Caldwell Industries: Difference between revisions

From IBLS
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Line 17: Line 17:


: The open column launch engine was very simple. It consisted of various pieces of cut bar stock (no castings) and some nuts and screws. I showed the kit to my uncle. He was working for a machine shop at the time. He ordered a kit and built it. Then he built a scaled up model 4x the size of the original. Both ran very well on compressed air.
: The open column launch engine was very simple. It consisted of various pieces of cut bar stock (no castings) and some nuts and screws. I showed the kit to my uncle. He was working for a machine shop at the time. He ordered a kit and built it. Then he built a scaled up model 4x the size of the original. Both ran very well on compressed air.
== Open Column Launch Engine ==
<gallery widths="300px" heights="300px">
File:Open Column Launch Steam Engine 1973 02 p162.PNG|Caldwell Industries' Open Column Launch Engine, from Popular Mechanics 1973, page 1962.
File:Open Column Launch Steam Engine 1973 02 p163.PNG
</gallery>
* http://bbs.homeshopmachinist.net/threads/39408-PM-Feb-1973-quot-Tiny-Steam-Engine-quot-Anyone
* http://www.john-tom.com/MyPlans/SteamPlans3/RiverQueenEngine/RiverQueenPlansInstruction.pdf
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=GtUDAAAAMBAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false Popular Mechanics, February 1973, pp 162-163]
* Live Steam Magazine, February 1973

Revision as of 20:30, 27 April 2014

Caldwell Industries was a supplier of live steam castings, plans and parts.

CALDWELL INDUSTRIES FORMED

From Steam Traction Farm Collector, March 1969:

In the first half of 1967 Bill and John Matlock made a discovery. Something that they wanted was readily available in England, but not in the United States. By July, a full scale investigation was in progress. Over a year later in September, 1968, Caldwell Industries of Luling, Texas had been formed and was publishing their initial catalogs.
There was a time when every toy store carried small steam engines. But not any more. Caldwell Industries feels that from the youth will come the machinists and engineers of tomorrow. They carry a complete line of electric and alcohol fueled toys.


Daris Nevil wrote:

Sometime around 1975 I saw an ad in a magazine for Caldwell Industries of Luling, Texas. It was an ad for a small open-column steam launch engine. I was intrigued, especially because it was cheap, around $20. I ordered one of the kits. A catalog came along with the kit. I was fascinated by the models in the catalog, especially a set of castings for a 4-6-2 Pacific locomotive in O gauge. I didn't know a thing about castings, machining or building steam engines, but I wanted to do it.
The open column launch engine was very simple. It consisted of various pieces of cut bar stock (no castings) and some nuts and screws. I showed the kit to my uncle. He was working for a machine shop at the time. He ordered a kit and built it. Then he built a scaled up model 4x the size of the original. Both ran very well on compressed air.

Open Column Launch Engine