This enormous piece of mining machinery, known locally as the ‘Oddball‘, is a walking dragline excavator, and thanks to both its size and its position on a top of a hill dominates the St Aidan’s nature reserve near Leeds. It was made in the USA in 1947, and was one of three brought to the UK. However unlike the others brought to the UK its electrical supply remained on US electrical frequency and consequently it became known at the ‘Oddball’.

It began its British working life in Wales in the 1950s, before heading to Staffordshire in 1964 and then finally to this site Yorkshire in 1974. It was excavating and walking here (a step of 6.6ft each time at a speed of 0.19 mph) until the late 1980s when flooding in the open cast mine brought production to a stop.

If you look carefully at my photograph above you can just about see a person walking in front of it. It really is enormous, equivalent to 60 double decker buses! However these days it would be considered small at less than 2000 tonnes. Most modern walking dragline excavators are around 8,000 tonnes and the largest is more than 22 stories tall at 13,500 tonnes! ‘Oddball’ though is rather special as it is a national landmark to opencast miners, and the largest remaining historic preserved dragline in western Europe. You could say it is one of a kind!

It’s hard to imagine how this giant worked – but it obviously did. 🙂
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Search on YouTube and there are plenty of examples!!
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Good tip. 🙂
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Goodness, what a massive contraption. I’m wondering at the mind of the human who imagined it in the first place.
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Amazing mind, and that they made it move! I’ve been wondering how on earth they moved it around the country – just can’t see it moving along our roads even on the back of something!
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Fascinating, Becky, and a great one of a kind. It is incredible what people have been able to invent and construct. I’d love to see this in action.
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I know I would so love to see it move – the fact it does over 6ft in just one step!
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Wow, how fascinating…I was going to ask how you found out about it, but the comments told me! Well, I ‘ve gone for a much more ordinary old thing: https://suejudd.com/2020/10/20/of-the-neglected-kind/
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The light in yours though turns it into something special 🙂
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Aww, thanks, Becky!
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Well that’s an extraordinary thing! In contrast I’m having a quiet moment https://lizannelloyd.wordpress.com/2020/10/20/kindasquare-20/
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I know, quite extraordinary. And quiet moments are good 🙂
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I’m quite ashamed never to have been to St. Aidan’s, but your post may have given me that extra push. I’m taking people out and about today too: https://margaret21.com/2020/10/20/beside-the-seaside-beside-the-sea-3/
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It’s an unusual reserve! We only go as it is within walking distance of my friend’s house, not sure I’d travel to it but it is fascinating.
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That’s interesting Becky. Always learning something new from your posts! Here is mine for today. Happy that I have joined you each and every day for this month! https://mywanderings.travel.blog/2020/10/20/the-best-kind-of-day/
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Thanks Teresa, I have fun creating these posts and learning more about where i go too!
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That is true 👍🏼
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A bit of a monster! I know Mr. B loves his machines 🙂 🙂 Something gentler today. https://restlessjo.me/2020/10/20/looking-kindly/
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Really is a monster, and totally unexpected when we entered the reserve. Our friends were a bit bemused by our response!
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Wow! I learn so much from your posts! What a beast 😳
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I know, huge beast. I still struggle to get my head around the fact it walks!!
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That would be something to see!
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That’s an enormous piece of machinery. Is it still in use?
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No it is just preserved these days, was working though up until the 1980s, and was walked to this spot in the 1990s
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Wow! ‘Oddball’ does seem appropriate 🙂
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That’s what I thought!!
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Never seen anything like it! Interesting piece of machinery!
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Extraordinary equipment, and to think this is a baby sized one these days!
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