Utah steward showcases generations of pneumatic drills at historic mine

Utah Cultural Site Stewardship Program ยท December 29, 2025

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Summary

Ian Wright of the Utah Cultural Site Stewardship Program described a range of pneumatic drills at a monitored historic mining property, explaining how smaller "buzzies" and much heavier drills operated and noting the risks and preservation value of keeping these examples intact.

Ian Wright, with the Utah Cultural Site Stewardship Program, led a brief on-site overview of pneumatic drilling equipment at a monitored historic mining property, showing examples used across multiple eras.

Wright said the pile near the group contained "about every generation of pneumatic drills," noting the collection helps document changing tools and techniques used underground. He identified a smaller unit as a "buzzy," explaining it was "like a single man type jack where they put the bin in right there and then drill into the wall."

Wright contrasted the buzzy with larger equipment, describing one heavier pneumatic drill: "this 1 is so heavy you'd have to have a leg on it that would go up on the, ceiling and also on the floor." He detailed how operators would lock a longer drill in place and that the tip would rotate while the machine "spray[ed] water and air out, to keep it clean."

Wright acknowledged the work's hazards, saying the operation "was obviously very heavy and and dangerous work," but said the surviving examples have research and teaching value: "it's pretty cool to have so many good examples of these still around that we can can learn from."

No formal actions or policy decisions were recorded during the visit; the exchange served as an educational site inspection and equipment briefing by program staff.

The program did not provide specific dates, funding details, or ownership records for the equipment during this brief on-site overview.