Cooper Bessemer Type 26 Pipeline Compressor Engine

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Komentáře • 37

  • @kevinsauce3408
    @kevinsauce3408 Před rokem

    My Dad helped put these very engines together when the plant was built in Natchitoches. I grew up around these engines, used to play in the engine buildings when i was little. Dad was the plant foreman when i was born (1955) and we lived onsite. There were 2 engine buildings, A & B. Can't remember how many were in each building. The engines i believe where in pairs, joined at the crankshaft. Happy Times. Everytime I visit Natchitoches I visit the plant. None were running in 2022 last time I was there. Toured A building and got me a souvenir spark plug. Kinder Morgan owns the plant now and had talked about getting one building running again but too expensive.

    • @randyroberson3515
      @randyroberson3515 Před 9 měsíci

      There were 9 units in A Building; I don’t remember how many in B.
      Each was a Cooper-Bessemer Type 26, twin tandem; 1600 horsepower at 125 RPM.

  • @paulmcarroll59
    @paulmcarroll59 Před 4 lety +1

    I'm in Ogden Iowa now. They have 4 of these still in service. Last 4, I hear. To be decommissioned next year. Got some great video. It's pure music to hear.

  • @dbowmaster1
    @dbowmaster1 Před 13 lety +1

    Brings back many found memories. Great friends, good times, entertaining stories.
    I grew up around these (some older) at Ogden, Ia., Beatrice, Ne., Palmyra, Ne., and many other compressor stations.
    Thanks for the memories.

  • @randyroberson3515
    @randyroberson3515 Před 9 měsíci

    I fear these old marvels aren’t going to be with us much longer. I wish someone would preserve at least one. I was privileged to see them in operation and help maintain them.

    • @nathanh.5373
      @nathanh.5373 Před 12 dny

      Do you know if any are still working and where?

    • @randyroberson3515
      @randyroberson3515 Před 12 dny

      These at Station 40 Natchitoches Louisiana had not run in several years when I retired circa 2022.

    • @randyroberson3515
      @randyroberson3515 Před 12 dny

      Several old companies had them: Panhandle Eastern; Southern Star Central, are two I recall. I do not know if any are still on duty.
      The compressors are quite efficient mostly because they are so slow; engines mot so much, plus they are huge laborious jobs to repair. Emissions and safety rules have doomed them imo.

  • @bswell7251
    @bswell7251 Před 6 lety

    Holy cow! I was a Kelly hand there in the summer of 1996. This brings back lots of memories and nightmares, lol!

  • @bonzo874
    @bonzo874 Před 14 lety +1

    all those great engines.........

  • @briantodd5896
    @briantodd5896 Před 10 lety +6

    I remember working on very similar units at the TGP Pump Station in Cleveland Texas. It really was a unique experience. I remember the operators becoming frantic when these large engines would *run away* so to say. I was the guy who would replace 100's of windows in the building during the winter because the thrust from the engines backfire was so strong it would blow out large groups of window pains near the exhausts. To my knowledge the engines are still onsite but went out of commission around 2011 after being replaced by an electric motor driven compressor. The plant originally had 2 buildings with 8 Cooper Bessemer each. The first electric motor driven compressor was installed in the late 90's and the first 8 Coopers along with building were removed. I'll tell you one thing, that is a lot of floor to mop around those eight engines and yes there was a basement level to mop as well.
    * 16ft flywheel
    * 8 horizontal pistons
    * 1600 hp @ max rpm of 125

    • @Monse_Sports_Cards
      @Monse_Sports_Cards Před 8 lety

      That's cool man. I work at the aqua dulce plant station 1 on that same tgp system

    • @thomaswoosley4821
      @thomaswoosley4821 Před 7 lety

      I worked in the Division A office in the 80s and those engines always amazed me. At the Cleveland station, during wet weather you could go in the basement and see water squirt out of the expansion joint between the basement floor and engine pad on #1 I think. Apparently, ground water under the foundation seeped in and squirted out with the engine movement. I was in the engineering department in the late 80s and did the initial estimate for converting the station to electric compression. The price tag was astronomical and I was surprised years later to find out that it had been done.

    • @briantodd5896
      @briantodd5896 Před 7 lety

      I remember the water coming up as well. We would have to squeegee and pump out the water. I drove by the TGP plant in Cleveland last year and noticed they finally removed the last remaining 8 engines. The most amazing thing was when they had all 8 on line.

    • @thomaswoosley4821
      @thomaswoosley4821 Před 7 lety

      Was Loretta still working there when you were there?

  • @douro20
    @douro20 Před 12 lety

    It's amazing that there are still stations around which are running these big double-acting engines...

  • @raymondgidman6466
    @raymondgidman6466 Před 11 měsíci

    I'd love to go just to feel the energy

  • @Fredthornton
    @Fredthornton Před 12 lety

    Like out of the comic books with the strange shapes, pipes, wonderful sound.

  • @pumpergauger
    @pumpergauger Před 12 lety +2

    Great footage, thanks for posting this video. It is good to know that there are others out there that appreciate these old slow speed engines. It is these types of mechanical marvels that delivered billions of cubic feet of natural gas all through our country. They also represent a fine generation of hard working folks who helped shape the USA...

  • @olheavyhands
    @olheavyhands Před 12 lety

    We have the same engines running today in Natchitoches,La .... Cooper bessemer type 26 model, We have 9 in one building.

  • @ashtabula4wd
    @ashtabula4wd Před 11 lety

    This engine looks like the huge Snow Compressor engines. Bessemer must have had a partnership! The Snow engines were also built in PA, in the early teens.

  • @stormlord5500
    @stormlord5500 Před 13 lety

    Great vid. The old horizontal large gas engines are in a league of their own. Slow speed but, insane amounts of torque, and great ruggedness. The look and sound just perfect. Maybe inefficient but who cares, I sure as hell don't!!!!!!:)

  • @enginebill
    @enginebill Před 12 lety

    Any chance of seeing a video of the engines in your station?

  • @tomtd
    @tomtd Před 3 lety

    Can you imagine the look on the salesman’s face when they told him he had the order got these machines.

  • @meanjogrn
    @meanjogrn Před 12 lety

    just a couple of engines in there

  • @otef434
    @otef434 Před 14 lety

    @tadpole482 Does Ogden have such a station? Would like to drive on down and take a look-see.

  • @harrimanfox8961
    @harrimanfox8961 Před 4 lety

    This is in Louisiana.

  • @jcoopercj7
    @jcoopercj7  Před 14 lety

    its in LA

  • @thomaswoosley4821
    @thomaswoosley4821 Před 7 lety

    Hey Justin, do you know if these are still operating at Natchitoches?

  • @ilkjdsflkfj
    @ilkjdsflkfj Před 14 lety

    where is this station located at?

  • @jcoopercj7
    @jcoopercj7  Před 12 lety +1

    this is actually from Natchitoches

    • @kevinsauce3408
      @kevinsauce3408 Před 2 lety +1

      My Dad helped build the plant in Natchitoches. Put those engines together. I lived at the plant from 1955-1966, Dad ended up the Plant Foreman until he transferred to another compressor station . I used to play in those buildings when i was a kid around all those exposed parts. There was A building & B building. I think A had 9 engines (actually 2 engines with a common flywheel) and 8 in B building. B building is gone, A still there (I visited yesterday 4-20-22) but none of the engines are in shape to run. I was told about 600K per engine to get in running condition.

    • @bswell7251
      @bswell7251 Před 2 lety

      I worked as a summer hand when they were decommissioning B building in 96. I spent most of the summer mopping up oil and water from the A building basement.

  • @stormlord5500
    @stormlord5500 Před 11 lety

    Many other companies here and in Europe built large double acting gas engines. The Cooper company and the Bessemer company merged around 1929 or so. Snow merged with Worthington I think in 1917? Cooper-Bessemer and Snow/Worthington competed with their doubleacting designs till about the late
    40's. Then they pretty much discontinued the horizontal double acting engines.