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The Elgin Vale Sawmill
by John
Manners |
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The Elgin Vale
sawmill in all her glory on the 27th of May, 2006.
The mill is situated on the downward side of the declining
foreground
to enable logs to be rolled on to the Canadian bench.
Saturday,
the 27th of May, 2006, saw one of the infrequent occasions when the
old Elgin Vale sawmill is brought back to life and put through its
graceful paces by a group of dedicated men and women who have steam
and timber coursing through their veins.
Situated in the South Burnett region of
South East Queensland, which region incorporates the shires of
Kingaroy, Kilkivan, Nanango, Murgon and Wondai, the sawmill at Elgin
Vale, earlier known as Scrubby Paddock, was established there
in 1926 having five years earlier been established as a new mill at
a place, some distance removed, called Sefton. On the 16th of March,
1987 the old sawmill ceased commercial production.

Ancient Leyland timber jinker,
supplanter of bullock-powered jinkers.
Many of the people in the region have
had or maintain a close association with the timber industry and
find it unremarkable in themselves that they should devote such
enthusiasm and skill towards the restoration, preservation and
operation of an old, steam-driven sawmill.
The Elgin Vale sawmill is set up to
mill the native pines, Hoop and Bunya, which were present in
enormous abundance in the district at the time the mill was
established. The log section seen on the Canadian bench is Hoop
pine. The sawmill’s machinery is not designed to mill the huge
hardwood logs which were available in the district.

Canadian
Bench. Entire logs are first ripped to flitches
here before passing over skids to No. 1 bench.
The Canadian bench is interesting in that the whole bench consists
of two long, metal plates which pass, with the log chocked into
position on it, on either side of the circular saw blade over sets
of rollers on the infeed and outfeed sides of the saw. Quite
impressive accuracy with the saw cut is achieved simply by the
sawyer, eyeing along the saw before sawing operations commence,
directing a man at the far end of the log to make small adjustments
with a crowbar to the log’s position on the bench and, if needs be,
chocking it into position.
The bench with its log are driven by a
belt taking power off the countershaft which extends beneath the
mill for almost its entire width. The saw is extremely powerfully
driven and runs through a log of the size shown in less than a
minute. When larger logs were being milled the Canadian bench was
also equipped with an overhead saw in line with the lower blade.
Provision for installing the upper blade still exists.

The Canadian bench has quite a
set of teeth. On the far
side of the sawblade can be seen the belt which drives the
saw. In the background are the raised skids on the outfeed
side of the saw which are greased to facilitate the transfer
of the flitches produced by the Canadian bench to the No 1
bench. The man who adjusts the far end of the log for sawing
under the sawyer’s directions moves up to the skids during
the sawing process to assist the sawyer to slip the flitch
on to the skids.
Unless something specific is
required, the No 1 bench produces the best boards available
from the flitches supplied from the Canadian bench and its
off-cuts are sent to the No 2 bench to be sawn as smaller
boards. The best boards may later be re-sawn on the No 2
bench to meet an order for smaller boards.

View from the
outfeed side of the Canadian bench (far right) shows
the skids over which the flitches pass to the No. 1 bench
(far left)
above the outfeed of the gang of saws in the frame saw.
The sawyer on the Canadian
bench judges the best flitches he can get out of a log, bearing in
mind the requirements and limitations of No 1 bench, and its sawyer
judges the best boards he can get out of the flitches. The fence may
look primitive but stays “square” and can be readily adjusted.

Nice Hoop pine boards
coming off No 1 bench. Chap at far left is the sawyer, at far right
is the tailer-out (nearly always the young bloke in the mill). The
fence is on the right hand side of the bench as the sawyer faces it.
Big sticks of hoop-pine are rare these days and this lot looks like
it comes from re-forestation plantations.
The importance of the alertness of the
tailer-out may be judged by the attitude of the saw and the
direction of its revolution. If an off-cut is allowed to be picked
up by the saw it will be pelted back at the sawyer with astonishing
velocity and momentum.
Under the old system, as evidenced
here, anti-kick-back mechanisms were distained as being impractical
in circumstances where it was part of one man’s job to guard against
kick-back.
Unguarded belts are really a bigger
danger to men than saws and in this mill the belts are, for the most
part, well guarded.

Closer look at No 1
bench.
Infeed and outfeed rollers are driven
as part of the setup. Timber is fed in and tailed out on two rail
trolleys pushed by sawyer and pulled by tailer-out. Timber rocks up
and down a fraction of an inch over bench to lift off the infeed
trolley after half-way mark and to ride on the outfeed trolley
thereafter. The waste on the floor would be further milled and
“finger joined” in a more modern sawmill.

Stack of sawn boards from No 1 bench to
the left of tailer-out standing between trolley rails, boards to be
reduced by No 2 mill on skids to his right with No 2 bench further
to his right again in background and waste to be docked for fuel on
floor in foreground. Sawmill produces much more timber waste than it
can use for boiler fuel and balance goes to assist keep Nanango and
surrounds warm in winter.

Boards from No 1 bench
which have run out to a taper have their taper docked here and waste
is docked to firewood size. Waste (mainly) being docked at the
docking bench by a pendulum saw. Belt drive comes from the
countershaft beneath the floor to the overhead of the saw and an
adjacent overhead drive pulley runs a belt down to the saw’s drive.

This frame saw is decidedly a bit of a
rarity in the saw milling industry, not only presently but back in
the early days of the Elgin Vale mill’s operation. Men who can put
it through its paces are equally rare, probably to be found only in
the South Burnett region. It seems to require all sorts of tweaking
before each log can be put through it but the man who undertakes
this task performs it with lightning speed which quite baffles the
onlooker. Its roller feed-grips adjust automatically for the taper
of the log. Something of a living fossil, its performance is not in
the least inhibited by its dignified coating of rust and its fast
reciprocal motion can really get the floor of the mill shuddering as
the gang of saws
slices through a log. Frame saw from the
infeed side with 8 saws close-ganged to produce boards from the
narrow logs. Somewhat Heath Robinson in appearance, everything is
geared to run off something else, somewhat like a steam and belt
driven pocket-watch. It is slow, but produces a lot of boards in one
pass and, once set up and in motion, can be left to its own devices,
literally.

Lest we forget. The eight-hour working
day and forty-hour week elevated and immortalized.
Notwithstanding their unique skills and, in many cases, their
isolated living conditions, sawmill workers’ wages were not very
rewarding despite the enormous productivity of a few men. The engine
driver, however, usually started work at 5.30 a.m. to have steam up
by 7 a.m. and kept steam up until knock-off, when the fire was
damped for the night but not extinguished. The fire was damped on
Friday afternoons but burnt so low that it had to be fired up on
Sunday evening to have steam on Monday mornings.

Where it all begins. Firewood,
including longer-burning hardwood.
The original boiler was fired by the overhead, mechanical delivery
of sawdust. The present boiler was rescued from an old hospital
laundry and re-commissioned by the ingenuity of the mill’s present
devotees. The mill’s own pine off-cuts are used for kindling but
pine burns quickly and, once the fire-box is well ignited,
unnecessary wear and tear on the fireman-engine-driver is averted by
the burning of hardwood.

If bit of steam is needed, a bit of
heat is needed first. Produces at around 70 p.s.i.
with all machines running. It
really is scorching, even for a hardened engine-driver, to stand for
a few seconds in front of the open firebox when all necessary steam
is being produced. While timber is thrown in by hand the shovel is
used to feed the firebox with sawdust which comes via a conveyor
belt directly from the machines on the floor above to a bunker which
faces the firebox on the other side of the fireman’s floor in front
of the firebox.

The heart of the sawmill, steam engine made by T. Robinson & Son
Limited of Rochedale, England. Bore of 16" with stroke of 30". Power
is transmitted via a flywheel with 10' 6" diameter, 12" wide face
driving belt of 14" width. This engine started its working life in
1901 at Drayton, outside Toowoomba.
Simplicity itself. The piston is steam-driven from either end, the
piston rod travels backwards and forwards, kept in a straight line
by the cross-head guides, and is coupled to the crank rod which
drives the circular crank which drives the shaft which turns the
flywheel which drives the countershaft which drives all of the
sawmilling machinery on the floor overhead.

Beneath the steam chest’s cover is a mechanical marvel, the slide
valve, also referred to as the “D” valve. As it moves backwards and
forwards it controls the admission of steam from the steam chest to
both ends of the cylinder as well as exhausting the steam after it
has given the piston a push in the cylinder. The “D” valve’s correct
design and manufacture are critical to the good performance of the
engine. Rear view of engine’s cylinder,
showing steam chest on right. Engine is, somewhat unusually, set
beneath the sawmill’s main operating floor as is the countershaft
and the drive belts reach from the countershaft upwards through the
floor to the machinery instead of the more conventional set-up where
belts from an overhead countershaft descend to the machinery on the
mill’s floor.

The circular crank is connected to the flywheel through a concentric
shaft and is driven eccentrically by the crank rod which is
connected to the piston rod. Lubrication looms large in the thoughts
of those who would keep these wheels in motion and the oil can
stands ready to top up the oil reservoir as required. The transport
of the flywheel to its present site in 1926, many miles from any
railway, must rank as one of the great unsung sagas of the
Queensland bush. In the words of the old
smoko song, “Round and round went the bloody great wheel.” 10' 6" in
diameter with a 10" deep rim and a 12" face, this flywheel would be
quite a piece of metal to be shifted around by the little cylinder
and its piston but for the inexorable power of steam.

A relatively new tank but of traditional design on an old stand
would seem to illustrate the principles by which the sawmill’s
volunteer conservators undertake their self-imposed duties to do
what has to be done to get the mill working again, but otherwise to
leave it in its original state. All opportunities to introduce a
touch of faux authenticity are cheerfully disregarded.
Perched for gravitational advantage above the sawmill’s roof is the
supply of raw material for steam, colloquially called “water”.

And here is that same water, its function as steam performed,
reverting to its raw material status.
It seemed to me on this visit to the
sawmill with my schooldays mate, Professor Bill Tyler (here insert
numerous degrees), that the reader of any writing on a steam-driven
sawmill could rightly hold reservations concerning the authenticity
thereof unless steam, as usually conceived in the mind’s eye, was
made pictorially apparent. So here it is.
It is trusted that this short excursion through the wonders of the
old, steam-driven sawmill will evoke memories in some, nostalgia in
others and in yet others the curiosity to look into the salvageable
remnants of their own local industrial history so that the building
blocks on which our present society was erected and the people who
led their lives amongst them may form part of a consciously
acknowledged path to our present state of being. Perhaps, even, some
reader may determine that one of the more satisfying things he is
yet to do is to travel to the fascinating South Burnett district and
to take his fill of timber and steam at the old Elgin Vale sawmill.
Regards from Brisbane,
John Manners |