Abbey Pumping Station
Last weekend, we visited some friends in Leicester and went to the Christmas steam day at Abbey Pumping Station. The massive engines were in steam, so I shot some video. It was nice to see them again - I haven’t seen them running for about 15 years since I used to visit with my Dad. The experience brought back a lot of memories.
Here’s a video I made of the engines running:
They were built in 1891 to pump sewage out of Leicester and up to the Beaumont Leys treatment works. Each of the four independent engines has an effective output power of 174 horsepower. Each flywheel is 21 feet in diameter and weighs 21 tons. They stretch from two floors below ground where the bottoms of the pumps are, to two floors above ground where the massive 15 ton beams sit. A steam pressure of 80psi is needed to run the engines.
Wonderful video, visited London Bridge (which has tiny steam engines in comparison) with my girlfriend this weekend, couldn’t stop telling her about how wonderful our Abbey Pumping station was, plan to drag her to the next available steam up. Hopefully this will give her an idea of how big everything is. Thanks.
Comment by James Cornish — February 19, 2007 @ 10:57 am
Hi! How r u?
nice site!
Comment by shadowman — April 29, 2007 @ 4:23 am
OUTSTANDING VIDEO! It never ceases to amaze me the technology of the 19th century. Whoever designed the Abbey Pumping station really understood mechanics better than most people do today.
Scott
Comment by Scott — August 23, 2007 @ 10:12 pm
Talk is cheap because supply exceeds demand.
Comment by Alden S. — February 16, 2008 @ 9:26 pm