Old Tool Review: Spike Maul

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  • čas přidán 16. 07. 2018
  • Have you seen the video about my big anvil? It came from the railroad blacksmith shop as well..... • Hay Budden Anvil - 448lb
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Komentáře • 316

  • @Rocketninja200
    @Rocketninja200 Před 6 lety +73

    My older brother worked on a track crew doing track repairs for a rail road when he was just out of high school in the late 90's. He used to take me to his work sometimes to show me what he did and I could fish off a pier. He used those hammers almost daily. Being much younger, I was amazed at how precise he could swing them over his head and strike the spikes so perfectly aimed. Some revered people achieve mastery skills in sports or playing musical instruments. My brother drove spikes and he was a hero to me.

    • @kuraudo9700
      @kuraudo9700 Před 5 lety

      Rocketninja200 Amen 🙏 i am a rail roader myself.

    • @c4rbon304
      @c4rbon304 Před 4 lety +1

      I jumped onto the railroad for a contracting company as a track maintainer about a year and a half ago, fresh out of highschool. I had guys saying, "You're 18 and already on the railroad? That's how you know you're fucked"

    • @garonjohnson5922
      @garonjohnson5922 Před 4 lety +2

      If you have never told him that to his face, you should. Even If he didn't quite show it, it would mean the world to him.

    • @Florida239
      @Florida239 Před 11 měsíci

      I’m a rail roader myself in Florida 🙏👍🇺🇸

  • @jordanengdahl4418
    @jordanengdahl4418 Před 6 lety +15

    Yes sir, I love hard manual labor. Infact, I could watch it all day long...

  • @TallifTallonbrook
    @TallifTallonbrook Před 6 lety +175

    when you double spike you both hit the same spike in time never hammer the spike that is next to your buddy over the rail. The skinny end of the hammer is for spiking between switch points and guard rails. When you set spikes you use a spike maul so you don't smash your finger on the spike(been there done that with a 12 lb "Monday Maul" (normal sledgehammer, which you can not spike over the rail with). Why do we call it a monday? Because every time you pick it up it sucks just like monday. Just choke up to get it started then wack it 3 or 4 times so it will not jump out then go to town with a windmill swing, sometimes called rolling the hammer. Most ties I have spiked in one day by hand is 88 and that is 6 spikes per tie. I love it when you get a good old American steel hammer (not the chinese steel we get now) and you hear that ring when you hit the spike just right. So yes we still use spike mauls every day on the railroad.

    • @scruffy6151
      @scruffy6151 Před 6 lety +10

      I have a friend that worked for the railroad he explain driving spikes the same way you did.

    • @TallifTallonbrook
      @TallifTallonbrook Před 6 lety +25

      nothing worse than being afraid to take your glove off because your finger feels like it might be hamburger in there.

    • @paulshewmaker4568
      @paulshewmaker4568 Před 6 lety +11

      Triple spiking: czcams.com/video/7fobnmlEaEU/video.html

    • @Worra2575
      @Worra2575 Před 6 lety +1

      Paul Shewmaker Very cool video, thanks!

    • @calisurfduuuddee8183
      @calisurfduuuddee8183 Před 6 lety

      MIMisguided or not using gloves and sending a drill through your finger at full speed.
      Still can't get used to those dang things.

  • @mrshoeguy2477
    @mrshoeguy2477 Před 6 lety +15

    Railroad spikes are square so they won't split the wood. The sharp edge cuts across the grain and there's no lateral pressure on the wood fibers. For what it's worth.

  • @dieselhead7961
    @dieselhead7961 Před 6 lety +19

    Yup, those are indeed spike driving hammers. Cool find. Railroad roundhouses were (and still are, to an extent) a machine shop of railroad proportions. Massive power hammers, big forges, and a whole lot of danger made the wheels turn.

    • @gramursowanfaborden5820
      @gramursowanfaborden5820 Před 6 lety +1

      what amazes me is how so many parts (especially wheels on axles of old trains) are just friction fitted on.

  • @jimcarter4929
    @jimcarter4929 Před 6 lety +9

    When my Father retired he gave me his beloved 24 pound forward bias cross peen, he loved it for driving form stakes, said rocks couldn't stop it. I used it to drive master links in dozer tracks,you didn't ever want to miss, you would go for a ride. Only one other guy I worked with would use it, most would look and say no way. I was grateful when they came out with zipper master links. I have never seen another hammer as big as this one, my Dad said an old blacksmith probably made it.

  • @christopheryoung7456
    @christopheryoung7456 Před 6 lety +6

    "'Till you could just puke!"
    New favorite saying

  • @ethanheyne
    @ethanheyne Před 6 lety +1

    I love learning from people who are enthusiastic about their subject! Thank you, EC!
    Great-grandfather built specialized parts for trains. When he was old, the church dishwasher broke down, was going to cost $$ to get it repaired. When he said "I can fix it" not everyone believed him. He poked around until he found the broken part, took it home and made a new one. Dishwasher worked great after he installed the new part. I bet he wasn't the only man who worked for the railroad who learned skills and a mindset that helped in seemingly unrelated situations the rest of his life.

  • @marccoogan6190
    @marccoogan6190 Před 6 lety +16

    You are correct about the spike hammers, we use them daily

  • @chrissaguaro7793
    @chrissaguaro7793 Před 6 měsíci

    Used to drive spikes for DS narrow gauge in Colorado. Being a historic rail, we had to do everything the old fashioned way with tie tongs, track shovels, spike pullers, and spike mauls. Each guy had their own way to swing and we’d work in tandem on spikes, especially driving in oak ties. When you get good you use the narrow end. Funnest job I ever had.

  • @horneygeorgeforge7079
    @horneygeorgeforge7079 Před 4 lety +1

    here is some old school trivia- the name for the track repair crew was "Gandey Dancers".( like in the in stage "lady dancers" of the time) this came from how the looked working together moving and adjusting the track by hand and pry-bars, also were some songs came from when they sang them to keep in time as they did their work. my Grandpa worked for a logging train company in Washington state.. remember the song I've been working on the rail road? after each phrase they would heave the track over as needed.

  • @Jesse__H
    @Jesse__H Před 6 lety +23

    I've always loved trains. My dad was a conductor for the Union Pacific Railroad for forty years. I'm not sure he loved trains after that but I still do haha!

    • @surveysays8335
      @surveysays8335 Před 6 lety +5

      Railroad retirement is still one of the best real pension/retirements left in the United States.
      I bet he didn't mind the retirement package.
      It's hard work, even now when there's equipment to do a lot of the work. Every tool is heavy, every material is heavy, and if its 100 degrees outside its 110 between those irons!
      I've been doing it for a while now, and I've moved into management. We have programs that we've got to bring some contractors in, and it's always interesting to see how many people quit on their first day. Contractors have a revolving door of people thinking they can do the job, who end up puking, and quitting. Never start this job in the summer.. lol.. give yourself a good winter to get your railroad strength.

    • @Jesse__H
      @Jesse__H Před 6 lety +6

      CJ Reed you're right UPR is very old-school in a lot of ways. Seniority is everything, pay increases steadily throughout a career, and they actually take care of their retired employees.
      Sadly my dad was diagnosed with lukemia less than five years into his retirement, and he passed away two years later. But my god, did the RR ever take care of those medical bills! He had a private room in one of THE best cancer treatment facilities in the nation for many many months on end, on top of SO much other shite, and we saw bills for probably 1-2% of the cost of it all.

  • @curtwhite876
    @curtwhite876 Před 6 lety +4

    This is the best channel on CZcams. I love your sincerity and passion with which you present.

  • @antitactical
    @antitactical Před 6 lety +12

    They also make awesome tools to knock pins out of backhoe buckets or hydraulic cylinder pins

    • @bostarbird5282
      @bostarbird5282 Před 6 lety

      ben shelton that's what I use mine for. Definitely a life saver.

  • @JeffRichBLET129
    @JeffRichBLET129 Před 4 lety

    Learned to use one over 30 years ago, had to learn " the roll" , you strike, roll your wrists and bring the mail up in a fluid manner. It's an energy efficient technique and a joy to watch.
    It's been nearly 30 years since I used one but I can still roll a hammer with the best.

  • @michealdchastain3637
    @michealdchastain3637 Před 2 lety

    I've probably watched this specific video a dozen times. It still fascinates me!
    I have a similar fascination with old west stories, though more leaning towards the timber/lumber trade, because of the family history involved.
    We have 10 generations of my family that have worked in the forests of the Pacific Northwest. Primarily the Oregon Coast range and Central Cascades. Places like Mill City, Scio and Lebanon. My great grandfather was partial owner of Rose Mill (Lebanon) during WWII. Taledo, Siletz and Valasetz. My grandfather was the last yard forman before Valasetz was closed, in the mid '80's.
    I can certainly appreciate the fascination.
    Thank you for sharing the content that you do, Mr. Wadsworth.

  • @na9260
    @na9260 Před rokem

    Nailing them down till you could just puke. Brought a smile to my soul. Thanks .

  • @Guysm1l3y
    @Guysm1l3y Před 6 lety +30

    As someone who volunteered at a "living museum" that operates a steam locomotive and worked on the track crew you "nailed" exactly why those spike mauls are shaped that way and how quickly the fun and novelty wears off when you have to replace and re-spike ties.

    • @TallifTallonbrook
      @TallifTallonbrook Před 6 lety +2

      LOL I do it every day. Only drive them by hand now for fun and competition between friends trackside.

    • @rynohorn3819
      @rynohorn3819 Před 6 lety +1

      Found out cutting down trees with an axe instead of a chainsaw yields same results... great comment.

    • @BenzParts123
      @BenzParts123 Před 6 lety

      MIMisguided What is used these days? A jackhammer to drive the spikes?

    • @TallifTallonbrook
      @TallifTallonbrook Před 6 lety +1

      sort of. It is a hydraulic Stanly spike driver. Just put a cup on the end of a jackhammer and replace the chisel with a flat-ended rod that never leaves the cup.

    • @TallifTallonbrook
      @TallifTallonbrook Před 6 lety

      you would be amazed at the technique in properly swinging a hammer. I can ding the hell out of those carnie bell games now. We rarely do it by hand now. There are some jobs that you can not use the driver on and you have to use a punch and hammer for.

  • @walterbeech
    @walterbeech Před rokem

    Great Vid, my grandfather worked for the Santa Fe, the one thing I would add is, when a spike was drove, they normally always had two guys on each spike taking turn hitting from opposing sides. Thanks for the vids!

  • @simonforget280
    @simonforget280 Před 6 lety +4

    One of my friend's grandfather was a railmaster for the Canadian National Railways. Well after his retirement (and walking with a cane), he was still proud to drive rail spikes in with a single blow. All retainment walls at his cabins where made of discarded dormers and rails. Let me tell you that I was careful to not angry that man. Keep up your excellent work!

    • @garymoore8711
      @garymoore8711 Před 6 lety +3

      My Mother's Father was a section foreman for Southern Pacific at the beginning of the Depression. He was demoted back to a section hand in order to keep his job. His track gang carried him until he could get back in good enough physical shape to carry his weight. He told me that story with a catch in hi throat at how proud he was of those men and the respect they had for him.

  • @Drmcunningham
    @Drmcunningham Před 6 lety

    The story of the Gandy dancers is fascinating. Their work and their songs are amazing.

  • @Tv-vu1ck
    @Tv-vu1ck Před 6 lety

    scott, thank you for all of the things you share and teach all of us , the comments on your videos speak for them self. everyone has alot respect for you and nate

  • @jackgreen412
    @jackgreen412 Před 4 lety

    I'm somewhat of a fan of the railroad and enjoying watching up close. A few years ago I went over to Northeast, Pa for a few hours of train watching. Got into town and just saw RR maintenance vehicles. Frowned, but soon realized they were replacing a long strand of continous rail. Wow. Soecialized mobile equipment galore. But at the end there were a few guys with spike mauls touching up.

  • @joeseabert8391
    @joeseabert8391 Před 6 lety

    My grandfather was a boilermaker local 92 out of Los Angeles. Did that work for 40 years. He once told me that rail houses were the worse to work in. Very dirty which is saying a lot considering he also worked in refineries too. When he first started in a shop he would go to work in a suit and jacket, change at the shop into his work cloths, they had showers there and after work would get back into his suit and head home. He worked a lot in the ship yards on Long Beach but also work in the Mohave desert at sears lake.

  • @joethorn88
    @joethorn88 Před 6 lety

    I picked up a couple in a farm auction a few years ago. So glad to have them sitting in my shop. Thoroughly enjoys the videos, as always.

  • @fredcox961
    @fredcox961 Před 6 lety

    Yes, and imagine the cruisers, loggers, teamsters, and mill workers producing the ties. Love the way you pack so much imagery into a short video. Blessed again. Thank you, guys.

    • @TallifTallonbrook
      @TallifTallonbrook Před 6 lety

      every now and then I run into a hand hewn tie. They are very rare now. Toledo docks stills has a few though

  • @JerkRice
    @JerkRice Před 6 lety

    Each of those old tools has a story to tell. Thanks for sharing with us.

  • @Ibaneddie76
    @Ibaneddie76 Před 5 lety

    My Grandfather retired from the railroad in Roseville California, he worked their for one 30 years pulling cars and maintaining tracks. He was a crazy strong man till the day he died. They used to call him Yogi because he wore the same hat and was hilarious. I built a few anvils from pieces of track he gave me and all sorts of tools from old steaks and ties.

  • @patrickoconnell5462
    @patrickoconnell5462 Před 2 lety

    I work track crew for a short line in Massachusetts. I use a spike maul daily. There is no better tool than my maul. Hot or cold, rain or shine, that bad boy does the job.

  • @errolwilcox747
    @errolwilcox747 Před 4 lety

    My grandfather worked as armed security at the switch yards of Russell, KY. Those switch yards were the largest in the world at the time. Check out some old photos of those yards in Russell, it's amazing how huge they really were. They also had the turntables you spoke of, for moving trains around the yard.

  • @danielanderson1417
    @danielanderson1417 Před 6 lety

    I worked on the railroad for two years building track and you captured the spike maul very well!

  • @IthBombgard
    @IthBombgard Před 6 lety

    I grew up near railroad roundhouse. They were amazing buildings for amazing machines. I love it. Nice vid. Thank you.

  • @Nightman2152
    @Nightman2152 Před 5 lety

    I had a friend who worked for a small rail contractor that did spurs for factories and yards and other small private applications. They pounded spikes by hand with a hammer just like that. This was in 2007!
    If you want to check out something interesting
    look up thermite track welding! Railroading in general is a subject with so much history and cool stuff it'd take you a lifetime to learn it all. Thank frig for youtube!

  • @tonydeleo3642
    @tonydeleo3642 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for sharing. Spike malls like those allows us to touch history, the day to day stuff, how simple tools in skilled hands built this nation.

  • @sirbrigit
    @sirbrigit Před 5 lety

    I found one of those hammerheads while picking up scrap metal. Mine is marked Tamco. What an amazing piece of equipment.

  • @Tv-vu1ck
    @Tv-vu1ck Před 6 lety

    i got a knife in the box from cy swan today, i want to thank you and cy both for this great honor, i got a camper coyote & it is stunning. ill never regret paying out a bit for a workhorse tool like that! in melbourne iowa there is a place called the edel historical blacksmith museum...so if u ever in the midwest

  • @KevinTKeith
    @KevinTKeith Před 5 lety

    You can see working railroad car turntables (sort of) on Powell St. in San Francisco. The Powell St. cable car runs between Mason St., near Fisherman's Wharf, up over a hill and down to Market St. in the downtown section. Where it stops at both ends, it is is turned around by on a manually-pushed turntable, right in the street, to catch the parallel set of tracks, load passengers, and go back up the hill the opposite direction. The single cable cars are nowhere near the size of full-size train locomotives, and there are no attached side tracks or repair galleys, but it's still cool to see.

  • @erniesouza6263
    @erniesouza6263 Před 6 lety

    Thanks, I learn so much watching your videos. I had no idea there were such tools specific to RR work.

  • @jeffcaudillCRUM
    @jeffcaudillCRUM Před 6 lety

    I can't wait to hear about Bill. I love your storytelling.

  • @darrellwalton6967
    @darrellwalton6967 Před 6 lety

    Loved that protractor! Had to order one . Thank you sir !

  • @Romezview
    @Romezview Před 6 lety

    I passed through your part of Oregon a couple weeks ago and I smiled and wondered what you were up to? thanks for the videos you are an amazing story teller and get my imagination wondering everytime you talk about the old smiths and such.

  • @63256325N
    @63256325N Před 6 lety

    Love _all_ the stories you tell, thank you!

  • @thekibby8375
    @thekibby8375 Před 5 lety

    my Dad worked tie gang for Conrail in the late 70s, he still has his hammer. He said that some of the rail gang veterans would have guys set the spikes and then they would walk the rail, hammer in each hand, and spike both sides of the same rail. he said that if you couldn't cover up your hammer blows with the head of a dime, you still needed practice. i know that Ive never seen anyone able to effortlessly swing a sledge in a fluid circular motion like my Dad, drive home spikes and not get tired-Ive never been able to quite emulate it myself

  • @pangsbricks8412
    @pangsbricks8412 Před 6 lety

    Awesome video! Always cool to see history in someones shop!

  • @krismckee5089
    @krismckee5089 Před 6 lety

    you sir speak nothing but inspiring words due to appreciate of good ol' hard work. thank you for your addicting content

  • @rodkraal7255
    @rodkraal7255 Před 6 lety

    Hi there to all craftsman. I am new to the world of you tube, and love it. I have subscribed and really enjoy the video's.I served an apprentice blacksmith for the railways here in New Zealand which was five years then served for another fifteen years until they closed our shop an we were made redundant. We forged the spiking hammers the same as in the clip of old tool review these were forged under a 15CWT Massey Harris steam hammer. There was a similar hammer with a handle earlier in the clip we also made these for driving spikes in lighter rails. The hex blanks you thought were for hammers look very much like the drifts we used for making box spanners, you would drive the tapered end into a piece of heavy walled pipe until it came up on to the flat part then working it under the power hammer on the flats until you made the hex box end. Hope this is of help keep up the great work and I look forward to the next installment cheers Rod Kraal, South Canterbury, New Zealand

  • @BusHuxley
    @BusHuxley Před 6 lety

    This is a great lesson on old hand tools. Thank you

  • @RyanBaumann530
    @RyanBaumann530 Před 2 lety

    Just piked up one of these at an estate sale this morning, great video!

  • @jdbenge00
    @jdbenge00 Před 5 lety

    Long runs are done with machines now, but for the everyday line maintenance like I do we still drive with the spike mauls. You get very good at making new handles before you get decent at swinging one. You break it, you make it.

  • @kengamble8595
    @kengamble8595 Před 6 lety +2

    I live very close to tracks and have found probably ten of those spike hammers laying around.
    I wondered for a while why there were so many just thrown down and left when they were still in great condition............ UNTIL I tried using one ! 😣
    Nice collection you have there Scott ! 😊
    Thanks for sharing and take care. 👍

    • @TallifTallonbrook
      @TallifTallonbrook Před 6 lety +3

      The yellow stripers (new guys) hate them because they can't use them correctly. The first time I double spiked the old head (old gandy dancer) that was teaching me would miss every time I missed. After about 5 misses in a row, sweat beading off me, I looked at him a little angry and he smiled and said "I am not going to do all the work by myself kid"

  • @fordilac
    @fordilac Před 6 lety

    My dad was born in 1902 and was a blacksmith, mule skinner, and carpenter. Worked in the sawmill business his whole life. I lost him when I was just 11 yrs old, so I never reaped his knowledge but the his genes were passed to me and I am thankful very day for that. He built the first 8 wheel log wagon any one around here has ever seen in person.

  • @JanetWilham
    @JanetWilham Před 6 lety

    blacksmithing was before what we have today as=welding--they were highly sought after and it took hard hot work to make things and repair things--this I know first hand as my grandfather was a blacksmith for =Alloy Metal plant in Alloy West Virginia and have many of his tool he made--its a dieing valuable craft and not many can master this but IF they do they are a gem.

  • @elitearbor
    @elitearbor Před 6 lety

    My home is built where the local roundhouse used to be, and even though we dropped a foot or so of fill and then topsoil on the leveled ground, whenever digging for posts or garden boxes - I still find hammer handles, railroad spikes, etc.
    It's interesting to know precisely what the hickory "dowels" actually went to, back in the day!

  • @ThePreacherProclaims
    @ThePreacherProclaims Před 4 lety

    My grandfather operated one of those hammers building the railroad. To his dying day he had arms as big around as my body (mild hyperbole). Years after retiring he was still hard as nails.

  • @michaele1201
    @michaele1201 Před 6 lety

    My Dad put in 43 years on the Great Northern and the Burlington Northern as a freight conductor until he retired. He always had a lot of respect for the track crews, "Gandy Dancers." He always said its "Tough work for tough people." As a young man, I spent 8 years in the truck gang, welding and repairing trucks and worn draft gear pockets on the engines. It's big iron and requires big equipment. That was hard work, but nothing like pounding spikes till you puke. Good video

  • @alexonder1545
    @alexonder1545 Před 6 lety

    I love to hear the stories of them days as well,,Thanks

  • @bruceg1845
    @bruceg1845 Před 6 lety

    Your'e a man after my own heart. I seen those hammers at Taylor Yard in LA in the late 70s when I worked for SP for a few years

  • @ChrisLoganToronto
    @ChrisLoganToronto Před 6 lety

    I was hired on the railway 21 years ago as a heavy equipment operator. The spike hammer was one of the first pieces of heavy equipment I was made familiar with. You would not believe how far a spike flies when you don't hit it square and it doesn't penetrate the hardwood tie.

    • @ChrisLoganToronto
      @ChrisLoganToronto Před 6 lety

      How it's done czcams.com/video/6fsfyWB6arw/video.htmlm35s

  • @mikehickey7881
    @mikehickey7881 Před 6 lety +4

    If you have never heard Canadian Railroad Trilogy sung by Gordon Lightfoot, try it .. an amazing story of building the miles of rail to span a country.

  • @warwoodtool
    @warwoodtool Před rokem

    Very cool video thank you for putting this together! We actually still forge railroad tools 100% in the USA from USA sourced materials. We still make these railroad spike mauls for jobs across North America.

  • @Joe___R
    @Joe___R Před 6 lety

    For your next video you should forge a spike maul out of one of those hammer blanks. My grandfather worked for UP and he always called them rail hammers. The odd thing is still today when they repair tracks they still have to drive all the spikes by hand. I'm not sure but they might even have to still lay new track by hand too.

  • @aaronr3637
    @aaronr3637 Před 6 lety +1

    You guys make great videos!

  • @patrickhance7348
    @patrickhance7348 Před 6 lety

    Man love your old stuff.pat from Belgium 🔨🔨👊

  • @wilburnfletcher6962
    @wilburnfletcher6962 Před 5 lety

    I have a old dozer track pin hammer and it looks just like that. Has two pin sizes on it . Works great to with the accompanying 16 lb hammer.

  • @chrisjewell7053
    @chrisjewell7053 Před 6 lety +1

    Thank you S.W.

  • @alanpaige9192
    @alanpaige9192 Před 6 lety

    Another good one. I have one of the post hammers you showed and had no idea what it was for but I have used it to drive 2x4 stakes so guess It was self explanatory. With out a clue as usual in my life. Keep on keeping on.

  • @mikeymike5074
    @mikeymike5074 Před 6 lety

    May 9th, 2019 Union Pacific 4014 "Big Boy" meets UP 844 in Ogden Utah! 150th anniversary of the Golden Spike. Awesome video! You really have something special here on CZcams. One of my top favorite channels.

  • @NoticeableNate
    @NoticeableNate Před 6 lety

    Idk why but I love how he chucks whatever hes done with on the floor

  • @logankessels490
    @logankessels490 Před 6 lety

    absolutely incredible

  • @lewruss7614
    @lewruss7614 Před 7 měsíci

    Those are indeed 10 pound 'Bell patern' spike mauls. There used to be three manufacturers, all american firms, that made them. Woodings-Verona in Verona, Pa., Warwood Tool in Wheeling, Wv., and Tamco out of Bethel Park, Pa. Tamco still forges those tools today. Originally gorged from carbon steel, then a higher strenght alloy steel, and today forged from an S5, Grade B alloy steel. The tool is liquid quenched and tempered to a specific Burnell (spelling?) hardness, all conforming to AREMA specifications. Worked 40 plus years for a railroad tool distribution firm and demonstrated 'spiking' many times.

  • @jpshaw55
    @jpshaw55 Před 6 lety

    My grandfather worked as a blacksmith at the Southern Pacific roundhouse in San Luis Obispo, California back before WWI. He and his five brothers all got jobs with the SPRR because their father, my great-grandfather, died a hero at the throttle of a passenger locomotive in Oakland.

    • @jpshaw55
      @jpshaw55 Před 6 lety

      You're welcome. Too bad this comment section won't accept photos. I have a couple neat ones of my great grandfather and my grandfather...

  • @matsherwood6277
    @matsherwood6277 Před 6 lety

    We have an old railroad roundhouse in our town! Very neat!

  • @BengtRosini13
    @BengtRosini13 Před 5 lety

    that's awesome. I actually have one of those, and kinda wondered how it was used.

  • @SamMcinturff
    @SamMcinturff Před 6 lety

    Thanks for another video.

  • @duggydo
    @duggydo Před 6 lety +3

    Essential Craftsman I swung a spike maul quite a bit 20+ years ago. You are right about someone starting them and the man with the maul setting them. Always stay a rail or two ahead of the maul. If he missed the spike and hit the rail, your bell will be ringing for hours. Great video!

  • @johnwinden8511
    @johnwinden8511 Před 6 lety

    What I was told by an old railroader is that the guys that swung those were called Gandy dancer and their name comes from the tools that they were using that were manufactured by the Gandy tool company of Chicago.

  • @G8rquest
    @G8rquest Před 6 lety +4

    I've seen enough of you to say; Your heart is like a tree. It branches out through generations. Care is the soil upon which you thrive. Your spirit is encouraging. Well done.

  • @logangarland2650
    @logangarland2650 Před 2 lety

    Just the guys building the 2 lane road to the old famly sawmill my grandfather lived on still seams outlandish today lol

  • @jrix2041
    @jrix2041 Před 6 lety

    Have you ever been to Promontory, Utah where the Golden Spike is? Meeting of the East and West with rails. Pretty impressive. There is a place south of Snowville Utah where people say you can hear strange things at night. It is the Chinese railroad workers singing and pinging. I have never heard it, but very reliable friends of mine have. Supposedly. AWESOME!!!! I am so glad to be able to call you and yours "Friends" It really is a pleasure to know you!!!

  • @suckmecok
    @suckmecok Před 4 lety

    My great grandfather worked on the railroad in the 1800s and I have some of his tools.

  • @neveraloneadventures2240

    Awesome love the history

  • @a1carpenter
    @a1carpenter Před 6 lety

    Excellent video !!!

  • @thegrindeveryday9408
    @thegrindeveryday9408 Před 5 lety

    There’s a beautiful working railroad turn house in Henry Ford’s Greenfield Village in Dearborn Michigan. I just saw it a couple weeks ago. It’s definitely worth seeing.

  • @jeffsandling5981
    @jeffsandling5981 Před 5 lety

    Got 2 of these. One was my grandfather's and the other I acquired at some point (old American made). Almost reforged one into a hammer eye punch but couldn't bring myself to do it, just too cool of a piece to hang on to.

  • @royreynolds108
    @royreynolds108 Před 3 lety

    If the makers mark is a W over a V it is Woodings Verona Tool Co. Those 2 spike mauls are factory made.. They are what is called "Bell pattern" as they are round on both ends.

  • @stantheman5163
    @stantheman5163 Před 6 lety

    We just returned from trip to China. You see craftsmen in front of a lot of jewelry shops using small specialized anvils to make jewelry. They are tiny, but mounted on a bolt just like the big boys.

  • @alexisoxley9630
    @alexisoxley9630 Před rokem

    I really enjoyed watching him throw the hammers and heads down on the ground for some reason 😂

  • @edf7008
    @edf7008 Před 6 lety

    I own two of these, very cool tool.

  • @victorcastle1840
    @victorcastle1840 Před 6 lety

    Like you I was more interested in reading about the Mountain men than the RR that spelled the end to that era. I mistakenly left Lewis & Clark's expedition to last , knowing it was written for a report to the President ( Jefferson) and thinking it would be boring . Boy was I wrong !
    Love old tools

  • @scruffy6151
    @scruffy6151 Před 6 lety

    Thank you EC. never to much iron on hand the price just keeps going an the iron is getting poorer.

  • @davidbrowning7172
    @davidbrowning7172 Před 6 lety +11

    Love your videos

  • @lanedouglas2165
    @lanedouglas2165 Před 6 lety

    I grew up on the Illinois Central RR that runs from Chicago to New Orleans. My dad worked on the ICRR. Fulton, KY had a round house. You are correct, those are spike hammers. They were pretty much antiques though by early 60's, as steam powered machines were used for all but the small repair jobs.

    • @TallifTallonbrook
      @TallifTallonbrook Před 6 lety

      I got 3 brand new ones in the back of the truck and my 30 year old one my partner gave me when he retired. Pretty sure we use them every day. You have to set the spikes before you use the hydraulic spike hammer to drive them or the other ones jump out to the hole. Then sometimes you can't get the power pack to the work location, and other times you do it for fun and to try and beat the other guy in contests... We have to make our own fun now. If you really want to drive spikes you use a kershaw hammer machine that has 4 hammers on it and you run it like a video game, but those are only for production teams.

    • @lanedouglas2165
      @lanedouglas2165 Před 6 lety +1

      MIMisguided I'm sure your totally correct. I'm 68, my information was 50 years old, railroads may have been at their peak in 1968. The trains are missed by many of us.

  • @johnnygroebs4407
    @johnnygroebs4407 Před 6 lety

    Thank you for this!

  • @stuartmccloud307
    @stuartmccloud307 Před 6 lety

    Great video man. I was kind of lost in the romance of a hundred years back for a moment and it felt great 👍

  • @TheVintageEngineer
    @TheVintageEngineer Před 6 lety

    I’ve been to Golden Spike. Middle of nowhere (Promontory, UT). So far away it’s where rocket propellant is tested and Autoliv (airbag manufacturer) makes their explosive propellant).

  • @usm-4kagnew165
    @usm-4kagnew165 Před 5 lety

    Worked as a roundhouse Forman. I think spike mauls went out with the gandy dancer on most class one railroads. Round houses too.

  • @blacksmithmakes9297
    @blacksmithmakes9297 Před 6 lety

    My family used to have one we got rid of it before I started making stuff and collecting tools, wish I had it now.

  • @americanaxetoolco2076
    @americanaxetoolco2076 Před 6 lety

    My Great Grand Father was a blacksmith in East Tennessee for the railroad In Erwin, Tennessee! I have his forge and anvil ! Your assumption On the round house is correct!...

  • @bostarbird5282
    @bostarbird5282 Před 6 lety

    I have one that I use to drive pins out of heavy equipment. Definitely a life saver in my world.

  • @PiotrTymkow
    @PiotrTymkow Před 6 lety +11

    I love your videos with a historical note, but now someone will have to pick the hammers up after you just thrown them on floor left and right 😉

    • @highwaystar8773
      @highwaystar8773 Před 6 lety +1

      It may look cool when you throw the various hammer heads on the ground but it makes me question your wisdom. But hey you’re a good story teller. 😉