SEPTA Market-Frankford El Flashback Series 1997-1999: Part 2

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  • Опубликовано: 7 авг 2020
  • This is Part 2 of 7 in a series of videos shot on SEPTA's Market-Frankford Line between 1997 and 1999. Featuring the Budd "Almond Joy" M3 cars, these videos take place from a few months before the first revenue run of the prototype Adtranz M4 set in 1997 and runs through to 1999 when both types of equipment were still mixed on the line a few months before enough M4's were on hand to permit withdrawal of the last Budd set.
    Part 2 features runby scenes at 2nd Street, Spring Garden, and Margaret-Orthodox.

Комментарии • 32

  • @ghostengineer
    @ghostengineer 4 года назад +9

    Hitting the heart strings with these almond joy videos pal. I miss those things

  • @TajmirTheRandomFan
    @TajmirTheRandomFan 4 года назад +5

    That train in the 1990s looked really classic.

  • @havenas1020yt
    @havenas1020yt 4 года назад +3

    That M4 sounded absolutely insane... if they sounded like that today I’d be a fan

  • @nysubwaydude5634
    @nysubwaydude5634 2 года назад +2

    What interesting to me is that the Septa Budd m3 almost resembles the Redbird subway cars and at the 0:06-0:08 the horn sound similar to the horns that the NYC subway cars have and this video was recorded 9 to 7 before I was born
    Hello from New York

    • @thor-elfalcon3057
      @thor-elfalcon3057 Год назад

      Westinghouse D-5 whistle. NYC Transit uses the same whistle.

  • @adrianwitzburg4140
    @adrianwitzburg4140 7 месяцев назад

    Didn’t know that the Market Frankford line was called Blue Line back then

    • @trainman1971
      @trainman1971  7 месяцев назад

      Back in the mid-80's, SEPTA attempted to rebrand the Market-Frankford, Broad St, and Subway-Surface Lines as the Blue, Orange, and Green Lines, respectively. It failed miserably, mostly because SEPTA never followed through fully with the changes by eliminating the former names from signage, so the old names never went away.

  • @italobambino43
    @italobambino43 Год назад +1

    23 years ago, before everyone became "Palm Zombie's"

  • @kingsmoove112
    @kingsmoove112 4 года назад +3

    I’ve always noticed on these MFL, there was a second conducter, usually the 3rd or 4th car in. What was their role? What were they responsible for?

    • @videonut1988
      @videonut1988 4 года назад +2

      To open the doors, unlike nowadays with the M4s where the Operator does the doors with the cameras at the station connecting to the train to know when the passengers get on. NYCTA still has conductors for the Subways.

    • @kingsmoove112
      @kingsmoove112 4 года назад +1

      Curtis Livingston Oh, ok thanks. I remember as a kid, with the M3s, the conductor would blow a whistle as well.

    • @dtvjho
      @dtvjho 2 года назад

      Two-man crews, one driver and one conductor. I remember quite often on a ride noticing a conductor get into or out of a cab and go through the end door of a car, was necessary to switch cabs when approaching a stop where the platforms are on the opposite side. Since I rode in from the Northeast, the only stop that was different was Spring Garden, so I'd see the switch happen around there, or the few times I took it to 34th which also had a center island. There was no whistle in the 1970s and early 1980s, believe the idea came after the new Broad St subway cars arrived in 1983, which had automatic sound signals on the doors. There was no PA system in the Budd cars, so I remember when there was an issue, the train sitting at a stop with the door open a long time, someone would come by and holler on the platform, or into the train cars to let us all know if we were going to run nonstop to M-O or even Bridge St.

  • @ivancollier1512
    @ivancollier1512 Год назад

    I liked the old smell. Like a classic car

  • @tameek24
    @tameek24 4 года назад

    I really want to see the old 46th street station in west philly what it look like back in the day

  • @thor-elfalcon3057
    @thor-elfalcon3057 4 года назад

    2:33 first ever 6 car full train of "Blue Line" painted cars I've ever seen. Usually seen 4 per train max.

  • @teambandicoottransit0824
    @teambandicoottransit0824 2 года назад

    7:55 aka (Arrott Transportation Center 2014-Present)

    • @dtvjho
      @dtvjho 2 года назад

      I remember when M-O had no diagonal bridge, and the other bridge far down the platform was still original, with no floor (rotted out). Prior to all the work SEPTA did, the only crossovers on the Frankford side of the line was an underpass at York Dauphin and a bridge at Berks. Go back into the 1970s, the metal was all painted an ugly green.

  • @nickygmp_350
    @nickygmp_350 2 года назад

    Did the line go all the way to 69th back then?

  • @transitfan2000
    @transitfan2000 4 года назад

    Is this posted from your own VHS collection

    • @trainman1971
      @trainman1971  4 года назад +1

      Yes.

    • @christianluyando883
      @christianluyando883 3 года назад

      trainman1971 septa blue line train looks like they have a Similar version to a New York City R40 as well as a whistle that sound like a cop from United Kingdom. 🇬🇧 I can picture septa as the new Philadelphia city subway train.

    • @christianluyando883
      @christianluyando883 3 года назад

      trainman1971 that horn also sounds familiar when a train is turning or if they see construction ahead.

    • @danielpedricothe2nd376
      @danielpedricothe2nd376 3 года назад

      Could You Make The Story So Far with All 7 Episodes

  • @jonathanrosario865
    @jonathanrosario865 2 года назад

    What kind of sound is SEPTA M3 doors make that noise. and what if The SEPTA M3 Car has both door chime and Automatic Announcements like the SEPTA M4.

    • @trainman1971
      @trainman1971  2 года назад +1

      Regarding the M3's: The doors were air-operated. They never had door chimes; the conductors had whistles that they blew as a warning that the doors were about to close. And they only got the whistles at some point in the 1990's.

  • @QuarioQuario54321
    @QuarioQuario54321 Год назад

    The old trains were too quiet

  • @christianluyando883
    @christianluyando883 3 года назад

    The former blue line train from septa looks like it ripped off St. Louis car company’s NYCT MTA R40.

    • @trainman1971
      @trainman1971  3 года назад +4

      Oh, not even close. They are Budd products, built 1960-1961. The NYCT Budd R32 fleet followed these in 1962-1964.

    • @GeneralHawk505
      @GeneralHawk505 3 года назад +1

      @@trainman1971 More or less like the R38 Cars....

  • @rayizm3
    @rayizm3 4 месяца назад

    Not clean NO MORE!!!