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Estimated read time: 2-3 minutes Spinning Machinery Spare Parts
OGDEN — Ogden city employees have created their own sandbagging machine using pieces of playground equipment and scraps from buildings.
The idea came from an employee with Ogden's Park and Cemetery Division. They work on the river a lot and use a lot of spare parts — a perfect combination for this project.
"I've always been a problem solver," said longtime city employee Jacob Chadwick. "Our day to day is maintenance on park restrooms, playgrounds."
His team makes repairs and maintains city grounds.
"We replace a broken slide," he said. "Weeding the cemetery."
Chadwick and his team brought this sandbagging machine to life.
It's not in their job description, but they engineered it.
"This came together very fast," said Justin Anderson with Ogden Public Services.
"About three days," Chadwick said.
"Five hundred bags in an hour," Anderson said.
A metal hopper sits on top.
"The top comes off and it goes right back together in less than 10 minutes," Chadwick said.
The rotating table is a merry-go-round "that had went bad."
Pipes and holes are measured to fit the perfect amount of sand.
"When you're filling them with shovels, you get some that are really overfull, some that are under full," Chadwick said.
At the bottom is an old axle from a Christmas village building.
Its stand is an old diesel exhaust fuel tank that Chadwick said was lying in their yard.
They haven't needed to use it yet.
"It's very comforting to know we've got that tool," Anderson said. "We could take it from here and have it up in a location easily working in under an area."
Sandbags on the spot are made at a low cost.
"It's pennies on the dollar for sure," Chadwick said.
Volkman Next, the team has plans to paint the machine and put a logo on it.