I've been slowly going through collection of Bowman steam engines I purchased as a group a few weeks back & thought I would put them on this thread as I finished with each one. I was to later understand they were all static engines & were never actually ran, so I have been carefully going through each one & performing any & all work that they might need to bring them up to my standards. Please enjoy if you have the time.
1st off is a Bowman m140 with the original box
after a bit of clean up & some tuning, this is a favorite of mine & is surprisingly powerful.
Next is a Bowman m122 ,this required a bit more work , cleaned out the boiler (had a bunch of green like resin/grit in it) & in moving it about the solder from the boiler to steam line detached & that had to be refreshed. my usual method of assessing a new engine is to bring it in the house on a little table next to "my chair" and to fettle with it while watching TV, despite all my encouragement I could not get it to run slowly & properly, I started taking the cylinder assemblies apart & found a very tiny rubber 0 ring in the right piston bore, it was just small enough to create a significant drag on that cylinder? after removing that it made all the difference in the world. I made s triple brass pulley for it & soldered a brass lug in the bottom of the chimney & a brass pin 5/16"od mounted to the base to receive the chimney since this model has no stay rod. the base has been repainted (top & bottom) with great effort to keep the original logo transfer intact. it will now run on as little as 2 lbs. pressure.
m122 on air, a bit more detail
Next up is my Bowman m101, the biggest offering in the Bowman lineup. this one was in good condition as it arrived, running it on compressed air it seemed fine, after steaming it the 1st time I noticed quite a bit a steam escaping from the mating surfaces of the oscillating parts and disassembled them and ground them down to a parallel surface, this dramatically improved performance, power & decreased steam consumption. the connecting rod had a gentle bend in it that tended to make the cylinder side of the oscillating pair lift a bit while running, I straightened that out as well. I made a few knurled knobs for the overflow tap & chimney support (hold down) nut. the steel stay rod has been replaced at some point with a nice brass rod. this particular model doesn't have a throttle & judging by some of the brochures I have, apparently a throttle was not always standard.
more to come as I get to them...