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Steam ploughing - a simple
guide |
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Almost universally the double engine
system is seen today. This involves two engines, one on each
side of the field, pulling an implement between them with a steel
cable. |

A ploughing engine can be recognised as a
very large traction engine with a winch drum under the boiler.
The great majority are Fowlers with just a handful made
elsewhere. The picture above is of a McLaren.
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Each engine pulls the implement in turn.
At the end of the pull the implement goes back the other way and
the engine at rest moves forward the width of the work.
The pull could be up to 800 yards. |

In good conditions a ploughing set can
plough about 20 acres a day using roughly a tonne of coal. By
contrast a horse plough could only manage 1 acre a day. The
steam plough could plough deeper and cultivate ground impossible
by other methods. |
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Implements are usually the plough or the
cultivator. The plough pivots around its centre axle each set
of plough blades operating in turn. The plough is steered.
A
cultivator, using up to 16 tines, is turned by the power of the
opposite engine as it starts to pull. At the same time the
tines are lifted out of the ground. When the cultivator is
ready the steersman pulls a lever to drop the implement into
the ground. |

Ploughing engines can use the same cable
system to dredge lakes. |
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Most ploughing engines were operated by
contractors moving from job to job. The farmer was responsible
for providing coal and water. Each plough gang consisted of a
foreman, two drivers, a steersman and a cook boy. They lived in
a van pulled by the engines. They stood in for each other
during meal times so the work never stopped. |

The heyday of steam ploughing was between
1860 and 1919. Some sets lived on to be used again in the
second war. |
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The last contractor sold up in 1960. |
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John Billard
April 2011
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all pictures copyright Steam Plough Club (horse plough
picture George Cooper) |