One of these years I need to see Rollag again. It's been 2 decades. Having said that some of that equipment shows up at other shows. Good video. Thank you Dave.
Good morning Geoff. I used to carry several empty gunnysacks in the truck. At a truckstop in Barkeyville PA I would fill them up with coal dumped over the berm in the back row. I suspect end dumps would clean out there. A elderly friend would fire his steamer with that. Occasionally he would grumble because I got a hard burning batch.
@@brycewiborg8095 That little secret is about an hour and a half from my house. That anthracite coal from northeast PA is very hard but the cleanest burning. I have the bituminous (soft) coal in my neck of the woods.
One of these years I need to see Rollag again. It's been 2 decades.
Having said that some of that equipment shows up at other shows.
Good video. Thank you Dave.
@@brycewiborg8095 it's definitely worth a visit. So much has changed in just the last 10 years.
Thanks for sharing Dave!! Good video!
Thanks Doug!
Next best thing to being there. Thanks.
@StevenMeckstroth thanks for watching. Glad you enjoyed it.
I could watch that all day!
@@roadmasterz For sure. The video doesn't do it justice.
Thanks for sharing. Was the steamer fired with coal?
Hey Geoff. They sure are.
Good morning Geoff. I used to carry several empty gunnysacks in the truck.
At a truckstop in Barkeyville PA I would fill them up with coal dumped over the berm in the back row. I suspect end dumps would clean out there.
A elderly friend would fire his steamer with that. Occasionally he would grumble because I got a hard burning batch.
@@brycewiborg8095 That little secret is about an hour and a half from my house. That anthracite coal from northeast PA is very hard but the cleanest burning. I have the bituminous (soft) coal in my neck of the woods.
is that james on the euclid ?
@@chriswelvang2616 it sure is