A road grader is a fascinating piece of construction equipment. Modern ones like the Caterpillar motor graders shown above have enhanced GPS-based controls on their blades (antennas indicated by arrows). They don’t need surveyors and stakes to grade land to a desired contour. How did graders evolve?
On Tuesday, September 3rd we were driving south in Oregon
on U.S. Route 97 and drove past the Collier Logging Museum 30 miles north of
Klamath Falls. On Thursday September 5th we stopped and visited that lovely
146-acre museum. It has equipment from three eras: horse and oxen (1860 – 1900),
steam (1890 – 1920), and internal combustion (1920 – today). There also is a ‘village’
of historic log cabins.
In displays on the horse and era there was a sign and an Adams Leaning Wheel grader. At the Historic Indianapolis.com web site I found more on Adams graders in an article by Lisa Lorentz on August 31, 2014 titled Sunday Adverts: Don’t Read This. The South African KHPlant web site has more Historic Motor Grader Pictures showing the evolution.
I looked on the Library of Congress web site and found two pictures showing road grading in Alaska, one from 1916 showing another tractor towed grader, and one from 1942 showing a motor grader working on the Alaska-Canada highway.
No comments:
Post a Comment