'Run It Like A Religion'
By Ken Bannister, MEch (UK), CMRP, MLE, Editor
Up until a few years ago, I used to make an annual “back to my roots” pilgramage to visit my parents who lived just outside the old mill/market town of Wigan, in Northern England. Halfway between Liverpool and Manchester on the Leeds-Liverpool canal waterway system, Wigan was an important player in the Second Industrial Revolution (in the 19th and early 20th
Centuries).
Some readers may know about this region from reading George Orwell’s 1937
book, The Road to Wigan Pier, a sociological investigation of pre-war working-class living conditions in Northern England. (And, yes, Wigan really does have a pier that was designed for loading and off-loading shipped goods.)
Now a busy recreation waterway, the Leeds-Liverpool canal system once served dozens of
mill towns and hundreds of cotton mills across Northern England. Those operations would receive raw cotton from the Southern United States, then deliver finished cotton goods to the rest of the world. As one of the dampest places on the planet and with access to abundant coal, this region was an ideal location for processing cotton.
One of the highlights of my trips home was to walk from my parents' house via the path
(formerly used by horses to pull barges) that runs by the canal, into the town of Wigan. Along the way, I would often stop in for a visit at one of my all-time favorite places: the historic Trencherfield Mill.
Built at the turn of the 19th Century, this once-busy cotton-carding and -spinning mill
has been turned into an industrial museum. Although now temporarily closed due to COVID-19, the site still houses the last and largest-ever built-in-situ, double-acting, triple-expansion, working steam engine in existence.
Commissioned in 1906 and fed by six boilers, that 2,100-hp tandem, horizontal,
four-cylinder behemoth was fitted to a 26-ft.-diameter, 70-ton flywheel that connected the engine by way of a cotton-rope-driven-line-shaft system to more than 1,200 machines spread over five floors.
Keeping this solitary steam engine running at a 100% capacity, 68 to 75 rpm, for 12
hours per day, translated into steady work for 450 mill employees. Downtime meant no pay and wasn't an option. Effective maintenance was crucial.
On some of my visits to the museum, I had the opportunity to speak with Mike Prescho, the
Senior Engineer in charge of the museum's treasured steam engine for modern-day presentation purposes. I have always been curious about the mindset of those charged with running such a critical piece of machinery in its production heyday.
As Prescho described it, they would “run it like a religion.” He would then elaborate on
the individuals' strict adherence to protocol, processes, and a calendar of PM events that never wavered in on-time completion.
Prescho also pointed to cleanliness, effective lubrication, and regular boiler washouts
(thanks to dirty canal water) as major factors in the equipment's incredible uptime and reliability record. Museum visitors can see some actual examples of this approach for themselves.
Among other things, during a true-to-life demonstration of the Trencherfield Mill steam
engine, I observed all critical main journal bearings being hydrostatically hand pumped with 220-weight lubricant prior to startup of the engine. Once the unit was running steady, the bearings were switched over to a cyclic, arm-driven, auto-luber that provided continuous lubrication. When the engine was shut down, everything was meticulously cleaned.
FINAL WORD
Amazing, isn't it? Industrial-revolution-era engineers and millwrights had no backup systems. Instead, they simply adhered to process, procedure, cleanliness, and principles of lubrication for their assets' reliability. Some things never change, nor should they. We have seen that reliability does not have to be
complicated.
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