What came before the Zamboni?

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There were several strategies for dealing with the problem of ice resurfacing before Frank Zamboni came along.

Just Let the Ice Get Bad: Before 1910, hockey games were played in two 30-minute halves. ESPN says "By the end of each half, the ice was full of ruts and covered in snow, and the game slowed to a walk." So eventually they switched to three 20-minute periods, allowing an extra opportunity to clean the ice, even though this severely slowed down the pace of the game. Even today, NHL hockey has longer stoppages of play than other professional sports, with two 18-minute intermissions as compared to a 12 minute halftime in NFL football and a 15 minute halftime in NBA basketball and FIFA Football. (I won't try to quantify how much downtime baseball has.)

Cheap Labor: To resurface a rank, you need to clear the snow. This could be done by handing out a lot of shovels. For example, at the UND Barn, "Young fans (in exchange for game admission) prepared for resurfacing by shoveling shavings and snow off the ice from the preceding period's action." Even in our post-Zamboni world, many NHL teams use teams of young women, so poorly paid that they can't afford winter clothes, to clean the ice between periods.

Other Contraptions: Tractors with ice scrapers were used in some rinks. After shavings were cleared, Zamboni (and presumably other low-budget rink operators) used what was basically a wheelbarrow and a hose to flood the ice. The more mechanically-minded managed to come up with better flooders. Returning to UND:

. . . a between-period entertainment (for those who weren't forced by the cold into the warming rooms) was watching him artfully resurface the ice with a pre-Zamboni apparatus he had cobbled together and which was pulled across the ice. It consisted of two barrels, one welded on top of the other, pipes, and valves that directed hot water to the ice through a canvas strip at the bottom rear of the Rube Goldberg contraption ("My barrel flooding outfit," Purpur called it).

Here's a Canadian Parks and Rec department hand flooder:

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Zamboni first tried to outfit tractors with mechanical sleds, before realizing that he could combine the shaving, cleaning, and flooding machines into one by building off of war-surplus jeep chassis:

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Clearly Zamboni's invention was effective enough that now nearly all rinks employ one. But there was enough amateur mechanical ingenuity in the first half of the century that I wouldn't be surprised if there were rink managers other than Zamboni and Purpur who were experimenting with their own shoestring resurfacers.

Upvote:4

John Ceburn West, the late 19th century inventor of the Alligator http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alligator_boat, the steam warping tug, also patented an invention that would carefully apply a layer of ice to roads.

It was very much like the modern Zamboni machine, with the minor variation of being horse-drawn and coal-fired.

It was never a success. Perhaps people disliked ice-covered roads?

But in much of Canada and in some of the northerly states, until the 1930's, when snow-plowing began to be common, in the rural countryside the only way for farmers in the winter to go to town was via sleigh or sledge or cutter, for which ice-covered roads were advantageous. Jingle Bells!

(I'm on road at the moment, hopefully not ice-covered, but will post details on the patent of West's invention shortly.)

Upvote:4

In the British Ice Hockey League ca. 1948 at the end of the period a staggered line of white-dust jacketed men with wide brooms swept the ice - in step - marching really, until they had the surface cleared of loose ice which could be shovelled up by another work detail, then the waterers followed with squeegees. It was a rhythmic and almost hypnotic evolution, probably the men were all ex-service. I can't remember if it was done to music but have no recollection so it was probably silent! All part of the spectacle. Zambonis were a pale substitute.

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