An absolutely wonderful video my good sir! The 3801 is certainly a nicely proportioned locomotive, and it must be nice for y'all "Down Under" to see her out on the rails again. Looking forward to seeing more Rails of New South Wales! Happy Railroading!
Great video! I saw them pass between Warwick Farm and Liverpool coming from Thirlmere! Certainly is a nice change from those Waratah Trains ;) 3801 will be running shuttles down In Albury and then will run the Hydro Express to Medlow Bath from Central Sydney Terminal. Also you can see me mate Adz' Transport Vlogs at 44:44 :D
Great work! However, I’m noting one omission and that is the New York, New Haven and Hartford (New Haven)’s I-5 class and the N&W’s famous J Class (they were the 2 candidates that influenced the styling)
I was going to place them in but I omitted them because I wrote that 3801 is famous and was mostly dubbed as the Flying Scotsman of Australia. Not that I’m denouncing the two engines’ fame.
The 38 class streamlining was certainly copied from the New Haven I5 class. I doubt whether N&W's J class had anything to do with it - the I5 class came out in 1937 and the 38 class was designed in 1938-39; the J class didn't emerge until 1941 - too late for the 38 class I would have thought even though 3801 wasn't completed until the beginning of 1943
I mention the stations and the reason I know they pass through those stations is to research the line, look at the distance from A to B and have this app called ‘Any Trip’ which helps you track the trains, but only on tracks by Sydney Trains, by adding in some codes which are a bit hard to find but you join some Facebook groups you might be lucky to see one. Sometimes they might share a code with the ARTC (Australian Rail Track Corporation) and it’s not hard, all you have to do is Google the abbreviation and then ‘TAA notices’ and a link will take you their. The list of notices are their for every rail movement but it’s easy to go through and you might stumble upon things like maybe ‘THNSW’ or ‘Picnic Train’ or ‘SRS’ which is an abbreviation for ‘Sydney Rail Services’ who operate the picnic train. For the ‘Any Trip’ app, codes only used by the ARTC won’t work. I don’t think there’s any other app that would help you with that.
This is the best documentary I’ve ever seen on 3801, it feels like a modern version of The 3801 a legend in steam doco
Thank you for the compliment and the comparison :)
Just when I thought I didn’t need more reasons to visit Australia
The 38s, and 60s are some of the NSW's best. Absolutely love them
An absolutely wonderful video my good sir! The 3801 is certainly a nicely proportioned locomotive, and it must be nice for y'all "Down Under" to see her out on the rails again. Looking forward to seeing more Rails of New South Wales! Happy Railroading!
3801 is my favourite Australia steam engine, The Steam Train Passes was where I was introduced to her, I’ve never seen an engine so beautiful
Can't wait for 3801 80th anniversary in 2023
I love 3801’s whistle! It sounds so classic!
Bro, the whistle gave me goosebumbs. It's so beautiful
With your hype of 3801, that's they hype us Americans had for the return of the 4014
And the UK’s hype for ex-LNER 60103 Flying Scotsman return in 2016
Every country has _it’s_ locomotive...
@@844SteamFan let me guess,
USA: UP Big Boy 4014
AU: NSW 3801
UK: LNER 4472/BR 60103 “Flying Scotsman (and possibly even LNER 4468/BR 60022 “Mallard”)
@@terrier_productions Those fit
Welcome back 3801 from from your friends in the United States.
3801 is my favourite Aussie steam engine
Amazing and for a Correction there the LMS had 4 cylinder 4-6-2 Pacifics which were the Princess Royals and the Duchess Pacifics
My mistake, must've been a mistake that I'd written in the script and didn't check over that.
Thats okay but we had a 4-6-4 loco and that was the W1 Hush Hush loco designed by Gresley
@@TERRYBARTLETTRAILMAN28 but it was a failure before it was rebuilt
@@TERRYBARTLETTRAILMAN28 It was nicknamed "Steaming Sausage".
@@neilsonthegreat Yea correct.
One of my favorite steamer
This is magnificent work! This is the type of stuff they should show on TV. Awesome job again 👍at 44:45 you can see my cousin in the white shirt
Bravo nwr1991 3801 a true legend of steam she makes the Pennsylvania k4 1361 blush in shame congrats on video and keep up your vids on aussie steam
I'm a fan of this loco even tough i'm not the same country this engine lived
Excellent documentary of 3801 as well fantastic video of the fabulous locomotive in action during it launch weekend 👍👍
Welcome back 3801 you are my favorite Australian Steam train!
Great video! I saw them pass between Warwick Farm and Liverpool coming from Thirlmere! Certainly is a nice change from those Waratah Trains ;) 3801 will be running shuttles down In Albury and then will run the Hydro Express to Medlow Bath from Central Sydney Terminal. Also you can see me mate Adz' Transport Vlogs at 44:44 :D
Wow, that was an amazing documentary, i didnt realise that so much had happened in 3801s life!
Wow that engine looks awsome, too bad I'll never see it in person due to living in the UK
You never know your luck.
@@NWR1991 very true although it's unlikely due to covid
You just never know once when COVID is under control and hopefully some normalcy returns. But of course there’s money.
@@NWR1991 I can only hope
3801 looks very look! Nice documentary!
Although I live in britain I really like Australian locomotives, especially this one👍
Same here and I live in America
Watching this the second time,this is a pretty Good video! I'm more into British Steam and British Older Diesels so I learned alot about the class!
Welcome back 3801
Great work!
However, I’m noting one omission and that is the New York, New Haven and Hartford (New Haven)’s I-5 class and the N&W’s famous J Class (they were the 2 candidates that influenced the styling)
I was going to place them in but I omitted them because I wrote that 3801 is famous and was mostly dubbed as the Flying Scotsman of Australia. Not that I’m denouncing the two engines’ fame.
The 38 class streamlining was certainly copied from the New Haven I5 class. I doubt whether N&W's J class had anything to do with it - the I5 class came out in 1937 and the 38 class was designed in 1938-39; the J class didn't emerge until 1941 - too late for the 38 class I would have thought even though 3801 wasn't completed until the beginning of 1943
3801 looks like a New Haven RR I-5 but as a 4-6-2 instead of a 4-6-4
I have to ask. What NSW stations do you see these locomotives and how do you know where they go? I’m sure it’s not too far for me
I mention the stations and the reason I know they pass through those stations is to research the line, look at the distance from A to B and have this app called ‘Any Trip’ which helps you track the trains, but only on tracks by Sydney Trains, by adding in some codes which are a bit hard to find but you join some Facebook groups you might be lucky to see one. Sometimes they might share a code with the ARTC (Australian Rail Track Corporation) and it’s not hard, all you have to do is Google the abbreviation and then ‘TAA notices’ and a link will take you their. The list of notices are their for every rail movement but it’s easy to go through and you might stumble upon things like maybe ‘THNSW’ or ‘Picnic Train’ or ‘SRS’ which is an abbreviation for ‘Sydney Rail Services’ who operate the picnic train. For the ‘Any Trip’ app, codes only used by the ARTC won’t work. I don’t think there’s any other app that would help you with that.
22:06 news report from HARRY POTTER
Yes but it was well before the book: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Potter_(journalist)
what a great history
It is good that you acknowledge the First Peoples. (As we call them, yeah.)
First Peoples! I love that!