Marion 6360
Marion 6360, known as "the Captain", was a giant power shovel built by the Marion Power Shovel company. Completed and commissioned on October 15 1965, it was one of the largest land vehicles ever built, exceeded only by some dragline and bucket-wheel excavators. The shovel originally started work with Southwestern Illinois Coal Corporation, but the owners were soon bought out by Arch Coal. Everything remained the same at the mine except for the colors which were changed to red, white, and blue. Like most mining vehicles of extreme size, the Marion 6360 required a surprisingly small amount of men to operate, consisting of an operator, oiler, welder, and a ground man who looked after the trailing cable.
The shovel worked well for Arch Coal until September 9, 1991, when a fire broke out in the lower works of the shovel, caused by a burst hydraulic line that sprayed the hot fluids on an electrical relay panel. This fire caused a great deal of damage to both the lower works and machine house. Afterwards, engineers from both Arch and Marion Power Shovel surveyed the damage and deemed it too great to repair, and the machine was scrapped one year later in the last pit it dug.
The only Marion shovel that compared to "The Captain" was the Marion 5960-M Power Shovel that worked at Peabody Coal Company's River Queen Surface Mine in Central City, Kentucky. It was named the "Big Digger" and carried a bucket on a boom. It was Marion Power Shovel's second largest machine ever built and the third largest shovel in the world. This "sister shovel" was scrapped in early 1990 in Muhlenberg County, Kentucky.
Specifics
- Boom Length:
- Bucket Capacity:
- Dipper Stick Length:
- Overall Weight: 12700 tons
- Total Height:
- Crawler Height:
- Crawler Unit Length:
- Individual Crawler Width:
- Individual Track weight: 3.5 tons apiece
- Clearance Under Shovel: to the first level of the Lower Works
- Largest Shovel In The World & Largest Ever Built By Marion--
- Started Service: 1965
- Dismantled: 1992
- Power
- Build time 18 months & 150,000 man hours