The last Gravity Ropeway

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The last Gravity Ropeway

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  • #36490
    JohnF
    Participant
      @johnf59703
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      #554048
      JohnF
      Participant
        @johnf59703

        Hi all thought this may be if interest, its very close to me and in my opinion a cleaver feat of engineering.

        **LINK**

        Hope you enjoy

        John

        #554072
        Ady1
        Participant
          @ady1

          Very clever, and interesting too

          I do wish these things wouldn't pan the narrator so much as he speaks, the mechanism is far more interesting and we can hear what he has to say without looking at him

          #554073
          not done it yet
          Participant
            @notdoneityet

            I doubt there were so many which worked by gravity? The local brickworks shifted clay up from the ‘knot-hole (quarry) for many a year. It would have been close to a mile long if it was extended to the far end of the furthest hole. I know it went over one road but it may also have gone under another.

            Closed buckets (two maintenance workers – fitter and mate? – died in a fire in a bucket, caused while welding and setting fire to grease, as I recall, in the ‘50s), with only a flimsy net over the road and was replaced by a conveyor belt when they opened up another quarry in the late ‘50s(?) on the other side of the works.

            I did my first ‘cut’, with a scraper behind a Caterpillar D-8, to remove the upper ‘calor’ layers of clay when I was 13. I dug ditches down the cutting face and would have stalled out the Cat if the driver had not disengaged the clutch! I don't think I could reach the clutch – certainly not while concentrating on operating the scraper control!

            #554074
            duncan webster 1
            Participant
              @duncanwebster1

              Perhaps Michael Gilligan should pay them a visit, he's in the market for some decent brickswink

              #554077
              Michael Gilligan
              Participant
                @michaelgilligan61133

                Great link, thanks John

                I lived in Lancaster for a while, and my wife is from Morecambe

                I think it should be preserved as an Eco Tourist ride

                … Everyone goes down free and the youngsters have to climb up angel

                MichaelG.

                #554080
                pgk pgk
                Participant
                  @pgkpgk17461
                  Posted by Michael Gilligan on 14/07/2021 13:47:45:

                  Great link, thanks John

                  I lived in Lancaster for a while, and my wife is from Morecambe

                  I think it should be preserved as an Eco Tourist ride

                  … Everyone goes down free and the youngsters have to climb up angel

                  MichaelG.

                  Toilets at the bottom, cafe at the top.

                  I had a student holiday job in't brickworks Ours dug from pits and used cable drawn trucks on rails.
                  My job was to bring the extra stamping machine on-line: 2 bricks every 15 second and put them on the kiln conveyor – mind-numbing stuff..

                  pgk

                  #554198
                  JohnF
                  Participant
                    @johnf59703

                    Hi All, It will/would be sad if and when it is dismantled, I hope that somehow it will be saved when the day comes as suggested in 2036 — I doubt it will be my problem !! It is very quiet and efficient and some years ago there was a plan to scrap it and run trucks to carry the shale, the route was through our village — after a considerable "fight" with the planners it was abandoned thank goodness !

                    Conversion to a tourist attraction sounds great but it would need a very large cash injection to come even close to standards necessary to carry people.

                    Cheers John

                    #554271
                    Neil Wyatt
                    Moderator
                      @neilwyatt

                      Fascinating, but I agree it's not very failsafe if you want to carry people!

                      Neil

                      #554272
                      Nigel Graham 2
                      Participant
                        @nigelgraham2

                        That the one near Caton? (Sorry, Google has made Youtube such a faff, and so stuffed it with idiotic ad breaks through the videos themselves, I've given up on it). I've driven under it quite a few times when driving back from the Dales via Ingleton.

                        Is the brickworks closing too?

                        In t'other county, one of the two limestone quarries at Horton-in-Ribblesdale now has a private siding built a few years ago, off the Leeds-Settle-Carlisle line. The other hasn't for some reason (cost?) though it used to, so its crushed rock still goes out by lorry, over the village's two narrow hump-backed bridges separated only by a very sharp bend.

                        Dow n the road a few miles from there, the Hoffman Kiln (for lime) at Langcliife is worth a look if you're driving through the area.

                        #554300
                        JohnF
                        Participant
                          @johnf59703

                          Yes Nigel it is close to Caton, next Village along at Claughton. Caton is my home town !

                          No the brickworks isn’t closing as far as we are aware, it was mothballed a few years ago for some time but I understand the raw material is of high value and something special! There were three brickwork’s at one time ! Two in Claughton, East works and West works plus another on the opposite side of the more Brookhouse Brick.

                          The chap on the video suggests the shale will run out in 15 years or so hence the possible closure however time will tell !

                          John

                          #554305
                          David Noble
                          Participant
                            @davidnoble71990

                            My father was a fitter there in the 60's. He told many stories about the ropeway!!!

                            David

                            #554349
                            Anonymous

                              Reminds me of lift locks that work on a similar principle. They always fascinate me. There are a couple of those within my "easy to get to" distance.

                              Edited By Peter Greene on 16/07/2021 17:11:36

                              #554364
                              not done it yet
                              Participant
                                @notdoneityet
                                Posted by Peter Greene on 16/07/2021 17:10:41:

                                Reminds me of lift locks that work on a similar principle. They always fascinate me. There are a couple of those within my "easy to get to" distance.

                                Edited By Peter Greene on 16/07/2021 17:11:36

                                The Falkirk wheel is a good example – they ‘lose’ only a few litres of water during operation. I remember the lift at Hastings (is it still in use?). Unfortunately more people needed a lift to the top than from top to bottom, otherwise it would have been fairly well balanced🙂 .

                                #554385
                                Nigel Graham 2
                                Participant
                                  @nigelgraham2

                                  Thank you John!

                                  One of my old engineering text-books devotes a chapter to ropeway components and designs; and reveals as well as being transport machines (as at Caton) they were also used without buckets, for power-transmission. Basically a V-belt with a very long belt.

                                  Seen the cliff-lift at Bridgenorth? Lynton and Lydmouth had installed a water-balanced one, fed from further up-valley; but at Bridgenorth the river's down at the bottom. Not to be outdone though, the late-19C builders installed pumps… Until they twigged it was rather more efficient simply to use an electric capstan.

                                  #554397
                                  mike barrett 1
                                  Participant
                                    @mikebarrett1

                                    Lynton and Lynmouth Cliff Railway is worth a visit.
                                    Powered by a stream that fills the top train tank, when its full, brakes realesed and down the hill it goes.
                                    At the bottom of the hill the water is discharged and the top train is filled and the process repeated.

                                    Run by water from a stream, brilliant.

                                    Mike

                                    #554401
                                    David Noble
                                    Participant
                                      @davidnoble71990
                                      Posted by duncan webster on 14/07/2021 13:41:41:

                                      Perhaps Michael Gilligan should pay them a visit, he's in the market for some decent brickswink

                                      Oooo! cutting

                                      David

                                      #554403
                                      Michael Gilligan
                                      Participant
                                        @michaelgilligan61133

                                        Yes … it was studiously ignored

                                        MichaelG.

                                        #554516
                                        duncan webster 1
                                        Participant
                                          @duncanwebster1

                                          This is very interesting LowTech. Has details of aerial runways many miles long

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