Traction Engines

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A01=Derek A. Rayner
art
Author_Derek A. Rayner
Category=WGC
collections
concise
curiosity
discover
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
facts
gift
giftbook
guide
handbook
historical
history
illustrated
introduction
research
short
traditional
traditions
vintage

Product details

  • ISBN 9780747805250
  • Weight: 116g
  • Dimensions: 149 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Dec 2007
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Traction engines steam engines to haul loads on the roads developed in the mid 1860s and were usually dirty, noisy and somewhat crude to handle. This book brings together much information about these engines, from the earliest to the latest, about how they worked and what they did. Attention is also given to the various derivatives of the traction engine the humble portable, the well-known steam roller, the steam tractor, majestic road locomotive, ploughing engine and, last but not least, the King of the Road, the glorious and glittering showman's engine. The informative text is accompanied by illustrations that show something of the age in which traction engines worked and of the age when they became treasured historic relics. Engines appear at rallies and other events all over Great Britain and in many other countries. On these occasions they are visited and admired by thousands of people and are now part of our engineering heritage.
Derek Rayner has been interested in steam engines since his schooldays. He first drove a traction engine in 1963 and since that time his interest in these mighty machines has burgeoned. He and two friends purchased a 1915 Aveling & Porter steam roller in 1964, and he has been its sole owner since 1968. Mr Rayner a frequent contributor to 'Steaming', the magazine of the National Traction Engine Trust, and 'Old Glory' magazine. He involved with a number of traction engine organizations and is the author of the Shire Library book 'Road Rollers'.

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