SLUGs, Cabooses & Pushers

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  • Опубликовано: 3 янв 2025

Комментарии • 139

  • @citxsd70m-2
    @citxsd70m-2 Год назад +38

    Crazy coincidence, that 8863 duo :0

    • @RHTeebs
      @RHTeebs Год назад

      No such thing as coincidences. Must be a conspiracy. 🤪😂

    • @SD40Fan_Jason
      @SD40Fan_Jason Год назад

      It's a good day when they are lashed up on the same set of power. It can be a real bad day when they are on the point of separate trains though.

  • @leethetraindude
    @leethetraindude Год назад +8

    Gotta love when V12 drops a vid!

  • @epicness69992
    @epicness69992 Год назад +3

    Nothing but the best!

  • @WCPRRTX
    @WCPRRTX Год назад +4

    Finally ive been waiting to long!

  • @bennetts-revenge_2
    @bennetts-revenge_2 Год назад +7

    I love all the drone shots, I'm always amazed how the cars with the rail on them can go around curves too. Thanks for the video!

    • @v12productions
      @v12productions  Год назад +2

      Thanks for watching!

    • @natehill8069
      @natehill8069 Год назад

      Not really much different from them bending and stretching due to heat.

  • @kens.3729
    @kens.3729 Год назад +2

    Great video. Thanks Charlie. 👍🙏

  • @Tuglife912
    @Tuglife912 Год назад +2

    It the CSX REDI Center in Atlanta, Georgia back open? I went there in October and November of 2014 went to work as a Freight Conductor out of Hialeah Yard in Miami, Florida. They cut the course from the 6!weeks it was when I went to 4 weeks, then they closed it down and was supposed to have sold the buildings to a Doctor’s office. It’s wired to me what they done to Tilford Yard too! Makes no sense at all. I got to work a few jobs with an old Slug Set that had a EMD GP40-2 mother unit and a Road Mate that was a former EMD GP38-2 that had its EMD 645 Prime Mover removed and replace by a huge Concrete Ballast Block. They are quiet on the inside because all of the engine noise is on the mother unit that it’s paired to. They always have extra fuel lines running from the Road Mate/Road Slug that helps transfer extra Diesel Fuel from the Tank on the Road Mate/Slug to the mother unit. Interesting that come of the ones at CSX where EMD GP30s! They got rid of a lot of them too. Another railroad that regularly uses slugs is the Shortline Sandersville Railroad Company in Central Georgia that has two GE Slugs that they call Boosters. SAN 91 is a former Southern Railway Slug sold to them by Norfolk Southern in 1995 and SAN 90 was a former GE U25B cut down into a Slug that they bought from Rock Island back in the 80s. It’s the only one like it that I’ve ever seen too. Awesome video! 🚂

    • @v12productions
      @v12productions  Год назад +1

      Thanks! I believe the REDI Center is currently open.

  • @crazybobc1
    @crazybobc1 Год назад +2

    Beautiful video! You sure know the spots.

  • @sweynforkbeardtraindude
    @sweynforkbeardtraindude Год назад +5

    Good stuff!

  • @awr1050
    @awr1050 Год назад +6

    Awesome video as always! Great shots and great explanations! Keep up the great work!

  • @Thekaiser2023
    @Thekaiser2023 Год назад +17

    Id love to see a video discussing the rule and regs of Drones on or around trains.

    • @milesoftrains
      @milesoftrains Год назад +2

      Yeah, I've been considering getting a drone and I'm wondering what the rules are for that.

    • @aaronl_trains_and_planes
      @aaronl_trains_and_planes Год назад +1

      I've used my drone to get some shots of the A&M. They've never had an issue with me using it. I think it might be more of the location that could restrict you, like airports or gov't buildings and bases.

    • @SD40Fan_Jason
      @SD40Fan_Jason Год назад +2

      Rule 1. Don't operate your drone from railroad property. (Flying on or over RR Property is okay, but don't park, stand or sit there)
      Rule 2. Don't fly your drone directly into the path of an oncoming train
      Rule 3. Obey FAA regulations regarding UAVs and be mindful of overhead power lines.
      Rule 4. Be courteous.
      By the way, these are pretty much common sense rules, but do these and you'll never have a problem.

    • @aaronl_trains_and_planes
      @aaronl_trains_and_planes Год назад +1

      @@SD40Fan_Jason Common sense. But, a lot of humans have none.

    • @SD40Fan_Jason
      @SD40Fan_Jason Год назад +1

      @@aaronl_trains_and_planes while you're not wrong, I still assume there's an abundance left among the railfanning community.

  • @JasonTrew2018
    @JasonTrew2018 Год назад +2

    Another place that uses manned helpers is Cowan, TN, along the CSX Chattanooga Sub

  • @pruittiii
    @pruittiii Год назад +1

    Great footage, Charlie.

  • @mid-southrails1039
    @mid-southrails1039 Год назад +1

    The rail train is tied down in Arlington TN, not to far from Memphis. Plan on seeing it today.

  • @crsrdash-840b5
    @crsrdash-840b5 Год назад +5

    It be a treat if you did a story about those specialized switches: like wyes, curve, sharp #4, 3-way, double slip and 4-way. These unique style of switches are getting harder to find and harder to be used on any main, sub, or branch lines.

  • @trainfan4014
    @trainfan4014 Год назад +2

    Amazing video today v12 love the slugs and the manned dpu cool thanks again!

  • @DairyNS
    @DairyNS Год назад +7

    Awesome

  • @andreabennett
    @andreabennett Год назад

    Another terrific video! Thank you.

  • @wideslammer
    @wideslammer Год назад +1

    Another interesting video with a variety of topics included.

  • @paulkoza8652
    @paulkoza8652 Год назад +1

    Another class A video.

  • @brandonreeves5979
    @brandonreeves5979 Год назад +1

    Great video. Love the commentary!

  • @RFMCabooseNP1713
    @RFMCabooseNP1713 Год назад +2

    Great video.

  • @RODALCO2007
    @RODALCO2007 9 месяцев назад

    A double 8863 duo, that is like winning the lotto. Great video.

  • @sharkey086
    @sharkey086 Год назад +1

    NS still uses helpers through Horse Shoe Curve.

  • @MrPeteUK
    @MrPeteUK Год назад

    Another great video.
    Thank you from the 🇬🇧!

  • @stretchlimo7275
    @stretchlimo7275 Год назад +7

    Great video my man, I always learn something new watching your stuff. I gotta say your vids are always well put together and professional. Great work👍🏼😎🇺🇸

  • @rustyshackelford7042
    @rustyshackelford7042 Год назад +1

    I like your pickup. Looks like a clean old classic style gm pickup.

    • @v12productions
      @v12productions  Год назад

      Thanks! I do my best to keep it in good condition.

  • @davidpoor8638
    @davidpoor8638 Год назад +1

    Awesome video!!!

  • @nancy8521
    @nancy8521 Год назад +1

    Like the caboose miss them on the trains wish they would Bring them back

  • @davidstewart5694
    @davidstewart5694 Год назад +1

    That caboose is a x cr, former NYC design there were roughly 6 classes of those mostly looking about the same

  • @Manwholikestrains
    @Manwholikestrains Год назад +3

    Because of the merger between the cp and kcs the cp is the only North American railway to my knowledge that has trackage in 3 separate countries

  • @RandomRailfan828
    @RandomRailfan828 Год назад +2

    Great video man, got some nice catches! And what a coincidence with 8863!

  • @SD45-ET44AC
    @SD45-ET44AC Год назад

    Great video as always! Not leading but next 2 back were CN, so all in all a good catch. 👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾

  • @rickdee67
    @rickdee67 Год назад +2

    Excellent video

  • @frankgrabasse4642
    @frankgrabasse4642 Год назад +2

    That caboose behind the sd40 is an old nyc n7 or n7a

    • @ShawnCalay
      @ShawnCalay 9 месяцев назад

      Im pretty sure that is a SD40-2

  • @TheQuebecRailfan
    @TheQuebecRailfan Год назад +2

    7:15, i have some of these with patched QGRY for quebec gatineau railway, ex-bnsf SD70MAC, it was pretty cool to see and i got a lot of that shot in the sunset

  • @jwrailve3615
    @jwrailve3615 Год назад +2

    Saw a cow calf slug UP Consist switching one of the main yards in Houston a couple months black, not something I’ve seen too often. Nice video as always tho!

    • @jacobdubielak
      @jacobdubielak Год назад

      I have seen a cabless slug too but on Norfolk southern railroad in Irondale AL

  • @BSPIVEY100
    @BSPIVEY100 Год назад

    The drone really makes the videos more interesting. Nice use of the technology.

  • @punchfisttop
    @punchfisttop Год назад +1

    I LOVE SLUGS!!!

  • @FrogandFlangeVideo
    @FrogandFlangeVideo Год назад

    Really informative and entertaining. James.

  • @roberttaylor6600
    @roberttaylor6600 Год назад

    Love your videos rail on my friend keep them coming.

  • @matthewmatheny2412
    @matthewmatheny2412 Год назад +3

    Awesome video! Any time you plan on traveling again, could you make a video on the railroads of Birmingham, AL or Meridian, MS?

    • @v12productions
      @v12productions  Год назад +1

      Thanks! I'd like to go back to Birmingham at some point.

  • @truckinpoppop6777
    @truckinpoppop6777 Год назад

    Great work! I always learn something.

  • @ConvoyCowboy
    @ConvoyCowboy Год назад +4

    Nice

  • @RailPreserver2K
    @RailPreserver2K Год назад

    Think you'll be around the abbeville sub, bogart and hull are of particular signifigance to me because they were where i watched trains when i was little :)

  • @RailFanRob
    @RailFanRob Год назад

    Great footage man 👍👍🚦

  • @jjrailfan2024
    @jjrailfan2024 Год назад

    I railfan along the helper line you mentioned and yes helpers are not that rare you cannot go a day without seeing helpers up here

  • @brandongaines1731
    @brandongaines1731 Год назад

    I'm fairly certain that that CSX Bay-Window caboose that you caught on the welded rail train must be an old Penn Central caboose. If you look again at the photo that you showed at the end with the Penn Central units, then you'll see that the bay windows on the PC caboose just behind the locos are the same style as the ones on that CSX caboose.

    • @JohnReall
      @JohnReall Год назад

      I do believe it was New York Central before it was Penn Central.

  • @stockbridgerf
    @stockbridgerf Год назад +1

    v12 i saw you . and u gave me the little wave 😞 when u was setting up in front of the rail side apartments.

  • @kittty2005
    @kittty2005 Год назад

    I'm 70,and back in my day they were called cow and calf, kind of fits the calf was always feeding.

  • @bnsfgevoproductions
    @bnsfgevoproductions Год назад +2

    Sheesh! 🚂🚃🚃

  • @amylocke1364
    @amylocke1364 Год назад

    Do another video in griffin GA cause that’s were I live. By the way nice catches in tillerd yard and Inman yard

  • @CowpoteAdventures
    @CowpoteAdventures Год назад +1

    Very nice

  • @JohnSmith-zi9or
    @JohnSmith-zi9or Год назад

    On a business trip in Atlanta, watching a rail fan video about trains in Atlanta. Lol

  • @jasonervoes1326
    @jasonervoes1326 Год назад +1

    Great video. Did they move that stuck train?

  • @revharrycwigmoreiii5787
    @revharrycwigmoreiii5787 Год назад

    V12, I appreciate your videos, they are very informative, especially around Atlanta. Do you ever get up here in North Carolina on the CSX main line? I live in Smithfield, the CSX main line is about 1/2 miles from my house. There are about 30 trains per day, but on weekends about 35 to 40. Mixed manifest, and a bundle of Amtrak. Might be of interest for some of your filming. Thanks again V12 Productions.

    • @v12productions
      @v12productions  Год назад

      Thanks! That's a great suggestion! I'll have to get up there sometime.

    • @revharrycwigmoreiii5787
      @revharrycwigmoreiii5787 Год назад

      @@v12productions Great, Be blessed.

    • @gloria6229
      @gloria6229 Год назад

      ​@@v12productionsI saw WFRX #8909 in Gallitzin on the night of June 21st, 2023 and WFRX #8966 in Bluefield, West Virginia on September 2nd, 2023!

  • @RailfanBrenden.
    @RailfanBrenden. 7 месяцев назад +1

    7:15 Nice EX BNSF WFRX

  • @SD40Fan_Jason
    @SD40Fan_Jason Год назад

    I wish I had the opportunity to meet you while I was still in Atlanta. I worked at the yard off Cascade Rd. for about 7 years. Was also in Columbus / Ft Benning for a little over a year. Would love to have given you the nickel tour of those places.

  • @natehill8069
    @natehill8069 Год назад

    Oh heck, I never thought about the fact that you can have 1 little remote control engine control a whole stack of standard MUs.

  • @AtlantaNorthDistrict_Railfan
    @AtlantaNorthDistrict_Railfan Год назад

    Nice video!

  • @waldemarogandotrens.8063
    @waldemarogandotrens.8063 Год назад

    Vídeos espetaculares demais imagens aéreas um visual fantástico, parabéns pelo excelente registro 👏💯

  • @ourv9603
    @ourv9603 Год назад

    My Grandad was a steam mechanic for the Pennsylvania RR at their Indianapolis yard.
    When he was 45 or 50 they switched out all the steam locos & brought in diesels. I dont
    know if Grandad quit or was let go but at any rate he left the trade & started his own business doing steam repair. Many homes & businesses back in those days used steam heat.
    My Dad too worked for the Pennsylvania as a machinist. Me? No, I never worked for any RR but I did steam boilers aboard an aircraft carrier during Viet Nam.
    !

  • @markhagerty259
    @markhagerty259 Год назад +2

    When you say Atlanta. Do you mean Atlanta Georiga?

  • @sixone7478
    @sixone7478 Год назад

    2'53" that gondola loaded up with scrap metal looks like it will break apart pretty soon...

  • @KnoxvilleRailfanProductions
    @KnoxvilleRailfanProductions Год назад

    Thats probably the only video of one of those macs leading

  • @titanyawilliams2887
    @titanyawilliams2887 Год назад

    I like trains

  • @caedenpierce275
    @caedenpierce275 Год назад

    Interested in purchasing a handheld radio for trainspotting. What do you recommend for a newbie? Great video!

    • @SD40Fan_Jason
      @SD40Fan_Jason Год назад +1

      For a newbie, get the Baofeng UV-5R for $30. Remember that it's a transmitter and receiver though and transmitting is prohibited without a license. Want to step up your game a little bit? get the Wouxun KG-UV9D which has a much better filter on VHF and will knock out a lot of the intermod coming from urban areas. But the real key to any Radio listening (SWL) is to have a decent antenna. Get a Diamond RH77CA and the adapter to connect it to your handheld. Get away from the cheap rubber ducky antennas that come with the handies. Or if you can get a mag-mount antenna for your car, even better. But you'll be tethered to the wire on that antenna.

  • @brandonharris7516
    @brandonharris7516 Год назад +2

    Oh

  • @planebois
    @planebois Год назад

    What yard does B637 come out of? Schiller Park? Glenn Yard?

  • @southerncsxvlog
    @southerncsxvlog Год назад

    What if V12 Productions and Delay In Block Meet Each Other Again? Or The First Time? The video will blow up if that happened! Also Nice Video V12!

  • @Seaboardsystem-t7e
    @Seaboardsystem-t7e Год назад

    Do you know what year the hump was closed at Inman?

  • @jasonervoes1326
    @jasonervoes1326 Год назад

    Did they move that other freight train blockibg the railroad crossing?

  • @Atlantametrorailfanproductions

    Atl is a major railfaning

  • @mijicalmagiemance8014
    @mijicalmagiemance8014 Год назад +1

    Great vid can we get more vids

    • @v12productions
      @v12productions  Год назад

      Thanks! More are on the way!

    • @gloria6229
      @gloria6229 Год назад

      @@v12productions Guess what, I'm going to Gallitzin!

  • @amylocke1364
    @amylocke1364 Год назад

    Could you please recommend a good scanner I could purchase for my son to be able to listen to trains?
    We live right outside of Atl also & he is as obsessed with trains as I imagine you probably were at his age, 7 years old. He watches ALL of your videos & knows more about trains than any one I have ever met in my entire life. You are famous in his eyes & he not only looks up to you but he learns & retains every single thing you say.
    It would mean the absolute world to him to be able to meet you or come watch you shoot a video or train track sometime. If there’s a way we could get in touch with you privately please me know.
    Thank you, from a mom of a train obsessed little boy that literally eats, sleeps & breathes trains, along with your videos.

    • @SD40Fan_Jason
      @SD40Fan_Jason Год назад

      For a newbie, get the Baofeng UV-5R for $30. Remember that it's a transmitter and receiver though and transmitting is prohibited without a license. Want to step up your game a little bit? get the Wouxun KG-UV9D which has a much better filter on VHF and will knock out a lot of the intermod coming from urban areas. But the real key to any Radio listening (SWL) is to have a decent antenna. Get a Diamond RH77CA and the adapter to connect it to your handheld. Get away from the cheap rubber ducky antennas that come with the handies. Or if you can get a mag-mount antenna for your car, even better. But you'll be tethered to the wire on that antenna.

  • @rachelandwade3607
    @rachelandwade3607 Год назад

    I saw an SD70ACC

  • @SantaFe19484
    @SantaFe19484 Год назад

    Nice video! Is it legal to fly drone over a rail yard?

    • @FFred-us9tw
      @FFred-us9tw Год назад

      Over a yard? Yes. Over a train? No. It’s in the FAA drone regs.

  • @RailsofForney
    @RailsofForney 11 месяцев назад

    Doesn’t it seem more convenient to have the helpers at the rear? You can just pull them out and have access to the rest of the train in a yard if needed instead of cutting it all up.

  • @NorthBay43
    @NorthBay43 7 месяцев назад +1

    Why Does NS has forgein power

  • @teacher555555
    @teacher555555 Год назад

    i want to know how trains can be any more efficient. they already have a contact point from wheel to rail the size of a US dime so they only need to refuel once a month or every couple of months.

    • @SD40Fan_Jason
      @SD40Fan_Jason Год назад

      That's a bit of an exaggeration on the refueling, though I wish you were right... A new GE has a 4,000 gallon fuel cell and is usually filled to 3,200 gallons (80% capacity) When I would make a run of about 180-240 miles, we found it consumed 180-250 gallons on those trips. Now it was unusual to have just one locomotive, but typically the train was built with enough engines in the consist to get from point A to point B without any struggle. But even in the most conservative statistics, we are refueling our engines about once a week, or more. Now, in the switch yard, that was different. But the pair of GP38s I had were 3400 gallon cells and also fueled up to 80% cap. If we switched for 8 hours straight, just going back and forth, not going more than 10 mph and doing a lot of sitting and pumping air, we usually burned about 100 gallons per engine per 8 hour shift. This meant every 7-8 days we were also refueling.
      The only other factor to consider is just with hills, it's much harder to pull than on flat straight track.

    • @teacher555555
      @teacher555555 Год назад

      ​@@SD40Fan_Jasonthis is just my biased opinion as I have never been inside of a locomotive cab but I don't think any rail company is going to use a GE ES44C4 as a sort of short-haul locomotive with what you were saying in when you did ther 180-240 mile trips. i can see a SD40, a couple of them or something of similar size but I am guessing this because I am guessing your trips required a lot of stopping, starting and shuffling cars around for local deliveries and pickups so of course you would burn a lot more fuel but a locomotive going from the port of LA to Chicago is not going to make as many stops so it will not as burn as much fuel as you were. you were also running those locomotives 24 hours a day so of course you would have to refuel more often. your 100 gallons a shift times 3 shifts is 300 gallons per day, 7 days a week is 2100 gallons a week so you could go 11 days without refueling if actually filled but since you said 80% so they put in 2700 gallons so you had to fuel on Sunday and then refuel again 1 week later to keep their maintenance schedule on track or they would have to have towed a couple of engines that ran out of fuel which would have caused twice as many issues because now 3-4 engines would be out of service for a short time. with you saying gp38s, and looking at images, most are Canadian national/pacific so am guessing you are there which means it gets cold in the winter so your bosses probably keep the engines running by working or by just having them idle

    • @SD40Fan_Jason
      @SD40Fan_Jason Год назад

      @@teacher555555Most of the runs I did ran the entire length of the Atlantic Coast. However I was only on the first or last stretch for that train. Crews are only good for 12 hours at a time and then we crew change.
      GP38s and GP40s are all over the rail network from Canada to Mexico and all in between. For CSX they are ideal yard switchers and short run engines. In fact they usually mother them to slugs in many cases.

    • @teacher555555
      @teacher555555 Год назад

      @@SD40Fan_Jason so basically you dont know how long these locomotives run before needing to be refueled, just the ones you have used on the switching at years which causes more fuel to burn? as someone who worked on the rail, you should know how efficient trains are because of the steel wheels and steel rails contact point being that of a dime. its just that you would need to stop and start for deliveries and pickup outside of the yard. but an 8 hour day for going 180-240 miles? you were crawling, basically 30-40mph

    • @SD40Fan_Jason
      @SD40Fan_Jason Год назад

      @teacher555555 I can't tell if you're looking for an argument or if you are just not listening to what I am saying.
      On road trains, I'd cover a stretch of track that would range from one end of a subdivision to the other and I would swap with a crew at both ends. Sometimes if the train reached its terminus, it wouldn't be crewed, just disassembled. But yes 35z40mph sounds about right for the average speed in an 8 hour shift. Max track speed was 60 mph and we would do our best to keep it there. Invariably there were slow orders, sidings taken for a higher priority train, and other issues that caused us delays. Some days we'd finish early and take an early quit too.
      But in every case we had to record our fuel readings at the beginning and end of each shift. And if we took on or cut out any locomotives in the process we recorded their fuel readings as well. A formidable engineer will be able to tell if a locomotive is malfunctioning based on fuel consumption metrics.

  • @NSCSXRailfan457
    @NSCSXRailfan457 Год назад +4

    First! And nice

  • @michaelhband
    @michaelhband Год назад

    👍👍👍❤❤❤🚂🚂🚂

  • @MiguelNavarreteCruz
    @MiguelNavarreteCruz Год назад +1

    Trains de vagones

  • @なかむり-f3h
    @なかむり-f3h Год назад

    🌁

  • @beeble2003
    @beeble2003 Год назад +4

    There's no need to capitalize "slug" -- it's just an ordinary word, not an acronym.

  • @HarrisburgRailfanProductions
    @HarrisburgRailfanProductions Год назад +4

    Nice

  • @なかむり-f3h
    @なかむり-f3h Год назад

    🌁