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Saturday, January 13, 2018

Big Brutus - Wikipedia
src: upload.wikimedia.org

Big Brutus is the nickname of the Bucyrus-Erie model 1850B electric shovel, which was the second largest of its type in operation in the 1960s and 1970s. Big Brutus is the centerpiece of a mining museum in West Mineral, Kansas where it was used in coal strip mining operations. The shovel was designed to dig from 20 to 69 feet (6.1 to 21.0 m) in relatively shallow coal seams.


Video Big Brutus



Description

Big Brutus is 160 feet (49 m) high and weighs 11 million pounds (4,989,516 kg). The bucket holds 90 cubic yards (69 m3) or 150 tons (136 metric tonnes). Maximum speed is 0.22 MPH (6 metres per minute). It cost $6.5 million in 1962 when it was shipped in 150 railroad cars to be assembled in Kansas. It was used until 1974 when it became uneconomical to mine coal at the site. At that time it was considered too big to move and was left in place.

Big Brutus, while not the largest electric shovel ever built, is the largest electric shovel still in existence. The Captain, at 28 million pounds, was the largest shovel and one of the largest land-based mobile machines ever built, only exceeded by some dragline and bucket-wheel excavators. It was scrapped in 1992.


Maps Big Brutus



Museum

The Pittsburg & Midway Coal Mining Company donated Big Brutus in 1984 as the core of a mining museum which opened in 1985. In 1987, the American Society of Mechanical Engineers designated Big Brutus a Regional Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark.

The museum offers tours and camping.


Big Brutus,' World's Largest Electric Shovel, Turned Into Museum : NPR
src: media.npr.org


See also

  • The Silver Spade
  • Bucket wheel excavator
  • Dragline
  • Dump truck
  • Excavator
  • Marion Power Shovel
  • Power shovel

Big Brutus video tour - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com


References


Big Brutus Electric Coal Mining Shovel Editorial Photo - Image ...
src: thumbs.dreamstime.com


External links

  • Official website
  • Big Brutus, Sept. 1987, The American Society of Mechanical Engineers

Source of article : Wikipedia