bedroom window. I now live about 5 miles from it.

  • @harrisoncoalandreclamation4149
    @harrisoncoalandreclamation414911 ай бұрын

    The organization actually secured enough funds to acquire the Silver Spade at scrap value. After the organization secured enough funds to acquire the Silver Spade at value the owner wanted the organization to pay for the cost of reclamation at the resting spot. That was the nail in the coffin towards the efforts to preserve the shovel.

  • @hisaddle
    @hisaddle9 ай бұрын

    On a Saturday, I think in 1986, I went up inside a 1850B at the River King mine in southern IL. A co worker's Dad worked at the mine and I said I liked heavy equipment. It was amazing. we walked on the coal seam to get to it, went up metal steps haning under it by a chain, then took a tiny eleavator to go see the operator. all they were doing that day was repositioning it. Guys on catwalks underneath coordinating how to move and turn the tracks. A heck of a day.

  • @miningshorts

    @miningshorts

    9 ай бұрын

    Amazing 😀😀🥰

  • @hisaddle

    @hisaddle

    9 ай бұрын

    My bad, it was a 3850B

  • @7891ph
    @7891ph7 ай бұрын

    The #1 reason we most likely won't see machines this large again (at least not anytime soon) is that mining methods have changed. Ad in the fact that the electric power industry is actively switching over to natural gas (less coal being mined), and the smaller equipment makes sense. And that's before you get into the environmental law's that now prohibit that style of mining in the first place. The mining companies still aren't cleaning up the messes they made.

  • @theunemployedtrucker
    @theunemployedtrucker5 ай бұрын

    I know everything comes down to money but big muskie should have been saved and put on display because we will never see anything like it ever again, i was gutted when it was scrapped 😢

  • @shadovanish7435
    @shadovanish743529 күн бұрын

    I know that the "modern" smaller mining excavators are not intended for excavation of non blasted, hard material (earth with a large amount of rock), but I wonder if the older, giant mining shovels & draglines required hard material to be blasted before the material could be excavated? I've seen videos showing enormous rocks falling from the buckets of these giant shovels & draglines (after a shovel bucket skimmed a mine high wall, or a dragline bucket dragged a mine pit, where the machines had excavated apparently unblasted material), so it would seem that these giant machines could excavate (by design?) unblasted material (although maybe blasting was required for some material conditions).

  • @wheels-n-tires1846
    @wheels-n-tires18468 ай бұрын

    And to think I was inspired by the size of the '69 BE 30-B I rebuilt/restored a decade ago!! In the days of hydraulics, cable n friction machines are still an awesome look back into past engineering!!!

  • @richardmyers137
    @richardmyers137 Жыл бұрын

    It's sad that they could not keep the Big Muskie, like they did the Big Brutus.😢😢

  • @miningshorts

    @miningshorts

    Жыл бұрын

    So true !

  • @briebel2684

    @briebel2684

    Жыл бұрын

    The main reason Big Brutus got saved, is that the mining company decided it would cost too much to salvage, and left it sitting in a field. It sat for years before being moved to its present museum location.

  • @dougwood6186
    @dougwood6186 Жыл бұрын

    The silver spade was only 6400 tonne not 14000 . It was 14000000 pounds about

  • @WhiteyRavensTH
    @WhiteyRavensTH Жыл бұрын

    Thats cool 👌

  • @miningshorts

    @miningshorts

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you :D

  • @lastnamefirstname520
    @lastnamefirstname5204 ай бұрын

    Whats the benefit of these duty cycle machines over a continuous operating bucket wheel or bucket chain excavator?

  • @dennisneo1608
    @dennisneo1608Ай бұрын

    Bruts is my favourite.

  • @detroitdiesel7074
    @detroitdiesel70745 ай бұрын

    poor old girls Edit: phenomenal video, really shows the golden age of America, now we’re just a shell of that, with outsourced parts and cheap shit.

  • @mkay1957

    @mkay1957

    5 ай бұрын

    Along with crybaby young people who don't want to work

  • @alanmorrison3598
    @alanmorrison359810 ай бұрын

    Bucyrus Erie moved it's headquarters from Ohio to South Milwaukee, Wisconsin in 1893 and I believe that's where the parts for Big Muskie were fabricated and then shipped by rail to the Muskingham Ohio mine sight. 1:26

  • @frankgeurts3912
    @frankgeurts3912 Жыл бұрын

    American finest❤

  • @richardkruse1574
    @richardkruse1574 Жыл бұрын

    the last second of your show realy said it america is shot

  • @BlackPill-pu4vi

    @BlackPill-pu4vi

    Жыл бұрын

    Those great machines represent an America that USED to exist and a legacy that's been erased. It isn't that we don't need these machines. It's that we CAN'T make anything like them, even if we wanted to. Those machines represent a vast matrix of industry, logistics, skilled labor, engineering, and capital which take massive amounts of political will and organization to bring into being. Once they are gone, that's it. To destroy great feats of engineering that were still working and can never be built again ought to be a felony of the highest order. Big Muskie should have been converted into a museum. It's legacy and historical value far exceed its salvage value. BUT... of course..., we have more lofty goals now. Dontcha know? LGBTQ, BLM, pride parades, how to make it possible for men to give birth, and carrying out ADL directives to destroy monuments to Dead White Men. THAT is the real America on the ground today.

  • @Michael-lz3bk
    @Michael-lz3bk6 ай бұрын

    When I was 10 years old I went up in the captain got to even go up on the boom there wasn’t osha back then my dad worked beside it for 20 years it was the biggest shovel ever made the epa wouldn’t let it cross a state road because of environmental issues back then so I think that led to a fire and it was buried in its own hole

  • @harrisoncoalandreclamation4149
    @harrisoncoalandreclamation414911 ай бұрын

    The Silver Spade was named for Hanna Coal Company's 25th anniversary of surface mining in Ohio.

  • @miningshorts

    @miningshorts

    11 ай бұрын

    Thank you for your comment. I’m in the process of making a video about Silver Spade (same style as Big Muskie video recently released). Do you have any exclusive footage by any chance? 😉

  • @Zanenoth
    @Zanenoth5 ай бұрын

    Ive seen big brutus a few times. I can only imagine the capitain. Everyone always talks about russias big ass machines and their mines. Good to see american engineering in the highlight for once.

  • @ryanmatthews3609
    @ryanmatthews36096 ай бұрын

    0:20 does that include cars?

  • @jdsharp1366
    @jdsharp13669 ай бұрын

    I have fished many strip pits in S IL and my father hauled coal out of a lot of them, he worked for ICRR for 43 yrs starting in 1959, from Freeburg, New Athens, Smithton, Marissa, Sparta, Pinckneyville and many more, on a day off which wasn't often, he'd drive me down to some of the mines, it was cool, like a 1 kid field trip, I got to see the Captain operate at the mine of its namesake, anyway at the Freeburg maintenance shed one day these guy were playing craps on these huge pieces of plywood probably an inch thick, I noticed this one guy and he was in a 3 piece suit dark blue, jacket off, still got vest on rollin the dice, I barely know more about craps now at 57 than I did at 6-7, any way this guy was way out of place like the sesame street thing about one of these things doesn't belong, yeah a guy in a fancy suit on his knees playing craps in a greasy repair shed, anyway after dad and I left he said it didn't matter to the guy if he won or lost, if he won he'd just give back for the guys to split, he was the mine manager for the area mines.

  • @jclay6680
    @jclay66809 ай бұрын

    I thought the captain was damaged by traveling down a steep incline and tipping ?

  • @miningshorts

    @miningshorts

    9 ай бұрын

    Silver Spade did

  • @karlamaealojamiento9963
    @karlamaealojamiento99636 ай бұрын

    Its sad that the firefighters cant save the captain soo sad😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢

  • @davefleming1117
    @davefleming1117 Жыл бұрын

    So sad

  • @miningshorts

    @miningshorts

    Жыл бұрын

    Really sad indeed

  • @trainjack16
    @trainjack1610 ай бұрын

    Big Muskie was larger than the Captain.

  • @garygunter4578

    @garygunter4578

    8 ай бұрын

    It was but also was a different machine. Dragline vs stripping shovel

  • @andreacaldarone4909
    @andreacaldarone49095 ай бұрын

    Come in Europe we have bigger equipment that last longer and are even cost effective

  • @fishymokey
    @fishymokey2 ай бұрын

    hello minors💀

  • @cameronturner7475
    @cameronturner74759 ай бұрын

    This is what the environmentalists movement has done to this country. Guys today play video games and think they've done something.

  • @josephk1342

    @josephk1342

    9 ай бұрын

    What a moronic and useless comment. Coal is not the future.

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