A Descendant of Jacob Haish & The Smith Manure Spreaders | Engels Coach Shop
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- čas přidán 1. 04. 2024
- Trying to find answers to a puzzle, a descendant to Jacob Haish had the answer with his original Smith Mfg manure spreader. What are the number of spikes on the beater bars? This is how I found out. Thanks for coming along!
Spring for mugs, tee-shirts, sweatshirts and hoodies.
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Website to Smith Manufacturing - jacobhaishmfg.org
Jeff Marshall email - Use with discretion please - jjmarshall.landscape@gmail.com
#antiques #ranching #restore
I won't bother Mr. Marshall with an email but I do want to say Thank You to him for helping out with this rebuild...very kind of him to do so :)
Well said
After seeing how much work it took to dismantle the rusted wheels and gears it is remarkable to see how smooth it rolls and operates. A testament to your experience and skills!
SO NICE to see a machine running THAT smoothly and quietly! Always admire your workmanship and CRAFTSMANSHIP. Kudos to Mr Marshall for the Info!
If there was a Pebble Beach for old farm equipment, Mr. Dave, you'd win every year!
To me, it is wonderful that you have found this direct descent person. The smile in your voice makes me think you do as well.
It must be an incredible sense of satisfaction to see that heap of broken wood and metal transformed into this beautiful piece of historic equipment. Great job Dave.
Admirable Dave, instead of just leaving it, make it right, admirable.
Yep! After following his incredible craftsmanship for years I wouldn't expect anything less from Dave.
My favourite subject is history and it was also my strong subject in my school years.
That's fantastic for this gentleman to contact is nice to keep history alive.
Wow, it's rare to find a direct descendent for an old horse-drawn viehele. Thanks much for sharing.
I've got tickets to see Jacob Haish and the Smith Manure Spreaders at Red Rocks.
That thing should go to a museum when it's done.
Great job.
I immediately thought they should be offset, but then I thought maybe the spikes on the top bar might run between those on the beater, so i never said anything. Your attention to detail is impressive.
It really is a small world. Thanks to Mr Marshall for providing input and being open to contact. Can't wait to see the next installment. Great job Dave!
Somites something happens, that reminds us what the 'social' in 'social network' can be. I really love all that old stuff and the craftmanship from long ago, but hell, I really do appreciate living in the 21st century.
Greetings from Germany,
Marcus
Great that you could get correct information and photos to help with recreation.
Dave, you know how to look where you have to look! Thank you for showing his wonderful work.
Hi Dave, and Diane, just like you Dave to switch out the rods for original accuracy, and nobody here is surprised. As much as I love the sheep wagon, this spreader looks so pretty, and new. It's nice to have Jeff to give you some more ideas on this project. I always love to watch. Thank you for sharing, and take care.
Looking forward to the day Jeff comes out and inspects the project and maybe tells us a little bit about the history of the company that originally built the manure spreader.
The beauty of the mechanics, the understanding of the technology, the attention to detail and excellence in reconstruction. Thank you!
I admire your tenacity and determination to get it right. You had the beater bars assembled, then saw it was wrong. Took it back apart and crafted new parts, then put it back right. Brave. courageous and bold. A lesser person might well have been tempted to let sleeping dogs lay. The person who designed the set up, positioning of the bars and attachment points was genius.
I am glad to see that you are making a working machine instead of just a display piece. History and old technology like that needs to be preserved.
Great info on the history of the spreader and the person who designed it and built them. Thank you.
We over here in Wisconsin didn't have much of a winter during winter, either. So we are having winter in Spring too. Snowed all day they say all night and all day tomorrow too!
Great catch on the beater bar spike configuration. Cost some time to make it right, but that's the only way to go.
Very interesting. I, too, did some searching for the Smith Spreader. Got me interested for sure. I really enjoy watching you sort these things out.
Seems like that's often how it works -- the best way to find the information you need is to do it wrong and then the information will show up to show that you've done it wrong. It's a little reassuring to know that that happens to all of us. Also, looking at that photo of Jeff's version of this wagon, it's going to look glorious once it's all done.
I'm from the UK but Dave this a small world we live in. I know by your work ethics that you would have to correct the smallest of discrepancies. Well done.
You actually showed the threaded bolts in an earlier edition, I just assumed that they had become loose so they put nuts on them like you said. A picture is worth a thousand words. Good detective work.
Always fascinating, always fun, Mr. Engle. Thanks to Mr. Haisch for his input and assistance!
Very cool! It’s rare to get legacy input on this age of restoration.
I’m really enjoying the series of videos, Just watched it on my morning break.
It's this time of year when I'm glad to be living down south. It was in the mid 70s all last week. Today its raining, but still warm. Eventually summer shows up and the tables will turn when it comes to the weather and we'll be roasting down here, but until then we'll gloat.
Same here, Arkansas
Hey Dave, it was a breezy 82° n sunny in beautiful Fort Mill, SC.
Trust Y'all had a wonderful Easter. Blessings🙂
🖐😎
Nice catch , it’s always better to get it right even if it takes some extra work even if it’s only you that know the details!
Historical Archeology worth every second Fantastic work
We've got a delayed spring here in Vermont too. There's supposed to be a chance of up to 18" of snow tomorrow and the day after!
Cool indeed and great catch on the beater threaded pins
NOW it starts to look like a spreader. Good job!
It's truly satisfying to see it come together but can't be as good as actually doing it. Bravo!
The personal touch always makes it better.
Around 3:30 into a previous video “ the Smith Beaters” you showed what you thought was a repair bolted spike. It seems may have been one of the bolted spikes holding the center ring. Great job as usual. Spreader looks fantastic
When you started hand threading the nut onto the first threaded pin I thought "that'll get old pretty quick....". Sure 'nuff you put it into a drill before the first one was finished.... :D I must be a mind reader ! ! ! :D
Always a pleasure watching from Joliet, Il. My dad mentioned that one of his earliest memories was watching his dad back up the spreader. ( which apparently had automotive type steering) Grandpa had a New Idea pro powered spreader by the time I came along) Thank you!
Very cool! What a great find in being able to connect with a distant relative of the mfg of this spreader. God Bless Mr. and Mrs. Engels.
Make it as right as you can, I like it, nice catch guys. What a resource to have found for the restoration of the spreader, this is a fun series to watch, thank you.
Great craftsmanship is almost a lost art , thank you for keeping the tradition alive ... great job ...!!!
In Northern NY, we've yet to get out of the 50's, but luckily no snow in the past couple weeks.
The spacing of the beater bar spikes and the breakup bar spikes should be within 1. i.e. each divides the other by half. That is the only realistic way to ensure the beater bar spikes and breakup bar spikes don't collide(and also ensure an eaven distribution pattern of the sh1t)
Great video. O how I wish my Dad could have seen your work.Thanks Dave and Diane.
Simply amazing. Amazing that he too rebuilt the same manure spreader. Good hearts and minds think alike.❤😊
In my youth I worked with roughly similar machinery, cant say I noticed the finger pattern as such but in the last episode it did occur that they would need to be staggered as you have shown in order to clear the moving deck. Maybe I remembered better than I thought? Manure has a nasty habit of clumping and causing blockages, hanging onto the fingers and various other moving parts. Strange most of my memories tend to be of having to clear these machines by hand due to a break down. the side unloading flail type are only just a little more reliable unless you stay on top of daily maintenance. Working in a very wet area of the country also put extra strain on components. My great grandfather and his father did not have such a machine dung was dumped in mounds around the fields and then spread by hand, farming for them was not lucrative enough to purchase such machinery.
That is awesome that you got in touch with a descendant to the actual builder and he willingly sent you photos and information for you to use in your History so this build will live on several more hundreds of years. It's really looking good Dave, can't wait to see it all come together. It will be fun to go back and watch it again in a few years. Fred.
The complexity and parts count is greater than I would've expected at first glance.
Never imagined that I would say this about a manure spreader; that's a beautiful machine!😅
That's awesome to be able to get in contact with him! That spreader should be put in a museum when you're done so it can be enjoyed forever! Thanks!
Great to see those conections to the heritage ..
What a cool story, I'm glad you guys were able to get connected!
Watching for the island of tobago. You have such attention to detail.
So enjoyed you sharing the history it adds to your videos which I enjoy anyway will continue to watch
good catch. Glad to see another machine being saved. You have to wonder how many bones are lying around of these spreaders. There has to be some somewhere.
Thanks Dave for your informative and interesting videos.
Congrats to Mr. Marshall for providing his assistance. Very valuable.
At least you can provide him with four spare parts for his spreader.
One question I have is the distance between the top bar that has the L shaped pins, and the rotating beater pins supposed to have an interference with each other during operation, or are they spaced apart to prevent clogging ?
Kudos for all the extra work to make this restoration authentic!
Really liking the background music.🙏
Thank you Dave. I'm really enjoying these builds, love the attention to details...down to the alignments of the square nuts. Please keep them coming.
You’re making a lovely job of it. It’s cold and wet here today but you’ve encouraged me to get on with some shafts, thanks.
looking forward to another show thanks Dave great job i enjoy every sec of the show
Excellent history!
Aint gonna pester Jeff since i bet his inbox has blown up but thank you for reaching out and offering your email to help.
Mr Engle, you are a wonder!
You have done a remarkable job Dave. I really will hate to see used for it's intended purpose and crap it all up.
Watched a manure spreader at work behind an open tracker on a dairy farm outside of Stowe Vt. All I could think was the driver must have been glad it wasn't a windy day. Don't see spreaders on the "Jersey" shore although cranberry harvesters have a similar "beaterbar" arrangement.
Learning something new every day, this funky internet thing has its uses. Mr. Marshal will be a long time friend of your now…. The manure spreader is looking great Dave and now it’s period correct.
Looking GREAT !!!!
Excellent craftsmanship
Knowledge is Power.. Well done my friend..
This is one of your best series; and that's saying a lot! Thanks for the great videos.
I'm afraid Jeff Marshall's inbox is bulging at the seams by now & since I suspect he'll be watching the rest of this series as enthralled as the rest of us I'll just say a sincere THANK YOU to Jeff for taking the time to make contact with you and provide wonderfully helpful insight to this project. To Dave and Diane: thanks for allowing us along on these incredible journeys.
20 below at my place in Galena Alaska this morning.
Brrr!
Very Cool to have such a resource when doing such a project......Not many restoration experts around who are descendants of Stradivarius.....but would be super cool to find one if making a classical spreader.....LOL !!
Outstanding episode!!!
Good catch on the spikes. 👍👍
Dave,
The manure spreader, and making the contact with Mr. Marshall is way cool. 🇺🇸
This is just awesome. Great video as always. Cheers :)
Another great episode in the spreader story.🙂🙂
That certainly isn't how I would have done it!
I would have put all the beater bars in first, got them all centered, bolted down and finished before I realized I had forgotten the center support ring.
Incredible accuracy. I noticed an anomaly on the Chain Drives of the Beater Bar Shaft. The photo of the Assembled Spreader by Jeff Marshall has 2 different gears on the end of the Beater Shaft. Smaller gear has the chain on it to speed up the rotation. 14:58 and 19:10. Yours has only one gear which appears to match the large gear. There appeared to be other subtle differences in structure hardware.
The other sprocket gear has the paint worn off so it appears that either gear is appropriate depending on how fast the beater is wanted to turn.
I absolutely love watching you work.
Very cool. Thanks for sharing your content with us.
I remember seeing old machinery like these around my aunts house that were my grandfathers. And of course in yards and pastures of other farms in our area. Shame we don’t see more restoration.
Hi Diane and Dave, I'm left speechless at how great it runs with ALL of your expertise 🎉 ❤ your definitely 1 in a 1,000,000..
Thanks Dave. A wet Tuesday night in Lincolnshire is made better by your efforts. 🇬🇧🇬🇧
It's nice when we get to see you go, Wow.
Great story.
Very impressive rebuild! I made a comment about the spreader bars tapered from the middle to the drive wheels that was ignorant of the center ring. Good to see your thorough evaluation and correction of that detail. Thanks for sharing! CZcams is full of less competent content.
I find it interesting to see the evolution of keyed gears. In your case the key appears to transmitting the torque. That's a big no-no where I come from, the marine service industry. We would call those gears "key-bound" and you don't want it. Our props and fly wheels use keys but there is a tapered shaft. We use the key for timing and with props it's a fail safe. But the taper lock transmits the torque. Interesting.
I love watching an ARTIST in action. Well done Dave.
The Haish family was a major influence to my home town DeKalb IL. When I was little I used to stare with awe at the large factory buildings that were still standing that they and the Glidden (barbed wire) family had built. I also wonder if the Smith family that is tied to this spreader is or was part of the A.O. Smith that made the large blue silo’s in DeKalb also.
Did not A O Smith also build water pumps?
@@davedunham7910 I know they made water heaters for awhile.
Boy! Dave ain’t it a booger to have to re-do your work! I’d have been kicking the dirt pretty hard! You seemed just as calm as always. ✌🏻❤️🇺🇸🙏🏻🌎
I can see the muck flying - stay safe
Stay safe and we'll see you next time.
I'd love to be there 90 some years from now observing a rehab shop trying to rebuild or rehab machinery or the like of today ! They will be in for a surprise no doubt.