The weather was perfect on Wednesday morning (13th March) when the cap was finally lifted off Burwell Mill. A hugely supportive crowd of local people, mill enthusiasts, Friends of the Museum and volunteers turned up to watch (including a class of fascinated under-fives from Burwell’s Spring Close Montessori school) and were served tea and cakes from the viewing point on Mill Close.
First the temporary roof was swung over the Mill by the mobile crane, looking like a shot from a sci-fi movie against the bright blue sky. An hour later, after much hard work by the millwrights Neil and Steve, the cap was tenderly lifted off by crane driver Darren, and set on the ground to cheers, whistles and applause.
Anne Mason, Heritage Lottery Fund Committee Member for the East of England, gave a excellent speech about the Fresh Wind in Our Sails project which was enthusiastically received. It was a great day, and thank you to everyone for your support!
Photos of the day are in a slideshow below.
An occasional blog on what's going on at Burwell Museum and Windmill. This blog started as a record of the restoration of Stevens Mill (the Grade II* Listed windmill on the museum site) but now includes the whole museum as well as the mill. https://burwellmuseum.org.uk, https://facebook.com/burwellmuseum, https://twitter.com/burwellmuseum
Friday, 15 March 2013
Tuesday, 12 March 2013
BURWELL MILL DECAPITATED WED 13TH MARCH, from 9.30am
The big day has finally arrived
– the cap is being lifted off Burwell Mill by a 65-tonne mobile crane from
9.30am. It’s a historic day for the village, so please come along and bring
your friends and family – refreshments will be provided. All are welcome!
Getting the cap off the Mill
is no easy matter! During the lifting operation, the crane’s extending boom
will be positioned high above the Mill. The 6-ton cap will be lifted off and
placed on the grass beside the Mill. Finally, a temporary flat roof will be
placed on top of the Mill, to protect it from rain while repairs are being
carried out.
It’s part of the Fresh Wind in Our Sails restoration project, funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF). Anne Mason, HLF Committee Member for the East of England, will be in attendance during the morning, and will say a few words about the event and the Fresh Wind in Our Sails project.
Look forward to seeing you
there,
Fresh Wind in Our Sails team
Temporary roof ready to go on the mill on Wednesday
The mill & museum entrance on Tuesday evening
Photos by Simon Heath
Wednesday, 6 March 2013
New Sails
Our Millwrights are busy making new sails at their yard in Alford, Lincolnshire. (Click on a photo for larger version. Photos by the millwrights.)
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Neil Medcalf fabricating striking gear |
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Neil cutting rules (shutter bars) |
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Neil marking out the laminated whips for the first new pair of sails. |
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Steve Boulton planing shutter bars |
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Steve morticing the whips www.burwellmuseum.org.uk |
Tuesday, 5 March 2013
Cap Coming Off
Come and watch the cap of Stevens' Mill being removed as part of the Heritage Lottery funded restoration.
From 9:30am on Wednesday 13th March.
www.burwellmuseum.org.uk
Saturday, 16 February 2013
Sails-Off Photos & Video
Two days of hard work from the basket of a cherry picker resulted in the removal of the windmill’s sails on 13th February. Neil Medcalf and Steve Boulton of Traditional Millwrights Ltd laboured in cold conditions to extract the fixing bolts and wedges that held the sails in place.
More info below video box.
Video - by Peter Heath
(video is available in HD if you select Full Screen - click the symbol in the bottom right of video frame)
The first task was to rotate the sails and their supporting windshaft, which had not turned for several years, through 180 degrees to bring the uppermost sail to the bottom. This one would be removed first. On the morning of 13th February, a mobile crane arrived at the site and was positioned at the head of the track from Mill Lane. Its long jib was extended high above the mill and from it the lifting hook was lowered into position for the removal of the striking rod. The rod is part of the operating gear for the sail shutters and, before the sails could be removed, it had to be slid forwards out of its working position at the centre of the cast-iron windshaft.
With the rod and four-armed ‘spider’ coupling safely at ground level, the lowest sail frame could be removed. This was a fairly straightforward procedure, achieved by extracting each of the four fixing bolts with the weight of the sail hanging from the crane hook. Once safely at ground level, the condition of the timber could be examined at close quarters. Large areas of rot could be seen at most of the major joints of the sail frame. The effects of the driving wind and rain had caused the timber to begin breaking up. Its removal was timely, as it is unlikely that the sail would have survived many more winters without totally disintegrating, and possibly ending up in a neighbour’s garden!
The next lift was more ambitious, as the millwrights planned to remove the second sail and its supporting stock in one go. This involved positioning the crane hook above the centre point of the sails and attaching it at the correct point of balance to achieve the lift. When everything was ready, the wooden wedges that held the stock in position were knocked out. With no wedges in place, the stock should theoretically be free to move in the canister – the open-ended box casting at the front of the windshaft.
It was found that the stock had absorbed some rainwater over the years since it was fitted, and this had caused the timber to swell slightly near its centre point. With the crane jib applying tension the stock would only move upwards a few millimetres, despite strategic rocking backwards and forwards with the aid of ropes to try and release it. Its increased thickness meant that the stock could not pass through the canister until the millwrights had removed the excess timber with the aid of a power planer and an extra-long chisel. With the swollen area removed, the crane jib applied tension again. The lifting cable hauled the hook upwards until the stock and sail had been lifted clear of the mill and could be lowered to ground level.
The final part of the operation was to load the sails onto the trailer of a waiting flatbed lorry for transportation to the millwrights’ yard in Lincolnshire. This was easily achieved with the aid of the lorry’s remote-controlled lifting arm which carefully avoided an inconveniently-placed lamp post!
The millwrights expect to complete the next stage of the project, the removal of the cap and fantail, before Easter.
More info below video box.
Click this photo to see further photos from the day
Thank you to Luke Bonwick and Peter Heath for the photosVideo - by Peter Heath
(video is available in HD if you select Full Screen - click the symbol in the bottom right of video frame)
The first task was to rotate the sails and their supporting windshaft, which had not turned for several years, through 180 degrees to bring the uppermost sail to the bottom. This one would be removed first. On the morning of 13th February, a mobile crane arrived at the site and was positioned at the head of the track from Mill Lane. Its long jib was extended high above the mill and from it the lifting hook was lowered into position for the removal of the striking rod. The rod is part of the operating gear for the sail shutters and, before the sails could be removed, it had to be slid forwards out of its working position at the centre of the cast-iron windshaft.
With the rod and four-armed ‘spider’ coupling safely at ground level, the lowest sail frame could be removed. This was a fairly straightforward procedure, achieved by extracting each of the four fixing bolts with the weight of the sail hanging from the crane hook. Once safely at ground level, the condition of the timber could be examined at close quarters. Large areas of rot could be seen at most of the major joints of the sail frame. The effects of the driving wind and rain had caused the timber to begin breaking up. Its removal was timely, as it is unlikely that the sail would have survived many more winters without totally disintegrating, and possibly ending up in a neighbour’s garden!
The next lift was more ambitious, as the millwrights planned to remove the second sail and its supporting stock in one go. This involved positioning the crane hook above the centre point of the sails and attaching it at the correct point of balance to achieve the lift. When everything was ready, the wooden wedges that held the stock in position were knocked out. With no wedges in place, the stock should theoretically be free to move in the canister – the open-ended box casting at the front of the windshaft.
It was found that the stock had absorbed some rainwater over the years since it was fitted, and this had caused the timber to swell slightly near its centre point. With the crane jib applying tension the stock would only move upwards a few millimetres, despite strategic rocking backwards and forwards with the aid of ropes to try and release it. Its increased thickness meant that the stock could not pass through the canister until the millwrights had removed the excess timber with the aid of a power planer and an extra-long chisel. With the swollen area removed, the crane jib applied tension again. The lifting cable hauled the hook upwards until the stock and sail had been lifted clear of the mill and could be lowered to ground level.
The final part of the operation was to load the sails onto the trailer of a waiting flatbed lorry for transportation to the millwrights’ yard in Lincolnshire. This was easily achieved with the aid of the lorry’s remote-controlled lifting arm which carefully avoided an inconveniently-placed lamp post!
The millwrights expect to complete the next stage of the project, the removal of the cap and fantail, before Easter.
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