Sawmill boiler on tramway between Karekare and Piha
The Piha Tramway incline up to the hauler on Piha Road with a boiler on the tramway.
Text from Auckland Weekly News, 29 December 1910: "The establishment of a sawmill in the Kerikeri [Karekare] Bush has proved to be a matter of the utmost diffulty. All the plant has to be hauled up a bush tramway which in several places has a grade of one in one or, in other words, a slope of 45 degrees. The negotiation of a 10-ton boiler over such a track is a matter of not a little difficulty, and it says a great deal for the perseverance and ingenuity of the New Zealand bushman that the problem was recently solved, and the raising of the boiler effected without any more serious mishap than an occasional slight derailment, such as that shown in this photograph. There is over a mile of tramway - which is the steepest line in existence in any part of the world - so that the job naturally occupied several days."
See also article in: West of Eden, Journal of the West Auckland Historical Society, Issue 2, p.14-21 (Jan 2009).
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Piha TramwayDie Piha Tramway war eine von 1906 bis 1921 betriebene Waldeisenbahn in Neuseeland mit einer Spurweite von 3 Fuß, deren steilste Streckenabschnitte als Standseilbahnen über dampfgetriebene Seilwinden betrieben wurden. .. weiterlesen