Wow this was amazing to see❗My 4x great grandfather Christopher Hodgson of Seamer, ( near Scarborough) North Yorkshire was listed as a lime burner in the 1841 census. I have an appreciation for his hard labour.
We have a few old lime kilns here in my town of Montague NJ - but they are much more rugged looking than these kilns. The ones in this video series are so much more uniform looking. The ones in my town are all made from natural stone, not bricks. If you look at my channel you'll see a video of one of them.
If you noticed in the earlier parts of this series, that first kiln they looked at would have produced 50 tonnes, but they didn't need that much for this project, so they found this smaller one.
Also some were converted to continues working were the would burn for mouths with new lime and coal being added and it being raked out the bottom while it was still lit.
Meh. They have overburnt the stuff at the bottom and underburnt the stuff at the top. Its a continuous draw kiln that needs drawing out from the bottom as it burns. Too much coal too. 0.3 should be enough.
I suppose this is like the last time a draw kiln was worked before being abandoned. Could they have used the draw kiln as a flare kiln without adapting the construction?
Wow this was amazing to see❗My 4x great grandfather Christopher Hodgson of Seamer, ( near Scarborough) North Yorkshire was listed as a lime burner in the 1841 census. I have an appreciation for his hard labour.
Thank you for showing us a piece of history that made America greater
We have a few old lime kilns here in my town of Montague NJ - but they are much more rugged looking than these kilns. The ones in this video series are so much more uniform looking. The ones in my town are all made from natural stone, not bricks. If you look at my channel you'll see a video of one of them.
we offer customized ultrafine grinding mills system and coated machines for calcium carbonate/caco3/dolomite/talc/gypsum/limestoNe/calcite/calcium oxide/ bentonite/dolomite powder
1. 325mesh~3500mesh.
2. better powder quality
3. lower energy-consumption, higher outpout
4. PLC control, simple operation
5. No dust when Producing
6. Built-in airclassifier
www.lymill.com/show_19.html
Fujian Longyi Powder Equipment Manufacturing Co., Ltd
MP/Wechat/Whatsapp: +86 15105956429
Samuel@lymill.com
If you noticed in the earlier parts of this series, that first kiln they looked at would have produced 50 tonnes, but they didn't need that much for this project, so they found this smaller one.
This is very interesting. You see the diagrams...but this brings it to reality. Many thanks
Also some were converted to continues working were the would burn for mouths with new lime and coal being added and it being raked out the bottom while it was still lit.
What happened to the charcoal ash?
What happens if it rains?
Maybe in practise they had a metal or wood roof over the top of the kiln with open sides ?
That guy looked like a monster from Dr Who.
Meh. They have overburnt the stuff at the bottom and underburnt the stuff at the top. Its a continuous draw kiln that needs drawing out from the bottom as it burns. Too much coal too. 0.3 should be enough.
You have a kiln and do it in your spare time?
I suppose this is like the last time a draw kiln was worked before being abandoned. Could they have used the draw kiln as a flare kiln without adapting the construction?
Qicky limey Ku Klux Boys.
The Euro sector of the white dragons😂
Amazing Video-Many thanks for the insight.
Ku Klux Kiln
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Talk about over kill.
There's no way in hell this is how the old world was built. Not buying their BS history.
All these guys are annoying