How This Iconic Red Soviet Tram Survives On The Remains Of A Fallen Empire

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • KTM-5, also known as 71-605: an iconic red soviet streetcar that, having worked out its service life several times, still circulate on the desolated streets of post-soviet countries (mainly, Russia and Kazakhstan), slowly swaying on the crooked rails among swamps and snow drifts.
    Voice-over: Grant Bolton
    Video Courtesies:
    Ольга и таёжный трамвай | ЧЕЛОВЕК НА КАРТЕ ("Olga And The Taiga Tram | A MAN ON THE MAP") - Настоящее Время. Док
    Вместе с дзержинским трамваев навсегда уходит и целая эпоха в истории города ("Together With Dzerzhinsk Tram, A Whole Era In The History Of The City Is Forever Leaving") - Данил Фото _ 126, ТК Дзержинск
    Трамвай КТМ-5 с необычных ракурсов ("KTM-5 Tram From The Unusual Angle") - Роберт Карапетян
    VLADIVOSTOK TRAM - KTM5, KTM8 & RVZ6 (2015) - KT4Dani
    Маршруты. Павлодар - столица трамваев ("Routes. Pavlodar, The Capital Of The Trams") - ZHAR Media
    Sumgayit (Azerbaijan) Tramway / Straßenbahn and Trolleybus / Obus - 09.1999 - Irakli Zhozhuashvili, Dave Spencer
    Support me: www.paypal.me/... or money.yandex.r...
    #tram #streetcar #russia

Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @homfri111
    @homfri111 3 года назад +1612

    Toronto tram "help, there was a mcdonalds straw on the track and my fault sensors tripped saying im on fire"
    Soviet Tram "i was shot and rammed by a german leopard tank, i will tow him home as a sign of honor among warriors"

    • @mikebogucki5832
      @mikebogucki5832 3 года назад +71

      As a Toronto resident from Communist Poland; True story 🤣🤣

    • @Valkyrie_Yukikaze
      @Valkyrie_Yukikaze 3 года назад +10

      TTC services isn‘t good

    • @GhostOfDamned
      @GhostOfDamned 3 года назад +9

      Old but gold

    • @myrealusername2193
      @myrealusername2193 3 года назад +37

      The O train in Ottawa be like:
      Oh no someone touched the door guess my entire electrical system needs to be disconnected

    • @GhostOfDamned
      @GhostOfDamned 3 года назад +5

      @@myrealusername2193 true lmao

  • @aidanpysher2764
    @aidanpysher2764 3 года назад +752

    This has made me: an American who hasn't even stepped a foot in Europe - feel a level sympathy and appreciation for a small tram I will most likely never see in my entire life. These things have a certain charm to them.

    • @pyrat3538
      @pyrat3538 3 года назад +21

      travel more! then u can view the world not only from us bubble

    • @ctelable
      @ctelable 3 года назад +19

      They do have a charm to them , and if a place like that was still left in the usa, they would bulldoze it over, put up a wall-mart, a car dealership, a chipotle, and then if you wanted to have such an experience, then you would have to buy a ticket to go to walt disney world to see it rebranded ... and pay a 200 dollar entrance fee

    • @MrRailfan
      @MrRailfan 3 года назад +14

      On the US side we had something similar with BUDD company built R32 cars for the nyc subway. Built in 1963-1964 they persevered and outlived multiple class types that came after and were just recently retired. They even had a second spring on life as the new R179 cars that were to replace them broke down, having the r32s be reinstated for service.

    • @aidanpysher2764
      @aidanpysher2764 3 года назад +13

      @@pyrat3538 I've been abroad, when I was stationed in South Korea as I'm currently in the USAF, but there are countless countries I would absolutely love to visit. I absolutely love the history involving countries my own nation deemed as foes at one point, and I absolutely love the history of the Soviet Union and Germany.

    • @Nono-dk5hl
      @Nono-dk5hl 3 года назад +1

      that's what europe is about

  • @BentleyTypeR
    @BentleyTypeR 3 года назад +1299

    To be honest. I could watch 50 hours of these trams running around

    • @andrewblake2254
      @andrewblake2254 3 года назад +37

      I reckon I have spent 50 hours riding on them! The amount of squeal on corners was truly impressive,

    • @FUUUUU1111
      @FUUUUU1111 3 года назад +14

      But riding them is another story...

    • @randomclass4653
      @randomclass4653 3 года назад +1

      same bro , same.

    • @VanessaScrillions
      @VanessaScrillions 3 года назад +3

      Same they're adorable

    • @iainmacrae6982
      @iainmacrae6982 3 года назад +2

      wait for some random american to call you a communist

  • @pranavghantasala6808
    @pranavghantasala6808 3 года назад +249

    I love how these 50+ year old trams were designed to last just 16 years. Like, they were made indestructible _by accident_

    • @Laurabeck329
      @Laurabeck329 3 года назад +43

      That's soviet engineering for you

    • @trainsoftheworld1
      @trainsoftheworld1 2 года назад +3

      Haha, so true!

    • @skoval00
      @skoval00 2 года назад +19

      @@Laurabeck329 that's survivorship bias. Soviet engineers also created Chernobyl power plant and my parents' old vacuum cleaner. Can't say anything good about them.

    • @rohlicek3884
      @rohlicek3884 Год назад +1

      like the Czechoslovakian Class 451/452 they had a lifespam of 15 years. enntered service in 1964 withdrawn in 2018

    • @uis246
      @uis246 11 месяцев назад +6

      In soviet engieneering designing to last 16 years means it should not break for 16 yeas of non-stop use, while in capitalism engieneering designing to last 16 years means it will break after about 16 years

  • @ИльяКоротаев-ц9ъ
    @ИльяКоротаев-ц9ъ 3 года назад +75

    RUclips finally gives me a good recomendation. I'm from Dzerzhinsk and these trams are my childhood. These trams give me my love for all rail transport: trains, trams, metro. I literally can't believe that it's been already 9 years from closing last route.

  • @TrainerCTZ
    @TrainerCTZ 3 года назад +285

    Nothing more heart breaking than a sad babushka

    • @retropalooza
      @retropalooza Год назад +6

      Yes her sad pension

    • @Gabrielmaragh228
      @Gabrielmaragh228 8 месяцев назад +4

      Holy crap that's actually true.

    • @lovebus-dg5bf
      @lovebus-dg5bf 5 месяцев назад +4

      I live in Russia, and that's really sad...

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 3 года назад +1790

    Every country deserves a babushka driving a Soviet tram

    • @rowbot5555
      @rowbot5555 3 года назад +19

      I see you around a lot

    • @RATHERGAMER
      @RATHERGAMER 3 года назад +15

      You again?? :00

    • @rowbot5555
      @rowbot5555 3 года назад +6

      @David Jones what of the babushka wants to drive the tram

    • @vladis3331
      @vladis3331 3 года назад +1

      I rode on them.

    • @archlich4489
      @archlich4489 3 года назад +13

      May she enjoy both her job and good health for years to come

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 3 года назад +365

    We don't have Soviet trams
    but we do have Czechoslovak trams, as well as trams we made ourselves. The Czechoslovak trams still work like a charm. Part of the glorious vibe of Pyongyang

    • @space_fox2062
      @space_fox2062 3 года назад +9

      Czechoslovak Socialist Republic was a member Warsaw Pact

    • @lxi9648
      @lxi9648 3 года назад +3

      @@space_fox2062 yes

    • @bellezayverdad
      @bellezayverdad 3 года назад +17

      Is this really you, Dear Leader?

    • @petrfedor1851
      @petrfedor1851 3 года назад +1

      They looks stylish as hell.

    • @mishacol
      @mishacol 3 года назад +7

      How did you even connect to RUclips?

  • @Shayvick09
    @Shayvick09 3 года назад +869

    When the newer trams have to go to the depoo during Icy or really cold conditions, our KT4 trams continue hustling up and down the street. This as of March 2021.

  • @michaelsteele4587
    @michaelsteele4587 3 года назад +37

    I felt so terrible for that older lady losing her job at the 3:15 mark. These trams were literally her life and at her age, you take that away in such a heartbreaking manner, it leaves her without a purpose and these are the members of society who quickly fade away. Reminds me of a story I heard of a very old lighthouse keeper on the Great Lakes who lost his job due to automation and he was so heartbroken, he died in his sleep on his last night on duty at his lighthouse.

    • @worldtradesurfer
      @worldtradesurfer Год назад +4

      The wonderful tram operation in Ust Illimsk (from 01:20) was also stopped forever on 12/31/2022. 😞

  • @Mastakilla91
    @Mastakilla91 3 года назад +773

    They are so old and unique that they became iconic, like San Francisco street cars or the Lissabon trams.

    • @jimtaylor294
      @jimtaylor294 3 года назад +16

      Or most Trams in Blackpool

    • @raypitts4880
      @raypitts4880 3 года назад +1

      me to.

    • @bennymountain1
      @bennymountain1 3 года назад +10

      Except iirc SF collect unique trams and take good care of them. These Russian trams are mostly covered in rust and falling apart.

    • @pufferkuesser97
      @pufferkuesser97 3 года назад +9

      @@bennymountain1 Thats what makes it special

    • @chih-chienwu5757
      @chih-chienwu5757 3 года назад +3

      Oldie but goodie.

  • @king40x
    @king40x 3 года назад +27

    спасибо за видео. эти работяги кажется были с нами всегда, они символ быта. эти трамвайчики очень тёплые и уютные, а это очень важно в серые рабочие будни

  • @bigman10239
    @bigman10239 3 года назад +361

    wow i feel for miss valentina, i actually wanted to cry for her. sad too to see a tram system dismantled.

    • @JediTev
      @JediTev 3 года назад +3

      she reminded me of Aunt Lydia from Handmaid's Tale

    • @Dr.K.Wette_BE
      @Dr.K.Wette_BE 3 года назад +13

      I felt the same. In Belgium we had "the small train" going from village to village carrying workers to the town's railway station to go to the bigger cities or transporting goods between small factories. When the last train left (on a truck) my father took off his hat and placed it on his hart, like we did when a funeral passed by...

    • @weeardguy
      @weeardguy 3 года назад

      @@Dr.K.Wette_BE I'm pretty sure this happened in the Netherlands as well, when the local trams were shut down shortly after the second world war (or before, as the autobus was already the great competitor to rail-transport).
      I live in a town 18 km above Amsterdam, where we had the tram from the NZH. The busstation in the city center where I live, still bears the name of the tramstation that used to be there till (I think) 1956 (Tramplein = Tramsquare).
      Originally, it wasn't located at the spot where it is now, they moved it some 20 meters west.

    • @Dr.K.Wette_BE
      @Dr.K.Wette_BE 3 года назад

      @@weeardguy Ja dat kan best zijn, er zijn ook plaatsen in België waar "tram" in zit. En stations dat nu huizen zijn.

    • @weeardguy
      @weeardguy 3 года назад

      @@Dr.K.Wette_BE Ja, hetzelfde als de vele lokaalspoorlijnen die verdwenen zijn, maar waar voormalige halteplaatsen te herkennen zijn aan namen als 'Stationsstraat' 'Spoorlaan' en dergelijke.
      Yes, just like the many local railroads that have disappeared, with the many places where they had their stops can still be found by looking for 'Station-street' or 'Railroad-lane' and such.

  • @Alexander-cm1di
    @Alexander-cm1di 3 года назад +1042

    Him: "The KTM-5s angular and awkward design..."
    Me: DON'T LISTEN TO HIM YOU'RE PERFECT THE WAY YOU ARE

    • @sleepyyam5391
      @sleepyyam5391 3 года назад +29

      that first shot of the tram bobbing along was adorable idk what the narrator's thinking saying it isn't cute xD

    • @waffelo4681
      @waffelo4681 3 года назад +9

      Fr its cuteeeee

    • @vitonamous
      @vitonamous 3 года назад +4

      @@waffelo4681 ikr its cute

    • @johnc2438
      @johnc2438 3 года назад +14

      Correction: "...angular and awesome design...."

    • @darrien6223
      @darrien6223 3 года назад +4

      Two things
      1: I'm the 666 person to like this
      2: right as he said that I just scrolled past ur comment

  • @Spheredalai
    @Spheredalai 3 года назад +245

    "no other machine can be kept in working order using a hammer and swear words"
    sounds about right

    • @GhostOfDamned
      @GhostOfDamned 3 года назад +13

      Basically anything that was made in the commie era

    • @Juggernogger64
      @Juggernogger64 3 года назад +11

      Good ol soviet black magic

    • @PozieNayan
      @PozieNayan 3 года назад +1

      Hammer and Sickle
      Simple

    • @rosarioyeen1371
      @rosarioyeen1371 3 года назад

      they just give it a big old cyka blyat every time they swing the hammer

    • @hithere5553
      @hithere5553 3 года назад +5

      Soviet design was beautiful in its reliability. You could beat it, toss it in the mud and stomp on it, and it will still serve long after you are dead and gone.

  • @xpavpushka
    @xpavpushka 3 года назад +76

    5:20
    Can confirm that they are comfy in winter. Even too comfy.
    I didn't know about those heaters and melted my fancy rubber shoes once :D

    • @NGC1433
      @NGC1433 3 года назад +6

      Shoes? I have a 5x2 centimeter scar on my leg below the knee from the heater. 20 years ago babushka pressed my leg against the heater with her bag.

    • @Stripdancer100
      @Stripdancer100 3 года назад

      Exactly. These heaters are great, but sometimes they can go crazy...

    • @Lilian040210
      @Lilian040210 2 года назад

      @@NGC1433 oh yeah, babushkas with bags are the real danger😨

  • @agcouper
    @agcouper 3 года назад +77

    Ah, I remember when this tram appeared on our streets for the first time many years ago... It seemed so modern and new, comparing to the old trams!

  • @ВикторФирсов-е9ф
    @ВикторФирсов-е9ф 3 года назад +87

    Never before was I so proud of this creaking monster

  • @PaulFisher
    @PaulFisher 3 года назад +904

    “some billionaire would bring them to the SF transport museum,” he said, thinking wishfully

    • @PaulFisher
      @PaulFisher 3 года назад +14

      (this is a dig but honestly same)

    • @Gryphonisle
      @Gryphonisle 3 года назад +32

      Nope. The Museum has no rolling stock of its own; Muni is the one. AND, it would have to date before 1952 to escape required ADA modifications through historical exemptions (which is why our Berlin car isn’t ever in service). Plus, we have no idea what Covid economic damage will linger, especially given California’s historically bad leadership, and an exodus of fortunes and corporations we’ve never before experienced.

    • @archangel4597
      @archangel4597 3 года назад +10

      billionaires and rich people in general hate public transit so thats very unlikely lol

    • @Gryphonisle
      @Gryphonisle 3 года назад +22

      @Tech&More4U It may seem that way today, but your grasp of history is woefully inadequate. Before the airplane we had some great trains, and let’s not forget the Pullman car, one of America’s great rail innovations. City-wise, with the first working, safe, reliable, all weather cable car system developed in San Francisco, and the first working, reliable, safe, all weather tram developed in Virginia, the US one led, even dominated the urban rail business, as you see today in San Francisco’s “F” line fleet, where 1920’s trams from Milan are based on a design developed in Ohio, and operate on a GE system developed in the US. Melbourne trams from the forties were simply updated cattle cars from the twenties, while the US operated state of the art all electric streamlined metal trams with comfy seats. Yeah, today we’re the Mississippi of international rail transit, and should be ashamed of ourselves, but get your history straight.

    • @user-wg2dv8ll8h
      @user-wg2dv8ll8h 3 года назад +1

      @Marcus Alberto @Dallas Drew two bots detected

  • @razmazerz
    @razmazerz 3 года назад +359

    Soviets Era Vehicles are literally goddamn invincible.

    • @DrRadio155
      @DrRadio155 3 года назад +50

      Not only vehicle, but also power equipment. I work on power plant, the fist generator of which was turned on in 1962, and it still works.

    • @lolroflroflcakes
      @lolroflroflcakes 3 года назад +21

      Apparently they can't build a car that can start in the winter so its not a universal trait.

    • @neza6268
      @neza6268 3 года назад

      John cena: 👁👄👁

    • @rhoninwindrunner7575
      @rhoninwindrunner7575 3 года назад +11

      @@lolroflroflcakes cars can start their engines in the winter, but not in severe winter conditions of some Siberian towns. You can’t start and engine when oil supply is literally frozen, can’t you?

    • @lolroflroflcakes
      @lolroflroflcakes 3 года назад +5

      @@rhoninwindrunner7575 They specifically said minus 30/40 celsius. As a teenager I had a old GMC truck that ran fine in those conditions. No freezing oil or anything.

  • @restojon1
    @restojon1 3 года назад +322

    The AK-47 of public transport. Love these old ladies still doing their service

    • @uranium_beaver
      @uranium_beaver 3 года назад +10

      Totally agree. When you're served with it you start to cry and pray.

    • @darek4488
      @darek4488 3 года назад +1

      I think you meant AKM. AK-47 was a prototype that was never mass produced.

  • @skim_nz
    @skim_nz 3 года назад +116

    Рекомендации Ютуба такие рекомендации)

    • @yethv0stik882
      @yethv0stik882 3 года назад +7

      на обломках павшей империи... как то зловеще звучит

    • @transptort_i_drugoye
      @transptort_i_drugoye 3 года назад

      Ага

    • @lexxsimf2
      @lexxsimf2 3 года назад +3

      Рекомендуют всё, что обкавнякивает ссср, англичанка мелко гадит

    • @HeaGuerilla
      @HeaGuerilla 3 года назад

      @@yethv0stik882 емкое описание

    • @Lumion_Light
      @Lumion_Light 3 года назад

      @@lexxsimf2 автор канала из новосибирска

  • @bluemoondiadochi
    @bluemoondiadochi 3 года назад +90

    its interesting that people from non-materialistic (non-consumerist) societies can form such bonds with non-living things. in a sense, it's a being like us, only non-biological. i feel sorry for any old tram or car or trusk when it's cut up. especially after a life of great service to the citizens.

    • @RailwaysoftheWorld1
      @RailwaysoftheWorld1  3 года назад +25

      Soviet society was certainly not non-consumerist. Consumerism is in human nature, attempts to fight it by ideologies (and widespread scarcity of the most basic goods) lead to the ugliest forms of consumer's neurosis and even more unattractive consumer's behavior than we despise in the west.
      Trams (and also trains, cars, buses...) are indeed living (or at least zoomorphic) things. They have two eyes and a smile, and once I've seen it, I could not unsee it anymore.

    • @bluemoondiadochi
      @bluemoondiadochi 3 года назад +14

      @@RailwaysoftheWorld1 Hehe they do! at least the older ones (TKM 101 for life!), newer ones are much more dead and to phrase one comment i heard; they remind me of hospital body scan room.
      Sorry, i phrased it wrongly on consumerism; it was a "normal" society in terms of consumption, in a sense that there was no ideological attempt to make humans into impulsive, empty consumers like in the west. and so, the humans were more-less grateful to and respected the material things they had access to, be it an old bicycle, car or tram. even old, they were useful and often had emotional cultural and identnty worth. while now, "New" and "fashionable" is king.
      Dunno, i always saw things as living objects... japanese have this philosophy as well, where an old and revered object gains a soul after a long time.
      Anyways, hope to see more of your videos in the future! Good luck!

    • @None-zc5vg
      @None-zc5vg 3 года назад

      Same here! 'Must get out more.

    • @ShadowSumac
      @ShadowSumac 3 года назад +1

      USSR was country obsessed with consumerism. It was not like in the West, due to peculiarities of the Soviet political and economic systems, but more closer to barter.

    • @ShadowSumac
      @ShadowSumac 3 года назад +3

      @@bluemoondiadochi It was not.
      As a Russian, let me tell you - Soviet people were obsessed with material goods. Especially foreign ones. They were symbols of status and connections. It didn't matter, if USSR could produce the same things itself - people were simply hooked up on idea of "foreign means better and elevates me more in the eyes of other people". In order to show their wealth - everything worked - like cheap carpets from Asian republics, some fake jewelry and, most of all, clothes and cars.
      For example, foreign jeans or cassette tape recorder meant in Soviet society, that you are league above others and people were going for enormous length to acquire them.
      Also, obsession of Russians with old stuff is not, because, of "high spirituality" or something like that, but, because, more often than not it is everything Russian could had under Soviet regime. Like shitty Soviet cars, shitty Soviet transport and the like.
      Rare cases, when they were not shitty, usually meant, they were made for the elites or copypasted from the West and, yes, were made for elites.
      So, please, abandon, all notions and myths that people in a Soviet Union were somehow more spiritual or less obsessed with materialistic culture. Materialistic culture was enormous part of the Soviet life, but everyone pretended it is not.

  • @alanjohnson6398
    @alanjohnson6398 3 года назад +15

    Found this completely by accident but was absorbed through the whole film! Thanks!

  • @ianboard3555
    @ianboard3555 3 года назад +316

    One of the great crimes in Los Angeles history was getting rid of the red cars.

    • @deezynar
      @deezynar 3 года назад +22

      The L.A. trams were built by a real estate company that bought up a large swath of empty land for dirt cheap prices. It was cheap because it was so far from town, nobody wanted to be that far. To entice people to buy their land and homes, the company built the tram system to provide a cheap and speedy way for their real estate customers to get into their jobs in town. Also, the company built an electric utility station that produced electrical power that serviced the area they were selling off for homes. They powered their trams with some of the electricity produced by their own power station. They ran the trams with power at wholesale prices. Even with cheap electricity, the trams were always ran at a loss because the company made its money from the land sales.
      Two things happened that caused them to sell the tram system. One was the state passed a law that made it illegal for them to power the trams from their power plant. The other was that they sold off the last of their land. The tram lost money, and was only built to get people to buy their land, so the reason for the tram to exist went away, and it was foolish to run a business that loses money. General Motors bought the system and closed it down. It's possible that the city, or county, may have eventually bought it, and subsidized its operation with tax funds, but it's also possible that they would not have done that.

    • @Alex-pj8nz
      @Alex-pj8nz 3 года назад +1

      Ussr won this round....

    • @markkussusa
      @markkussusa 3 года назад +1

      @@deezynar jack London describes that whole process in the second part of his novel Burning Daylight, in which the main character - Elam Harrish is that up and coming mogul that bought the land and built the tram system (or the water ferries... I don't recall)
      But thanx a lot for your historical overview! Very interesting!!!

    • @oliversmith9200
      @oliversmith9200 3 года назад +5

      I was looking in the comments for someone who would bring what the Russians are facing home to what we faced here when to drag more profits out of working people for themselves, corporate petrol and big auto sabotaged and derailed our once fine mass trans in America. The unfair bus competition will become the only fair, and that fair will be unfair, without the competition of the economical trams, rest assured.

    • @Gryphonisle
      @Gryphonisle 3 года назад +4

      @@deezynar Not entirely true. No US rail transit system made a profit after the mid-1920s. The nickel fare had become practically sacred and a political third rail. Costs went up, service demands increased, but the nickel fair was practically carved in granite. Worse, unions (I’m a union worker so I’m not against them, but their actions make me wince some times) in California (SF and LA in particular) managed to get two man teams instituted as a safety precaution,which only added expense, especially (in SF) when PCC cars were designed for one man crews. These rules pushed out streetcars in favor of buses which weren’t legally obligated to have conductors. Then, of course, the Feds pushed Americans to the burbs after the War (GI bill and all that) to what, protect us from nukes by dispersing us (or at least the white person “us”)? The burbs were built and served by freeways, not streetcar lines and often did not have on ramps and exits into the old urban nabes. In any case, many different companies, including real estate ventures, owned streetcar companies in LA, but the biggest and most famous was the progeny of the Octopus itself, the Southern Pacific Railroad, built by the son of its founder, Henry Huntington, and of course known as the Pacific Electric, the PE, or simply The Red Cars.

  • @GeorgWatson
    @GeorgWatson 3 года назад +23

    It was pretty amazing to see my home town of Naberezhnye Chelny in the video. Unlike in many post-Soviet towns tram transportation keeps evolving here. KTM 5 are about half of all trams. Others are newer KTM 19 and KTM 23. There are 400 km of tram routes here. Just yesterday I've made up my mind to make a tram journey to the most distant tram stop of my town. It will take 1 hour and a half one way.

    • @accelerator5524
      @accelerator5524 3 года назад +4

      why dont you film that journey and share it with us?

    • @Lilian040210
      @Lilian040210 2 года назад

      Wow 400km on a tram😯 that's a lot.

  • @juliaflowers4409
    @juliaflowers4409 3 года назад +171

    Perfection lies in simplicity. I would like to see this tram the same care that the world cities provided to the Czech Tatra T3. I hope there are enthusiasts. who will be engaged in the reconstruction of many cars. I have seen how beautifully renovated Russian-made trams are in operation in some cities.

    • @hallucinatedovens8414
      @hallucinatedovens8414 3 года назад

      Man

    • @edvardsz3539
      @edvardsz3539 3 года назад +1

      Yeah, In Latvia 80% of our trams are T3's. Im so suprised how long can that huge steel brick live.

    • @nikodzepina2876
      @nikodzepina2876 3 года назад

      @@INFILTRATOR2008 No need to use images of Ukrainian roads. Most of Russia infrastructure is just as awful. i had my fair share of experience 😒

    • @Lilian040210
      @Lilian040210 2 года назад

      Those enthusiasts will have to be rich 😬AND interested in trams... Unlikely😟

  • @claudevieaul1465
    @claudevieaul1465 3 года назад +79

    Back when engineering meant something durable, instead of going for some flimsy "prettiest colour scheme" design award and parts that cost too much to fix...
    Function before esthetic.

    • @Brato1986
      @Brato1986 3 года назад +2

      Planned obsolesence.
      Hope it will go away in the future.

    • @lolly166541
      @lolly166541 3 года назад

      @@Brato1986 It will because those that still built things the way they're meant to be built are dying off because kids rather want to work in an Office than with their hands.

    • @codemy666
      @codemy666 3 года назад +1

      @@lolly166541 What kid wants to work in an office, most of them want to be influencers lmao

    • @Stripdancer100
      @Stripdancer100 3 года назад +1

      Yeah. A whole research institute of "Aesthetics" designed something completely out of aesthetics, made out of cheap materials to last only 16 years, kept only by miracle of golden hands, but yeah

    • @Lilian040210
      @Lilian040210 2 года назад +1

      It's not about the aesthetic. You can have pretty and durable, they are not mutually exclusive. It's about manufacturers deliberately making garbage so u have to keep giving them money by having to fix it.

  • @yegfreethinker
    @yegfreethinker 3 года назад +44

    Valentina I'm so sorry. Trains/trams deserve much more respect. Love / a kind hug from a follow cold weather citizen in 🇨🇦

  • @r.p.mcmurphy6213
    @r.p.mcmurphy6213 3 года назад +31

    Автору. Спасибо за Усть-Илимск и русские титры.

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 3 года назад +231

    "Soviet empire"
    *Lenin has left the chat*

    • @dl6105
      @dl6105 3 года назад +9

      Ха-ха, смешно, ленин сдох 100 лет назад с 1917 года СССР вся эта херня и зараждалась, еслиб не он то бы все было уверен как у всех цивилизованных стран, вам то смешно вы не жили в регионах России, а нам не очень

    • @luctapia
      @luctapia 3 года назад +5

      it was an empire

    • @-_Hatred_-
      @-_Hatred_- 3 года назад +10

      @@dl6105,если бы не Ленин, то кто угодно, кроме Ленина. Какая херня зарождалась? Что значит "цивилизованные страны"?

    • @Rapsodiaast
      @Rapsodiaast 3 года назад +13

      @@-_Hatred_- цивилизованные - те которые в свое время легли под цивилизаторов в кожанках от хьюго босса. .

    • @JJW83641
      @JJW83641 3 года назад

      Hello sir. I would want to know if you keep underage children in your basement. My team was reciving many noise complaints and we may ban you from the 500 diamond hotel.
      Press 1 to say yes
      Press 2 to say no
      Press 3 to say. i dont care you bald b
      Pressing 3 will result in a random nuke being launched into your house.
      Sincerly - Website Help
      If your bots report this as spam then this message will dissapear and will be arcived in folder 666.

  • @jacobkauder8058
    @jacobkauder8058 3 года назад +41

    Простой, надёжный и безотказный как трёхлинейка.

    • @avistanet910
      @avistanet910 3 года назад +5

      всратая расиюшка

    • @russianfunkerroma
      @russianfunkerroma 3 года назад +9

      @@avistanet910 Спасибо за Крым.

    • @alexeyled4680
      @alexeyled4680 3 года назад

      А это точно советский? Не было в союзе таких

    • @russianfunkerroma
      @russianfunkerroma 3 года назад +4

      @@alexeyled4680 Очень смелое заявление. Откуда они в таком случае взялись, хотелось бы знать? С Марса прилетели?

    • @russianfunkerroma
      @russianfunkerroma 3 года назад

      @Ivan Mustafaev Если бы Хрущёв не отдал Украине Крым, а Ельцин им его не оставил, в этом бы не было необходимости. А Крым обошёлся нам слишком дорого, чтобы оставлять его Украине.

  • @shtetc
    @shtetc 3 года назад +85

    Wow! Very nice! All what you telling in this film is true. Especially about design. When i was a children this tram really makes me scarred, but now i love it. It's nice to see my content using in such a great movie :) Thanks!

  • @dafiltafish
    @dafiltafish 3 года назад +13

    The two big headlights and the tall windscreen make these things look cute in a 3-legged-puppy sort of way. I hope they stick around for awhile.

  • @годгев
    @годгев 3 года назад +12

    In Bulgaria we had a big factory, making trams in the capital Sofia. The trams were called Sofia-100. They were produced from the beginning of the 70s. Yes, they were noisy, old, but very very reliable. They were the main trams in the city till 2000s. In 2012 the government had a deal with the EU, they gave some money for buying new trams, buses. On the 24th of May 2013, on the Day of the Cyrillic writing and culture the old trams were ridden for the holiday and the next day after that the city was waken with 4-5 closed tram lines and all of the socialist tram warriors parked in the biggest tram port and after couple of weeks of hard-working cutting and scraping work, the legendary Sofia-100 trams were now history- from the hundreds crossing the streets just a month ago, now there are officially 2 remained- the training tram and one service green tram, who they saved for the history museum. Now the only one soviet build transport vehicles are maybe the trolley Icarus 280t, who waits for the same fate as his fallow comrades.
    I'm also so mad that the old trolleys will go, because they serve as transport for *45 years* and they are unbelievably reliable. Even in a close town to the capital there is a factory, specialized in making main recovery and services for the Icarus 280t.

  • @DopravniPoradce
    @DopravniPoradce 3 года назад +39

    The KTM-5 is derived from Czech Tram Tatra T3, which are stil pretty common in Prague, Czechia. And they are very well maintained. You should do a video about the T3 legend (if you didn't already, I didn't search your channel). The T3 is an evolution of T2 and T1, which was a PCC licence. So in a sense, the KTM-5 is PCC derived.

    • @comandanteej
      @comandanteej 3 года назад +4

      Indeed. The PCC heritage is obvious from the first look at the proportions and the bogies.

    • @fasol1998
      @fasol1998 3 года назад +3

      @@comandanteej KTM-5 has never been technically related to Tatra T3. Though it looked similar some way, they had absolutely different control systems. The Tatra has a pedal controller while the KTM has a manual one. The body structure and the coupling unit are also different. In some cities (such as Krasnodar and Nizhniy Novgorod) Tatras and KTMs are even served by different depots. But 71-402 (403, 405, 407...) and modern Ukrainian trams (К-1) are really based on Tatra T6B5.

    • @faurl35h
      @faurl35h 3 месяца назад +1

      Although the KTM5 has a simplified electric control system, the bogies are a faithful copy of the PCC B3 bogies. A similar situation was with the Soviet RVZ and LM wagons, only there was an additional pneumatic system, just like in the pre-war versions of the PCC. It is said that the Soviet RVZ, LM and KTM wagons are derived from the Czechoslovak CKD-Tatra which is based on the PCC license. But how can we explain the fact that the first prototypes of the RVZ-51/52 wagons appeared in 1951, and the production of the Tatra T1 started in 1952, while the first T1 copies were delivered to the USSR only in 1957?

  • @AndreyS333_10
    @AndreyS333_10 3 года назад +23

    The tram shown at 10:12 - 10:17 - is factory - built and has nothing to do with passanger cars. But the words themselves are absolutely true, many service cars were converted from passanger cars by the depot forces

  • @gedungisphoopnuchle9121
    @gedungisphoopnuchle9121 3 года назад +13

    I love machines, and especially those designed by parallel societies with different priorities. Thank you for sharing!

    • @divinehatred6021
      @divinehatred6021 2 года назад +1

      Those trams constructed so much better than stroads in United States.

  • @zilfondel
    @zilfondel 3 года назад +7

    Please, make a second part! Tram history across the world is fascinating and you had some excellent footage compiled here.

  • @RussianSevereWeatherVideos
    @RussianSevereWeatherVideos 3 года назад +7

    Oh wow, your voice is lovely and I do enjoy the way you're telling this story. Thanks for the video man.

  • @steveohara8399
    @steveohara8399 3 года назад +8

    A really good watch. Amazing that the KTM 5 was so square while the T3 was elegant.

  • @jogmanY
    @jogmanY 3 года назад +2

    Thanks! Hello from Latvia

  • @gg_vard
    @gg_vard 3 года назад +68

    The most amazing thing shown here is the emotional connection one can have with a machine, especially older people who have lived with them from tens of years.
    (Talking about that I've read a story about how here in Greece, in Crete, in an elderly man's house that used to be a bus owner and driver, next to the photos he had of his family, ancestors, children, grandchildren, he also had photos of his buses. Those buses for him were part of the family)
    My city (Thessaloniki Greece) used to have a tram system until 1956 were it was all dismantled for the sake of buses. There's still hope one day the tram will return (even though we are now building an underground railway which you could also call an underground tram )

    • @dirtydog2858
      @dirtydog2858 3 года назад +3

      I still mourn the good-old-days when Denver Tramways lowered the trolley of the .04 for the last time. It - what is lest of it - is currently undergoing a static display for Arvada Colo.

    • @catriona_drummond
      @catriona_drummond 3 года назад +9

      I can tell you it is especially weird and sometimes sad to live in a "transformation country" like East Germany for example, EVERYTHING that you knew and loved, trams, trains, lorries, buses, shops, certain types of food or candy, cinemas, anything that had character and was kinda unique despite being a bit run down was gone, completely vanished from the face of the earth and replaced by (mostly) soulless and unfamiliar modern stuff. (Not saying that I didn't find new candy I liked , but damn i still miss some of the old ones tastes)
      fills your heart with a weird sense of sentimentality. But it's forbidden to admit it because you aren't allowed to have nostalgia for anything from communist times because even the trashcans were evil communist constructs and replaced within 2 years.

    • @rnzoli
      @rnzoli 3 года назад +1

      It is the same in all industries. When we replaced the last rotary telephone exchanges at the beginning of the 90's, their crew was also retiring and had lots of memories of power outages, technical faults, major overhauls and expansions and upgrades from their past. Machines help us a during our work, and it's normal to get emotionally attached, with those machines that were sharing a lot of adventures with. Also many old retired pilots have pictures of their aircraft at their home....so yes, it's amazing, yet normal :)

    • @alfredorotondo
      @alfredorotondo 3 года назад

      Here in Palermo where I live right now, they dismantled too the old tram sistem, but they rebuilt it in the other half of the city some years ago and it's usual to break because they rushed out the building of the trams because they were late with the new tracks and to this day the tram and busses company is in debt because they cannot pay the "new" and "beautiful" trams

    • @Lilian040210
      @Lilian040210 2 года назад

      The city I was going to university in (Voronezh) had the tram system dismantled, but the town I live in (Stary Oskol) we have about 50 of the old red ones (idk which model, I'm not that into them😄) and a few new-ish trams. All working and looking fine, the track is in good condition too. I'm guessing us being an ore mining town helps fund it, especially since it's sole purpose is to go from and through town to the smelting factory🤷‍But then Voronezh is an older city, not built for the amount of cars we have today, so they tried to free the streets I guess, but my town is well thought out and designed so trams don't get in the way, so they live😭

  • @DarkdalV
    @DarkdalV 3 года назад +4

    Блин, я смотрел это видео анимированной картинкой в ленте ютуба не открывая и читая субтитры, и прям был уверен, что это оцифрованная русская речь, так хорошо слова складывались в текст (неужели субтитры вручную качественно составляли). Good job! Very good

    • @RailwaysoftheWorld1
      @RailwaysoftheWorld1  3 года назад +2

      Спасибо! Ютуб английские сам синхронизирует с речью, потом сам же переводит на русский, сохраняя тайминги, дальше надо просто поправить ошибки автоперевода, вот так и получаются качественные субтитры)

  • @simonmikkelsen
    @simonmikkelsen 3 года назад +98

    In Aarhus, Denmark we have nice new trams that cannot run when it's around 0 Celsius.

    • @oskitrainspotter
      @oskitrainspotter 3 года назад +4

      frick the letbane bring back the regual aarhus - grenaa regional railway

    • @2112jonr
      @2112jonr 3 года назад +14

      Awesome! Thought that kind of head shaking stupidity was limited to Britain and France. But no........

    • @fabianschneider5992
      @fabianschneider5992 3 года назад +11

      Here in the north middle of Germany the complete rail system broke down for a week after 40 cm snow!

    • @asgertonsberg2457
      @asgertonsberg2457 3 года назад +1

      And back in the 1910s the Aarhus trams still operated normally, when there were snowstorms.

    • @starstencahl8985
      @starstencahl8985 3 года назад +4

      @@fabianschneider5992 Well.. it does every winter. As if we couldn’t see it coming

  • @genriloran6051
    @genriloran6051 3 года назад +6

    Ой, как здорово, что на английском сделали и субтитры. Как раз английский учу

  • @steviecureman2837
    @steviecureman2837 3 года назад +3

    Thank you very much for this video - so professionally made and narrated! Please continue and keep this high level👍👍👍

  • @1ucky1im
    @1ucky1im 3 года назад +2

    Thank you so much. There was only such trams in my childhood in Naberezhnye Chelny (KAMAZ factory). And they were and are allways in good condition.
    SF, you deserve it! X)

    • @GeorgWatson
      @GeorgWatson 3 года назад +1

      Ух ты, земляк! Я тоже только что посмотрел...

  • @Away907
    @Away907 3 года назад +3

    5:33 looks like a smartphone holder made from 2mm steel with use of welding

  • @thesart_
    @thesart_ 3 года назад

    So nice warm video about our working horse! Thank you!

  • @MMTB616
    @MMTB616 3 года назад +68

    Well done! Excellent photography with an excellent commentary. Tram systems enthusiasts from Australia (like me) are rarely likely to visit.

    • @RailwaysoftheWorld1
      @RailwaysoftheWorld1  3 года назад +11

      Thank you very much, I am so glad that this is of interest even on the other side of the world!

  • @OsmosisHD
    @OsmosisHD 3 года назад +49

    It's only a matter of time before Mr Bald and Bankrupt will show up.

  • @acoffeewithsatan
    @acoffeewithsatan 3 года назад +54

    Bandicam footage in 2020, I see the trams ain't the only blast from the past, here

    • @ИльяКоротаев-ц9ъ
      @ИльяКоротаев-ц9ъ 3 года назад

      To be honest, I'm from Dzerzhinsk and tram in our city was closed about 8-9 years ago. So Bandicam is understandable in this situation)

  • @oriolpujolmartinez7268
    @oriolpujolmartinez7268 3 года назад +10

    I am a simple culture man. I see a video about trams or trains: I click.

  • @maciekkra539
    @maciekkra539 3 года назад +10

    Excellent, greetings from Poland.

  • @НикитаКучер-и2к
    @НикитаКучер-и2к 7 месяцев назад +2

    Не понимаю, почему все невзлюбили дизайн этого вагона? Отличный дизайн! Тот же Консталь со своим дизайном узкого, рубленого топором бруска. Можем еще вспомнить ЛМ-68м со своим дизайном старого Чешского серванта. По сравнению с ними этот «красный ящик» является просто эталоном технической красоты.

  • @polarlightwolf3735
    @polarlightwolf3735 3 года назад +17

    Thank you for sharing the story of dzerzhinsk tram and mentioning the true reasons why local tram system was destroyed

    • @leyland9999
      @leyland9999 3 года назад +4

      No matter where in the world, once trams and infrastructures are destroyed, people regret it. Over here in Holland we once had an extensive tram network consisting of many companies. A few remained, mainly in our main cities. Only one intercity tramline survived: HTM (Haagse Tramweg Maatschappij) Lijn 1 from The Hague-Scheveningen to Delft. Apart fom this line, our three main cities Amsterdam, Rotterdam and The Hague operate modern trams on well maintained routes within city limits and nearby smaller communities like the RET-line (Rotterdamse Electrische Tram) to Barendrecht. Brand new lines were introduced just recently in the city of Utrecht. So, Russia, preserve what’s left. Combat destruction of still operative tram systems, no matter how run down they may be. Fight corruption, keep money where it belongs instead of sending it to Moscow.

    • @weeardguy
      @weeardguy 3 года назад

      @@leyland9999 Yep. I live in a city which was once part of quite an extensive network of local trams (NZH). I think the last 2 decades the idea of re-introducing the tram just keeps resurfacing at least once a year. With the opening of the North-South metroline in Amsterdam, those ideas have now become even worse: it should be extended all the way to where the tram once was...

    • @leyland9999
      @leyland9999 3 года назад

      @@weeardguy This idea of re-introducing the tramways in former NZH territory exist for decades now. The way it once was will never come back, unfortunately. However, parts of the former network might emerge again but must be implemented soon.

    • @weeardguy
      @weeardguy 3 года назад

      @@leyland9999 No it didn't cease operation for nothing. Especially De Beemster will be a hard-to-justify area to re-introduce the tram. The downside is that re-introduction of the tram in Purmerend will mean the end of the bus-system as it is now (well... first let the current bus-system survive the covid-disaster...)

  • @ivveG
    @ivveG 3 года назад +1

    These beautiful trams deserve exactly this level of appreciation! Honest and clear. Loved the video, thanks man. Sincerely, a Russian tram lover.

  • @Specz187
    @Specz187 3 года назад +6

    "Soviet Trams"
    *Bald has entered the chat*

    • @zerkku7916
      @zerkku7916 3 года назад

      Ah, a man of culture i see

  • @itechcircle9410
    @itechcircle9410 Год назад +4

    As of tomorrow the trams of Ust-Ilimsk are no more.

  • @poschtetos
    @poschtetos 3 года назад +12

    Неожиданно, печально, но приятно)

  • @Justineexy
    @Justineexy 3 года назад +3

    This video makes it feel like it's lovely, cozy and exciting to ride this good old soviet tram.

  • @Opoyu
    @Opoyu 3 года назад +5

    В Астрахани раньше ходили эти трамваи. Помню в детстве ездил на 3 от Спутника до Больших Исад и далее на Савушкина. А потом все убрал прежний мэр.Эх..

    • @burdaklein7112
      @burdaklein7112 3 года назад

      В Саратове они до сих пор ходят

    • @hist1h2aa2
      @hist1h2aa2 3 года назад

      Привет! А мне больше на круговом "А" приходилось ездить. В 80-e. Набивали их нещадно в часы пик так, что дверь не закрывалась! Ой! А вечером, когда пассажиров мало, было очень приятно ехать. Татра хороша, но мне она ощущается тесной и дизайн её ещё в детстве воспринимался более архаичным, чем у КТМ. :-)

    • @Opoyu
      @Opoyu 3 года назад

      @@hist1h2aa2 Да, я и забыл, что был "А".)) Да, было дело, битком ездили. Икарусы ещё ходили, гармошки, как и во многих городах , тоже битком в часы пик набивались.

  • @fakerating
    @fakerating 3 года назад +1

    great video!

  • @daanbos5918
    @daanbos5918 3 года назад +134

    Sometimes old is better than new especially if it still works like when it was new

    • @deemuss
      @deemuss 3 года назад +6

      As mentioned in the video, this is not the case, it was like this from the very beginning. The tram was designed as a cheaper alternative to Tatra T3 when political climate with Czech Republic worsened, and (especially) when the USSR became too poor to afford T3s

    • @Steve211Ucdhihifvshi
      @Steve211Ucdhihifvshi 3 года назад

      Well not really. Look at Japan, when new stuff is built better, learning and building on past experiences and knowledge new only gets better.

    • @dguy0386
      @dguy0386 3 года назад +2

      as the saying goes, don't fix what ain't broke!

    • @DANIEL-fp2uq
      @DANIEL-fp2uq 3 года назад

      LOL in some cases sure. But these are clearly in horrible shape.

  • @romanromanov6039
    @romanromanov6039 3 года назад +1

    У меня в городе такой трамвай переоборудован под передвижное кафе . Заказываешь что нибудь, и за столиком ездишь по городу )

  • @MrLukealbanese
    @MrLukealbanese 3 года назад +4

    Superb video, many thanks!!

  • @pilotthomas144
    @pilotthomas144 3 года назад +2

    I don’t like specially trams, but for sure, this video was amazing. I’ve loved seeing these old things, watching such isolated and poor places. And your explanations/voice are also amazing.
    Good stuff! 😳😳

  • @SuperTamaru
    @SuperTamaru 3 года назад +8

    This, and the follow-up video I watched before this one, makes me think of Gothenburg's old M28 and M29 trams, from the 60's and 70's respectively, they're still in service and numbers around 130-ish units just for this one city. They're just as old, but kept under better maintenence under the municipal funding and the heavy reliance on the tram network we have here. I'm quite sure that the KTM5's and the M28's and M29's will share a spot amongst the heroes of long service trams.

  • @134343
    @134343 3 года назад +7

    Thank you RUclips algorithm for showing me this video.

  • @misterkefir
    @misterkefir 3 года назад +16

    Absolutely amazing! I love trams. Rail transport definitely better than the wheel transport, especially on long routes.. shame that many of these systems are not properly managed, especially in the Easter European regions. Unfortunately, money is everything these days.. Anyways, Thanks a lot for the video ;)

  • @endutubecensorship
    @endutubecensorship 3 года назад +1

    "Kept in working order with a hammer and a few swear words"
    This is why I love old farm equipment 🤠

  • @ПафнутийМолодцов
    @ПафнутийМолодцов 3 года назад +4

    For a long time I decided for myself that I don't put likes for videos. And that's why I put no more than 20 likes in a year. But I will definitely note this video. It turned out to be unexpected for me, non-trivial and moreover, it slightly changed my attitude towards KTM-5 for the better, despite the fact that as a layman I know a lot about trams for. And besides, in a foreign language. It's incredible.
    There are three tram fleets in Nizhny Novgorod, and it is in the depot number 3, which serves the most industrial part of the city (Avtozavod = Automobile Plant), where all KTM-5s are located.

    • @RailwaysoftheWorld1
      @RailwaysoftheWorld1  3 года назад +1

      Thank you for you like! Three depots, impressive, Novosibirsk has two (had four before 2000s)

  • @ghos7bear
    @ghos7bear 3 года назад

    Agreed, the seats are SUPER comfy. When its -30'C outside, you get on this tram and sit down on its warm seat it feels like you're in heaven. Then you can take a nap while warming up on a way home.

  • @Saviliana
    @Saviliana 3 года назад +27

    If anything, I would say that these soviet trams would the the last running thing in the world after any kind of apocalypse, they are that robust.

    • @khidorahian
      @khidorahian 3 года назад +4

      Along with a Toyota Camry?

    • @AFoxGuy
      @AFoxGuy 3 года назад +2

      @@khidorahian Don’t forget the Corolla my dude.

    • @Saviliana
      @Saviliana 3 года назад

      @@AFoxGuy Toyota isn't going to run on batteries without heavy modified, KTM can just pop some batteries on and it would still run.

  • @niekbeentjes8849
    @niekbeentjes8849 3 года назад +2

    But the T3 still has my heart

  • @darylcheshire1618
    @darylcheshire1618 3 года назад +9

    Amazing to see trams running on grassy tracks and gravel roads.

  • @Phantomyshka
    @Phantomyshka 3 года назад +2

    A funny video, you can see my hometown and its famous tram line "city - LPK" - this is the city of Ust-Ilimsk.Thanks for the material, from Russia with love)

  • @ЕвгенийМедведев-н1в
    @ЕвгенийМедведев-н1в 3 года назад +1

    Тепло?! Ну, не знаю. Ни разу я не прокатился в теплом КТМ-5. За свои 43 года.

  • @bjarniyt1402
    @bjarniyt1402 3 года назад +4

    Awesome video. I really enjoy your content.

  • @burdaklein7112
    @burdaklein7112 3 года назад +1

    О! У нас в Саратове такие бегают. Гремят очень сильно и ржавые уже. Холодно очень зимой в мороз.

  • @SwedePlaysGames
    @SwedePlaysGames 3 года назад +3

    Meanwhile, Gothenburg bought italian trams that rust as soon as there is any moisture in the air, and stop running as soon as temperatures drop below 0°C. The AC stops working if it's too hot or too cold.

  • @bifftannen2062
    @bifftannen2062 3 года назад +1

    The grass covered rails in Latvia look beautiful.

  • @Xendr121
    @Xendr121 3 года назад +8

    Small correction. The most produced tram at world is Tatra T3, not KTM-5.

    • @milokojjones
      @milokojjones 3 года назад +1

      Also noticed that - though I couldnt find how many KTM 5 were produced ...

    • @13AZAT93
      @13AZAT93 3 года назад +1

      14 113 Tatras vs 14 991 KTM-5s according to russian wiki

  • @TrainzER2
    @TrainzER2 2 года назад

    Как же классно смотреть видео да и ещё с переводчиком яндекса, прям настоящий документальный фильм!) Спасибо за видео.

  • @thegreypenguin5097
    @thegreypenguin5097 3 года назад +6

    "if this gets 500 views" *has 132,108 views* nice job! keep up the good work!

  • @chuckkirkpatrick6712
    @chuckkirkpatrick6712 2 года назад

    I am a huge tram / trolley fan and this is one of if not the best film / videos I have ever seen. Thank you!

  • @davemassey9857
    @davemassey9857 3 года назад +9

    I like the sliding doors!

  • @АлекДобряков
    @АлекДобряков 3 года назад +1

    1:03 Zlatoust city, Chelyabinsk region. In Zlatoust, a tram road was built on which the running tests of these trams were carried out. Ust-Katav (there is a tram production plant located in it) near the city of Zlatoust. Ггород Златоуст, Челябинская. В Зластоусте посторена трамвайная дорога на которой проводились ходовые испытания этих трамваев. г.Усть-Катав (в нем располежен завод по производству трамваев) недалеко от г. Златоуста

  • @isaacgarcia2217
    @isaacgarcia2217 3 года назад +4

    Extrañamente sentí nostalgia al mirar el video. Muy bueno por cierto.

  • @gameradamsvk910
    @gameradamsvk910 3 года назад +1

    In our city go around 65 years old trams they are fully restored historic vehicles in everyday use but soon they gonna completely modernize all trams . And also we have every year historical drives with old trolleybuses like škoda 9TR 14tr and 15 TR.

  • @You0009
    @You0009 3 года назад +8

    У нас еще таких полно, красивый трамвайч 🙂

    • @user-tatra
      @user-tatra 3 года назад

      Татра лучше почти во всем)

    • @user-tatra
      @user-tatra 3 года назад

      @@88vok что, переведите пожалуйста

  • @urabanzai9932
    @urabanzai9932 3 года назад

    Огромный лайк за добрый и познавательный репортаж. Ещё один лайк за кадр (10:43) -- обалденно хороший праворульный а/м "Honda-Stream", особенно с V2,0 и 4WD. Да здравствует правый руль!

  • @LetsPlayCatsPlay
    @LetsPlayCatsPlay 3 года назад +3

    Ну. КТМ-5 на маршруах не помню в москве. Но КТМ 71 помню. Всяко лучше Витязей))) Но с Татрой Т3 ничего не сравнится. Ох этот уютный пухляш))

    • @SergeyBaikal
      @SergeyBaikal 3 года назад

      Эти трамваи пережили всю 30 летнюю либеральную эпоху)

  • @m.metroo
    @m.metroo 3 года назад

    Hi, i from Russia, Saint Petersburg. In my city there has been no KTM-5 for a long time, but I know a lot about other cities. you told us very well, without unnecessary words about Russia, because now everything is like that. thank you for not putting stupid stereotypes on Russia!

  • @deemuss
    @deemuss 3 года назад +15

    00:05 Actually, KTM-5 is a semi-official name. And 71-605 is the official name. And non-official name is 'ootyug' as it resembles the old iron for clothes. The newer version 71-608 has a pretty macabre nickname 'grob' (coffin). In 1990's and early 2000's living in a relatively big city, one had the choice to travel on an iron or a coffin. The richer cities had better-designed Tatra T3 SU

    • @Lilian040210
      @Lilian040210 2 года назад

      Where do u live 'cause I've never heard those 'names' 😅

  • @yesthisisniamh
    @yesthisisniamh 3 года назад +1

    These KT4 trams are wonderful and still running around the east side of Berlin. The newer ones break down far more often. Great video!

  • @Kruglyan007.
    @Kruglyan007. 3 года назад +4

    7:33 как бы тяжело не было в 90-х, но до такого состояния никогда трамваи в нашем городе не доводили. В Сумгаите тепло, они вообще без окон могут ездить, в России так не получится

    • @LazyNCH
      @LazyNCH 3 года назад

      О русский

    • @Kruglyan007.
      @Kruglyan007. 3 года назад

      @@LazyNCH здравствуй, уважаемый

  • @Newmodel100
    @Newmodel100 11 месяцев назад

    This is what took me to school in my childhood. I remember them fondly.

  • @lddnsk
    @lddnsk 3 года назад +3

    Помню были РВЗ. Вот это были аппараты. А вот Новосибирск вообще не ожидал увидеть, да ещё и левобережье)
    Ктм конечно знаковые трамвайчики. Но абсолютно разные. В некоторых как тут говорится "тепло и уютно", а в некоторых в сосульку можно превратиться. А ещё этот незабываемый аромат резины, когда перегреются... на соседней улице от проезжающего трамвая чувствуешь.

    • @RailwaysoftheWorld1
      @RailwaysoftheWorld1  3 года назад +1

      Для меня всё началось на левобережье Новосибирска, так что почему бы и нет!