ScoobyNet.com - Subaru Enthusiast Forum

ScoobyNet.com - Subaru Enthusiast Forum (https://www.scoobynet.com/)
-   Non Scooby Related (https://www.scoobynet.com/non-scooby-related-4/)
-   -   300ft Deep Mine Shaft Opens Just Yards From Cornwall Home (https://www.scoobynet.com/non-scooby-related-4/1036169-300ft-deep-mine-shaft-opens-just-yards-from-cornwall-home.html)

Autotweek 14 March 2016 08:51 PM

300ft Deep Mine Shaft Opens Just Yards From Cornwall Home
 
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entr...b05c52666ed843


https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.sco...ef39aa64fe.jpg

JGlanzaV 14 March 2016 09:44 PM

I'll be getting my ropes out to.orrow to go take a look down this....

hux309 14 March 2016 10:12 PM

Scorrier hah I'm only a mile away from there,seen it happen before.

Love the music very apt :D

Might see if i can have a butchers.

boomer 14 March 2016 10:15 PM

Wow - you could build the ULTIMATE wine cellar ;)

mb

dpb 14 March 2016 10:16 PM

Wasn't owner trying to sell ?

must be well pissed

Autotweek 14 March 2016 11:22 PM

He could so turn that into a selling point. How about a posh well?


https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.sco...052bceafb6.jpg

wrx300scooby 15 March 2016 12:04 AM

Ironic really as this one opens Kellingley shaft is being filled with concrete today:(

lozgti1 15 March 2016 07:23 AM

Are the police looking into it?

domino46 15 March 2016 07:35 AM

I'd start offering rubbish clearence on the cheap till it was full lol

JGlanzaV 15 March 2016 08:20 AM

Ropes, resin bolts, drills, harness and SRT kit in the van, off to go abseil down this now!

Will try get some pictures if it is safe enough...

MOTORS S GT 15 March 2016 08:24 AM

It looks like a test hole for footings for an extension, you know the one, building inspector, just a bit deeper!

JGlanzaV 15 March 2016 09:56 AM


Originally Posted by MOTORS S GT (Post 11809529)
It looks like a test hole for footings for an extension, you know the one, building inspector, just a bit deeper!

This is what happens when people don't inspect properly lol. You would have thought someone might have noticed the 12" timbers while digging the foundations.....

The timber sollar has rotted away to nothing and just fallen in on its self. This would have been the original cap when the mine closed, which got covered in debris and forgotten about!

dpb 15 March 2016 09:58 AM

I surmise elderly resident who hadn't been outside for last thirty years

alcazar 15 March 2016 10:04 AM

Lucky half the house isn't down it.

And it would have been hand-dug too. Look at all that rock........

JGlanzaV 15 March 2016 10:11 AM


Originally Posted by alcazar (Post 11809555)
Lucky half the house isn't down it.

And it would have been hand-dug too. Look at all that rock........

This is a typical cornish steam drilled shaft.

You can tell by how square it is, hand dug shafts are more rounded and jagged. A biG square shaft like this is a hauling shaft, it may have had a man lift in it too. It would have been dug late 1880s with steam drills and blasting.

Anything hand dug would be pre 1880, very easy to distinguish between hand dug and machine. They literally made it as small as possible to reduce labour costs. Usually coffin shaped and barely big enough to stoop through.

Shafts like this were often made on failing mines to impress share holders and convince them to invest more money because it looked spectacular....

kingofturds 15 March 2016 12:34 PM

Couple sheets of mdf over the top, back fill and job Done.

ALi-B 15 March 2016 02:50 PM

Quote of the day...

When the missus told me the kids were outside playing minecraft. This is not what I was expecting...

alcazar 15 March 2016 05:02 PM

Thanks for the explanation, J.

^Qwerty^ 17 March 2016 01:50 PM


Originally Posted by wrx300scooby (Post 11809505)
Ironic really as this one opens Kellingley shaft is being filled with concrete today:(

Are you working on this? I thought it would have been done by now, but I guess it took a while to clear the shafts of all the cables etc. It's still a bit of a mind fcuk to think of all those miles of roadways and equipment just left down there, unlikely ever to be seen again.

wrx300scooby 17 March 2016 03:19 PM


Originally Posted by ^Qwerty^ (Post 11810334)
Are you working on this? I thought it would have been done by now, but I guess it took a while to clear the shafts of all the cables etc. It's still a bit of a mind fcuk to think of all those miles of roadways and equipment just left down there, unlikely ever to be seen again.

Not me but one of my mates has just finished there. I think the final pour went in on Tuesday. I agree about all the equipment, there are literally hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of gear down all the mines that have closed around here. Apparently it isn't economically viable to dismantle and retrieve it, seems a real waste to me:wonder:

neil-h 17 March 2016 03:36 PM


Originally Posted by wrx300scooby (Post 11810346)
Not me but one of my mates has just finished there. I think the final pour went in on Tuesday. I agree about all the equipment, there are literally hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of gear down all the mines that have closed around here. Apparently it isn't economically viable to dismantle and retrieve it, seems a real waste to me:wonder:

Same deal with all boring machines used for the likes of the channel tunnel etc. One of them went all the way through, one is in a branch off the main tunnel never to see the light of day again.

oilman 17 March 2016 05:29 PM

Just had a survey done for the land where we are building (near Hayle, so not as full of mines as Scorrier), but I think we need another one for shafts. Apparently the shaft survey is just a database/map check to see if there are any shafts listed there. The problem with that is there are plenty of service shafts and vents that aren't on the lists.

JGlanzaV 17 March 2016 07:36 PM


Originally Posted by oilman (Post 11810385)
Just had a survey done for the land where we are building (near Hayle, so not as full of mines as Scorrier), but I think we need another one for shafts. Apparently the shaft survey is just a database/map check to see if there are any shafts listed there. The problem with that is there are plenty of service shafts and vents that aren't on the lists.


And plenty that are pre-regulation, meaning they were never submitted to plan anyway!

Sounds like you need some drilling work done

oilman 18 March 2016 09:52 AM

Yeah, might be worth doing it. Only thing is that it's family land (200 years+) and there has been no down shafts there in that time. There might be cross shafts, but they will be x00ft down and it's next to my parents house, which has never had any issues. The neighbours built their place in the 70s, not sure if they would have had the surveys done back then.

^Qwerty^ 18 March 2016 03:18 PM

This is quite useful to see what area not to buy a house in.

http://mapapps2.bgs.ac.uk/coalauthority/home.html

^Qwerty^ 18 March 2016 05:55 PM

Just found this

http://www.itv.com/news/calendar/201...ys-main-shaft/


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:21 AM.


© 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands