Happy New Year!
Parish
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- Posts: 2209
- Joined: Sun Mar 28, 2021 4:06 pm
- Location: Alcove N.Y.i buy and restore
Re: Parish
Very nice Micheal those are cool mills. Elgin made a chain drive windmill called the snow.
Parish
Dan,
I was thinking I saw an Elgin Snow when I went to the Lubbock museum in August. It was neat.
Couple more photos.
The brake liner was likely the original. The brake mechanism was mostly intact. The new spring is more of a guess as there was pieces of the old spring there.
Pulling the pullout lever raises the forks on the mast pipe and actuates the brake shoe within the hub and at the same time, turns the main vane from vertical to horizontal. The side vane then helps to pull the fan out of the wind or so the theory goes.
This older braking system, specifically the single pad system, seems much less complicated than the later Parish dual brake shoe system. The Parish in the Lubbock museum has the dual brake shoe system. I’ll post photos of it next.
I think mine was made in 1977 v the Lubbock museum’s being a 2008 as best I can infer from the serial #s.
I was thinking I saw an Elgin Snow when I went to the Lubbock museum in August. It was neat.
Couple more photos.
The brake liner was likely the original. The brake mechanism was mostly intact. The new spring is more of a guess as there was pieces of the old spring there.
Pulling the pullout lever raises the forks on the mast pipe and actuates the brake shoe within the hub and at the same time, turns the main vane from vertical to horizontal. The side vane then helps to pull the fan out of the wind or so the theory goes.
This older braking system, specifically the single pad system, seems much less complicated than the later Parish dual brake shoe system. The Parish in the Lubbock museum has the dual brake shoe system. I’ll post photos of it next.
I think mine was made in 1977 v the Lubbock museum’s being a 2008 as best I can infer from the serial #s.
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Re: Parish
American Windmill Museum Parish braking system, which appears to be a 2008 model.
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- Posts: 2209
- Joined: Sun Mar 28, 2021 4:06 pm
- Location: Alcove N.Y.i buy and restore
Re: Parish
Nice job so far Micheal, keep us posted i like that color.
Re: Parish
Thanks Dan. It isn’t Parish blue, but it is blue nonetheless.
Couple of more photos.
The chain is a #60 and is just a hair short of 4’.
Side vane made by Dan B. They seem to have been mounted by only two bolts and no cross brace, but I added a flat bar cross support.
Couple of more photos.
The chain is a #60 and is just a hair short of 4’.
Side vane made by Dan B. They seem to have been mounted by only two bolts and no cross brace, but I added a flat bar cross support.
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Re: Parish
Looks great, I wish we had more history of the Parish company. Thanks
Jerry Wade Barker
Wills Point, Texas
214-893-2864
www.farmhousewindmills.com
farmhousewindmills@hotmail.com
Wills Point, Texas
214-893-2864
www.farmhousewindmills.com
farmhousewindmills@hotmail.com
Re: Parish
Coming along Michael. Looks great.
Re: Parish
Thank you.
I made a short tower for it as I have no trees near my windmills. The pipe tower that came with it, was more than it needed, damn heavy and at the edge of ugly. I have my doubts it was ever on that pipe tower.
All I had was the Parish stub, which was torch cut from its previous tower. It was cut pretty short at the bottom and I would have preferred to have had a little more angle iron left on the bottom of the stub.
Overall the tower is about 12’, excluding the mast pipe. The stub angle is 2” x 3/16” so I just cut two 20’ sections of the same metal, adding 10’ to the 2’ stub for the overall 12’. Oversized platform is there because it is a Parish and might need an occasional repair/adjustment. My tractor frontend loader bucket should easily reach the platform to provide an extra large work area.
I thought about cross rods. However, over that 12’ there are 4 different sets of girts with the biggest span of 5’ between girts. Two sets of the girts are 1.5” x 1/8” and the other two are 1”. In addition to the four sets of girts, there is a platform girt and the base of mast pipe assembly, so I hopeful the tower is twist resistant. Mostly grade 8 bolts/nuts.
I made a short tower for it as I have no trees near my windmills. The pipe tower that came with it, was more than it needed, damn heavy and at the edge of ugly. I have my doubts it was ever on that pipe tower.
All I had was the Parish stub, which was torch cut from its previous tower. It was cut pretty short at the bottom and I would have preferred to have had a little more angle iron left on the bottom of the stub.
Overall the tower is about 12’, excluding the mast pipe. The stub angle is 2” x 3/16” so I just cut two 20’ sections of the same metal, adding 10’ to the 2’ stub for the overall 12’. Oversized platform is there because it is a Parish and might need an occasional repair/adjustment. My tractor frontend loader bucket should easily reach the platform to provide an extra large work area.
I thought about cross rods. However, over that 12’ there are 4 different sets of girts with the biggest span of 5’ between girts. Two sets of the girts are 1.5” x 1/8” and the other two are 1”. In addition to the four sets of girts, there is a platform girt and the base of mast pipe assembly, so I hopeful the tower is twist resistant. Mostly grade 8 bolts/nuts.
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Re: Parish
Few more photos
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- Posts: 2209
- Joined: Sun Mar 28, 2021 4:06 pm
- Location: Alcove N.Y.i buy and restore
Re: Parish
Looks good Micheal I think you'll be fine without the X braces. !!