Building an intermodal train on the BNSF, Seattle, 8-10-2010, part 1

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • A crew brings 5 Dash-9s into Seattle's Stacy Street Yard and begins making up their intermodal train.
    First, the Dash-9s are brought off the Champion servicing tracks and into Stacy. Two are left on a track to be used as DPUs. The remaining three engines then grab two separate strings of loaded well cars to form the train.
    If you like to watch railroaders doing their jobs up close and personal, you'll like this pair of videos.
    5094 / 5378 / 1003 / 967 / 748 - all C44-9Ws
    Due to length, this video is in two parts. This is part 1.

Комментарии • 37

  • @Smoovious
    @Smoovious 12 лет назад +2

    They've been pretty common for years now on intermodal, as well as coal. You'll see them most often in the mountain areas, but just about anywhere you could see them.
    I've often seen one or two engines in the middle of the consist as well, either together, or in 2 different spots. Helps spread the tractive/braking effort around, particularly where there are a lot of curves.

  • @davidfrobel7582
    @davidfrobel7582 11 лет назад +1

    good video,,as an old truck driver,,mooving trailers around the yard ment for a long boaring day,but it was better than sitting home waiting for a load cross country,,I dont know if rail crews feel the same way,,,,,lol.

  • @SeattleRailFan
    @SeattleRailFan  12 лет назад

    @inels100 The "Champion Tracks" are a small 2-track yard where engines are stored.
    In this case, hostlers brought the engines down from Balmer Yard and dropped them off at the Champion Tracks several hours earlier. At the correct time, the road crew brought the engines out of Champion and into Stacy Yard to make up their train.
    A train that ends its trip at Stacy could also have the engines moved to the Champion Tracks where the hostlers will pick them up and take them back to Balmer.

  • @SeattleRailFan
    @SeattleRailFan  13 лет назад

    @hardwork454 I'm not a railroader but from what I've seen it's hard in that you're constantly walking, climbing on cars, setting handbrakes, wrestling with brake hoses, etc. You have to do that in all weather conditions: 95 & sunny or 10 degrees & snowing and everything in between. You have to have a good head on your shoulders as there's lots of rules and procedures to know and follow. And it's not a 9 to 5 job, you'll be working all sort of crazy schedules. More of a lifestyle than a job.

  • @Smoovious
    @Smoovious 12 лет назад

    you'll also see them on some local runs if they need to keep a car on the mainline to protect the siding/spur they're shunting on.
    There are also some loads that require them for extra personnel. Some hazmat, for instance. I've been seeing the railroads do some overdimensional loads too (as a heavy-haul truck driver, I'm against this :) ), that may need a caboose for the additional people if the load requires it.
    You just won't see them replacing the FREDs tho.

  • @SeattleRailFan
    @SeattleRailFan  12 лет назад

    Excellent info. I over-simplified things. Probably should have said that the hostler crew "drops off the engines and prepares them so they're ready to go for the next crew that will assemble the train".

  • @Theoriginaltkg2902
    @Theoriginaltkg2902 11 лет назад

    Yeah, some roads even use white for main and red for lined over. When I worked for the B&O years ago some switch targets even had different shapes, so if you could not see the color, you at least saw the shape .

  • @SeattleRailFan
    @SeattleRailFan  11 лет назад

    Here in Seattle, BNSF uses switch flags that use green to indicate the switch is set straight for "mainline movement" and yellow for diverging. In contrast, UP up here uses red switch flags that show red for diverging and turn sideways (i.e.: you don't see them) for mainline movement.
    I assume it's a local thing. Different railroads do thing differently. May even be differences in different divisions on the same railroad. Different countries will have their own way of doing things.

  • @SeattleRailFan
    @SeattleRailFan  12 лет назад

    @MrJimmybgood Zero chance of seeing them regularly on the big Class 1 railroads. The FRED (Flashing Rear End Device) & the cost of the old 5-man crews spelled the end of the caboose.
    Cabooses are seen occasionally on both Class 1s & shortlines when a job requires shoving cars a long distance. You don't want to have the conductor hanging off the grab irons for 10 miles - very unsafe. In those cases the conductor will ride in a caboose, also called a "shoving platform".

  • @SeattleRailFan
    @SeattleRailFan  13 лет назад

    @jpfrench325 Some things are obvious, like a crewman throwing a switch to line the engines onto the correct track. Experience helps with other things. When they left 2 engines on a track I knew from experience those would be used on the rear of the train. I also have a scanner, so I was listening to the crew talk amongst themselves on the radio.

  • @SeattleRailFan
    @SeattleRailFan  11 лет назад

    Air reservoirs. The air compressor fills these and the compressed air is used to power the braking system.

  • @CSXEMDTrainLover
    @CSXEMDTrainLover 8 лет назад +1

    nice video and great catch of all 5 BNSF engine's making a intermodal train.

  • @UPMAN2011
    @UPMAN2011 12 лет назад

    Yes according the bylaws they must have shoving platform while moving a train in reverse.

  • @Patriot1776
    @Patriot1776 9 лет назад

    I think the 'shoving platform' bylaws are now why DPUs are used on the rear-end so much nowadays. Rear DPUs can in a historical sense now be considered 'powered cabooses'. ^^

  • @Theoriginaltkg2902
    @Theoriginaltkg2902 11 лет назад

    Nice to see the red and silver warbonnet.

  • @Class1aNScaleModelRailroading
    @Class1aNScaleModelRailroading 12 лет назад

    I have never seen a DPU on any intermodal train. Interesting.

  • @SeattleRailFan
    @SeattleRailFan  13 лет назад

    @micksquizzy I was at maximum zoom in from the start until about 5:00, when I started zooming out to get a wider shot. At 5:18 I was maybe at 1/3 of max, by 6:10 or so the lens was at it widest as the train approached.
    My camcorder has a 12x zoom (35mm equivalent is 40-480mm).

  • @walt1064
    @walt1064 11 лет назад

    I still like the Warbonnet paint.

  • @attlevi
    @attlevi 11 лет назад

    Great Video. Thanks for sharing. Im in S. Florida. We nver see anything on this end. I too, Like the War Bonnet Paint Scheme. I the BNSF should keep them in addition to the the pumpkins. Funny, about the sounds.be. read my comments & You will see. I love the sounds they make. But CSX keeps running a shtload of Dash 8. We rarely get a GEVO this far South.

  • @Passengervehicles
    @Passengervehicles 10 лет назад

    Fantastic videos !

  • @RailfanNoah
    @RailfanNoah 10 лет назад

    fantastic video!

  • @SamWalworth
    @SamWalworth 11 лет назад

    Just wondering why does the "switch flag" shows "Yellow' even when the danger of derailment is 100% if the locomotive goes by it?
    Other countries (e.g. Indian Railways) i see it as Red whenever there is a switch like this is involved

  • @SeattleRailFan
    @SeattleRailFan  11 лет назад

    Don't think I've yet got an engineer to sound his horn just to acknowledge me. I have got two or three to give a wave, which is nice...

  • @ElliottWolcott
    @ElliottWolcott 12 лет назад

    cool i love trains.

  • @hardwork454
    @hardwork454 13 лет назад

    Great videos, im starting at kcs in a bout a week as a conductor trainee and wanted to know what you think of the job like is it hard or just hard if you don't like to work, im looking forward to starting my career cause im 18 and just graduated and see this as a great thing.

  • @phoenixrailfan7956
    @phoenixrailfan7956 9 лет назад

    Nice pop off at 0:24

  • @jpfrench325
    @jpfrench325 13 лет назад

    How do you know what those people are doing as well as whats happening?

  • @jonnhanlan930
    @jonnhanlan930 9 лет назад +1

    What you are calling a foreman is called a conductor in Canada (CN,CP, etc.)

    • @SeattleRailFan
      @SeattleRailFan  9 лет назад +1

      +Jonn Hanlan I've noticed on local jobs the term "foreman" is used on the radio, on road trains they use the term "conductor". Might just be that BNSF has a certain way they like to do things.

  • @inels100
    @inels100 12 лет назад

    what is a Champion Track?

  • @scudrunner79
    @scudrunner79 10 лет назад

    Two words. Hand signs.

  • @curtis13450
    @curtis13450 10 лет назад

    run it

  • @charlesdell2864
    @charlesdell2864 9 лет назад +1

    Boring for some, fastinating for others, all depends on who you are.

  • @bryanwhitford2729
    @bryanwhitford2729 8 лет назад

    So disappointed to see a Warbonnet on point. Ugly engine lol

  • @lrcopeland09
    @lrcopeland09 11 лет назад

    I filmed 748 today. I will respond with the video.