@@Hyce777 the whistle sounded very nice. i didnt expect that it would sound like that, but its still sounds very good and it can get peoples attention easily, so it succeeded very well at its purpose.
Hearing that whistle just makes me smile. Nice work making it. And a side effect - since its such a custom made whistle, 491 now truly has a unique voice, you will probably never be able to get a whistle that will sound the same
I don't know if anyone else has mentioned it, but I think its AWESOME that the railroad place you work for allowed you to put your own whistle on there. I mean, i don't know much about the operations of that kind of stuff, but to be able to say that you designed and built a whistle, and have it mounted on a real steam engine, is a feat by ITSELF, but then to have some company say, go ahead, put it on there, is just icing on the cake. The sheer joy you got from hearing it and using it, just....wow. That is REAL contagious laughter. I smiled along with you just because you were so happy to finally have it on there and working. Good job man.
@@Hyce777 Thank you Hyce, for sharing the story behind the whistle (including the tech info on building it). Most of all, a big thank you, for sharing the beautiful sounds of that 6 chime delight!
This is awesome. Im so happy for you man. How many people can say that not only are they an engineer, they're an engineer WITH THEIR OWN WHISTLE? Thats like god tier status. It sounds amazing. I hope to hear this in railroads online one day. Thatd be epic. Also yes to whistles 101 and yes to seeing the switching for 20 and whatever prep was involved.
I just ran across your channel today. I watched the video where you brought 491 up from cold, then saw this and could not resist. It didn't disappoint. I'm also an engineer, electrical/mechanical who has designed systems that used steam to automatically heat water for industrial purposes. I saw the pride you had after your first run with the whistle, it was justified. The sound is amazing. I could tell you were emotional, rightfully so. I know I took a great deal of pride in the systems that I had worked on.
Cheers Dave - you know the same feeling as I do. No matter the system, or it's subject - when the time comes, it feels great to truly own it. Glad you enjoy the channel.
@@Hyce777that is such an Awesome whistle, It’s definitely louder than the SP 6 that 475 uses. I was wondering if that whistle would fit on a Strasburg engine. Keep up the great work. Hope to see you repair another whistle.
Sounds a bit like a Nathan 6 chime. A deep but commanding tone. Absolutely fantastic. I wish I had the resources to build a whistle like that, what a cool thing to say you own!
That whistle sounds amazing! Also, I can't tell you how much I appreciate these videos! It's so nice to have someone who is so willing to share what all that is like, and I suppose it helps that the Colorado Railroad museum is full of lovely folks like yourself too! Thank you for "pulling back the curtain," so to speak, for us lay people! ...and I know other railroads I'm sure are touchy about camera use in the cab, so I know it's not always something that's even possible to share. Of course, I still very much appreciate all the other engineers/firemen/conductors/shop staff/etc. without a youtube presence, believe me! I'm just saying that it is nice to have such a transparent and candid look at what running a steam locomotive is really like! Thank you! (I say, with full knowledge that I'm at risk of getting a little foamy...but damnit! That's on you! You started it! lol)
Cheers Ryan :) yup, got special approval to film and everything knowing that we could get the cameras rolling and leave them. Gotta run trains first :)
Now that is one of the most beautiful examples I’ve ever seen of home made whistles. It’s deep, the tone is right, and it gives the authority a whistle should have.
I love how happy he sounds and looks when he hears him blow his own whistle, and I also love those beautiful sounds of a steam train, can't forget that 6-chime!
Dude you're killing it on this RUclips stuff! And that's coming from a professional RUclips watcher 😆. Keep up the good work. Stay as consistent as possible. I can see a 100k subs soon!
The local tractor museum has a steam tractor with a train whistle on it (found one somewhere, thought it should get to roar again). It’s a ghostly sound on a still evening, because it just doesn’t belong. It’s awesome you guys get to help keep this alive.
As a former player of a stringed instrument I would be very interested in seeing the internal details of how a whistle works. (Some of my organ friends might be very interested too)
Find or get a copy of the book THE ENGINE'S MOAN by Edward A Fagen. It is about American Steam Whistles. There was a series of articles in LIVE STEAM MAGAZINE some years ago about the design and making the whistles for a calliope. I can't remember the year or issues.
Happy yer able to use my footage Mark! Thanks again for the shout out as well, I appreciate it greatly brother. I really hope to hear the 6 chime more often, next time you are out! Not only does it give 491 it's own personality when yer here, I hear a chilling Reading 6 chime tone to it also.
Toot TOOT! That sounds amazing. My husband's granddad started his career in the railroad as a fireman. I'm personally a history geek, so I love that people are maintaining these old beauties.
This is the kind of whistling I always connect with the old Hollywood Movies my Grandpa, my brother and me used to watch on Saturday nights when we had sleepovers at our Grandparent's appartment. I love it. Feels so warm and dear to me. Thank you for repairing this wonderful piece.
Pretty much every arrangement of chimes and notes you can imagine have been built at some point... Certain arrangements became more common than others as most don't sound very pleasant. 1, 3, and 6 became the most common with 5 and 4 also used in various places. Others were much more rare.
This was actually insanely helpful. I have the parts to weld together a 5” 3 chime, and plan to put it together, and do a 5 and 6 chime later on. Never seen anyone else do this. Great job!
Watching hyce smile and laugh maniacally like a little child with a new toy when he heard his whistle for the first time ever is so wholesome and beautiful
Nice whistle there Hyce :) also very nice to hear your whistle signature in video form, much more subtle and reserved than I am used to hearing from most engineers
Thanks for putting this video together. Not only did you make an awesome whistle, it was so refreshing to see how much you really enjoyed not only blowing the whistle but running the train. I am envious of the joy you have in the work you do. Keep it up!
I'm glad your whistle made it home and you got to put it on 491 for the day. Also really cool shots of the running gear. You can bet your brass that I want to see a video of switching moves at the round table!
Back in the late 1990’s . I took Amtrak from Detroit to Denver, nice sleeper car. Rented a car and visited the Colorado Railroad Museum for a few days. Then Amtrak back home to Michigan. The Railroad Museum is fantastic and someday I would like to return. Your videos will have to do for now.
Your enthusiasm for these engines really comes through in your videos. Thank you for that. It must be EPIC to drive a train like that with your own touch(the whistle) added to its character.
Hey Hyce, yet another brilliant vid. I completely understand what you mentioned about 'back to reality' - being away from the railway where you volunteer and not being able to go as often is not fun, I'm in the same boat at the moment due to uni. I love hearing your railway preservation stories, keep them coming!
I love the fact the whistle itself has a story itself. Every part of a loco has a piece of heart put into it, I feel. So I really love watching a steam loco rolling and feeling alive. Also, that low tone suits it well. Thanks for showing the view of the engine bay. I enjoy seeing it in working situations. I've always wanted to be an engineer
OMG what a beautiful sounding whistle. Congratulations Mark! Excellent story and perfection video. Thanks so much for sharing. BTW I just read in the Iron Horse News that you are now working at the CRM. Congrats on that too they are lucky to have you there as a staffer. 🎉
That is an absolutely GORGEOUS whistle!!! Shows what a musician can do! Thanks so much for sharing this with us. Hope to hear it in person some day. Love your channel.
Love it! I own a 15” gauge loco in the UK and fitted that with a whistle that was way too big, but it sounded awesome. I also drive on the large standard gauge heritage railway and wish some of our locos had better whistles...that’s heritage for you!
Yesterday i was just thinking about maybe learning how to design and build one to replicate the sound of SP 4449's old six chime, but then i see this in my recommended. Wow the coincidences! You did a really great job on your whistle btw, sounds awesome!
Awesome whistle so glad you saw it through to completion. Id totally have this as my ring tone on my phone just for an excuse to hear it all the time lol
For anyone who doesn’t know what the high pitched sound is it is called a dynamo which takes a little steam from the boiler and get sent through a turbine in the machine that generates electricity to power the lights in the cab and this is no new technology btw
I've been off and on working on creating a replica Hancock 3 chime for a few years now. Its all cad files as of now, but I'd like to get all the parts cast in bronze.
Sounds incredible! Was worth the 6 year wait! Thank you so much for sharing and building this, I think some people should do this more often. I also want to say that it either sounds similar to SPL 2472's whistle, AT&SF 3751's whistle, or a combination of both. Either way it sounds AWESOME!
It'd be neat to see the welds ground down and the whistle polished up with brass fittings and all that. That'd be worth it. Huber 6 chime is my favorite whistle. :)
The second I heard this whistle I left my depression deeper than the boiler room of you-know-what and immediately put it at the top of my favorite whistle list. It shattered the CofG 6 chime placed on the SOU 630.
I Like that you thought all steam whistles were alike but then found out they aren't....it's kind of a life lesson, don't think you know it all. I kind of had the same lesson when I lived in Japan....taught me a lot about how other people live and how you don't Have to live One way
LMAO at the two bursts and the happy giggle, stuff like this makes you feel like a kid again and is just so damn cool. Really need to come visit the museum.
Honestly, one of the most beautiful sounds of the modern age, especially paired with a brass bell. Not only the sound itself, which is majestic and nostalgic, but what it represents. The invention and discovery of the steam locomotive changed the face of mankind as we know it. It represents human imagination and innovation.
Your knowledge of steam railroading machinery is just astounding! I almost think of you as a national treasure, like the samurai sword makers in modern Japan.
Sounds Great Mark. Congrats on the Six Chime whistle. I love the deep sound and would love to hear that out here. Would be awesome to hear that on one of Mt. Rainier SRR.
Found the video on your six-chime whistle. I love it! I also appreciate your unbounded joy at sounding your whistle, which sounds absolutely magical. Congratulations on your achievement. I have one question that I simply cannot find anywhere without trying to work through some questionable geometrical calculations from the original Santa Fe six-chime is the notes of the whistle. Could you or would you be willing to share the notes of the whistle? Again, I absolutely love the whistle, and your efforts to make it come to fruition.
Notes I'd have to get back to you on. Notes and whistles are a bit of a silly thing, because they change based on steam flow and pressure. Full quill of the same whistle on different engines can yield a whole step or more in terms of what note they play in difference, and each chime scaled differently, so they're not exactly perfectly tuned notes no matter what.
That I understand. The tones change through a whole host of situations, from steam pressure, to bowl position, to amount of steam being introduced into the whistle, plus the resonance of the whistle and a whole host of other things that we have not thought of. The basis of my question is that I have wanted a make a wind chime with the six basic notes of the Santa Fe six-chime passenger whistle. I have found a blueprint of the cast steel six chime whistle and the equation to approximate the note that requires a whole bunch of algebra to get there. If you have the basic notes, that would be great, if not, it looks like I need to pull out my calculator and go through that exercise and check my work on the piano. Your assistance would be greatly appreciated. Thank you in advance for any assistance in this matter.
I am so glad you went to work for the CRRM. You and the rest of the crew are some of the best (and most jovial) people I know. I love your channel! Keep it up.
Its a beautiful sounding whistle Hyce! Even more impressive that it was built from scratch! The Santa Grande 6 chine almost sounds like the 6" Boston and Maine 6 chime that's mounted to the tiny 2 foot gauge Monson Railroad #3 owned by the Maine Narrow Gauge Railroad Museum
As you get more whistle sound files, I'd be fine seeing several options with the same visual appearance - since it's not easy to have universal whistles. Naturally the most fun would be the ability to put any whistle on any engine but that's a lot of extra work for asthetic.
Is that dynamo posterior powered?
yes, yes it is.
@@wesleystuff4882 Bacon is a dear friend, we spoke about it in private. :) thank you though
This is the first time ive seen someone use the thanks button
@@veerailau I wondered what that button did. I'd go broke thanking people...
@@Hyce777 the whistle sounded very nice. i didnt expect that it would sound like that, but its still sounds very good and it can get peoples attention easily, so it succeeded very well at its purpose.
Hearing that whistle just makes me smile. Nice work making it.
And a side effect - since its such a custom made whistle, 491 now truly has a unique voice, you will probably never be able to get a whistle that will sound the same
491 became truly special and unique
19:05 In case y’all wanna relive the magical sound of the Santa Grande Screamer, a.k.a. the Huber 6-Chime.
I don't know if anyone else has mentioned it, but I think its AWESOME that the railroad place you work for allowed you to put your own whistle on there. I mean, i don't know much about the operations of that kind of stuff, but to be able to say that you designed and built a whistle, and have it mounted on a real steam engine, is a feat by ITSELF, but then to have some company say, go ahead, put it on there, is just icing on the cake.
The sheer joy you got from hearing it and using it, just....wow. That is REAL contagious laughter. I smiled along with you just because you were so happy to finally have it on there and working.
Good job man.
Cheers :)
@@Hyce777 Thank you Hyce, for sharing the story behind the whistle (including the tech info on building it). Most of all, a big thank you, for sharing the beautiful sounds of that 6 chime delight!
I say use your whisle for at least one of the "paper" engines that were never actually built. Or a possible upgrade that can be placed on any engine.
This is awesome. Im so happy for you man. How many people can say that not only are they an engineer, they're an engineer WITH THEIR OWN WHISTLE? Thats like god tier status. It sounds amazing.
I hope to hear this in railroads online one day. Thatd be epic.
Also yes to whistles 101 and yes to seeing the switching for 20 and whatever prep was involved.
Casey Jones levels of legendary, honestly
@@evocationist0420 I was just about to say lmao
17:04 that is the laugh of a man who has waited too long to hear something so sweet.
I just ran across your channel today. I watched the video where you brought 491 up from cold, then saw this and could not resist. It didn't disappoint. I'm also an engineer, electrical/mechanical who has designed systems that used steam to automatically heat water for industrial purposes. I saw the pride you had after your first run with the whistle, it was justified. The sound is amazing. I could tell you were emotional, rightfully so. I know I took a great deal of pride in the systems that I had worked on.
Cheers Dave - you know the same feeling as I do. No matter the system, or it's subject - when the time comes, it feels great to truly own it. Glad you enjoy the channel.
@@Hyce777that is such an Awesome whistle, It’s definitely louder than the SP 6 that 475 uses. I was wondering if that whistle would fit on a Strasburg engine. Keep up the great work. Hope to see you repair another whistle.
If I’m gonna be honest, I’d love to see this whistle as the new permanent whistle on 491 for some reason. It sounds beautiful!
Man, that sounds amazing!
All we really need now is 5550 having it's turn with the Huber 6
you mean atsf 3751
Sounds a bit like a Nathan 6 chime. A deep but commanding tone. Absolutely fantastic. I wish I had the resources to build a whistle like that, what a cool thing to say you own!
Well, we all know what Hyce's new censored whistle is gonna be!
LoL
Pretty cool. I would love to see a whistle 101.
Any 101 vid is perfect imo
Oh, most definitely
I agree
In case you haven't seen it, he did one about 2 weeks ago
ruclips.net/video/fJ47wo3H8TQ/видео.html
That whistle sounds amazing! Also, I can't tell you how much I appreciate these videos! It's so nice to have someone who is so willing to share what all that is like, and I suppose it helps that the Colorado Railroad museum is full of lovely folks like yourself too! Thank you for "pulling back the curtain," so to speak, for us lay people! ...and I know other railroads I'm sure are touchy about camera use in the cab, so I know it's not always something that's even possible to share. Of course, I still very much appreciate all the other engineers/firemen/conductors/shop staff/etc. without a youtube presence, believe me! I'm just saying that it is nice to have such a transparent and candid look at what running a steam locomotive is really like! Thank you! (I say, with full knowledge that I'm at risk of getting a little foamy...but damnit! That's on you! You started it! lol)
Cheers Ryan :) yup, got special approval to film and everything knowing that we could get the cameras rolling and leave them. Gotta run trains first :)
Now that is one of the most beautiful examples I’ve ever seen of home made whistles. It’s deep, the tone is right, and it gives the authority a whistle should have.
I love how happy he sounds and looks when he hears him blow his own whistle, and I also love those beautiful sounds of a steam train, can't forget that 6-chime!
Dude you're killing it on this RUclips stuff! And that's coming from a professional RUclips watcher 😆. Keep up the good work. Stay as consistent as possible. I can see a 100k subs soon!
The local tractor museum has a steam tractor with a train whistle on it (found one somewhere, thought it should get to roar again). It’s a ghostly sound on a still evening, because it just doesn’t belong. It’s awesome you guys get to help keep this alive.
As a former player of a stringed instrument I would be very interested in seeing the internal details of how a whistle works. (Some of my organ friends might be very interested too)
:D well i will just have to do it.
Find or get a copy of the book THE ENGINE'S MOAN by Edward A Fagen. It is about American Steam Whistles. There was a series of articles in LIVE STEAM MAGAZINE some years ago about the design and making the whistles for a calliope. I can't remember the year or issues.
Happy yer able to use my footage Mark! Thanks again for the shout out as well, I appreciate it greatly brother. I really hope to hear the 6 chime more often, next time you are out! Not only does it give 491 it's own personality when yer here, I hear a chilling Reading 6 chime tone to it also.
You have the pride of a proud father. You did a great job and it sounds amazing.
that sounds SO DAM GOOD DUDE! congrats!
whenever we get 491's class in RRO this has to a customizeble option
I love that you kept the audio from inside the cab when it was at the other angles outside the cab like ontop and when it’s looking at the wheels
Toot TOOT! That sounds amazing. My husband's granddad started his career in the railroad as a fireman. I'm personally a history geek, so I love that people are maintaining these old beauties.
This is the kind of whistling I always connect with the old Hollywood Movies my Grandpa, my brother and me used to watch on Saturday nights when we had sleepovers at our Grandparent's appartment. I love it. Feels so warm and dear to me. Thank you for repairing this wonderful piece.
Beautiful sound. I'm in the works of designing a 7 chime for my consolidation. It's probably going to be first and only 7 chime built.
@OllieandJamie Adventurers for some reason I'm not surprised someone made a 7 chime.
I've seen 7 chime boiler tube whistles before. Definitely cool :)
If I recall correctly, former Duluth & Northeastern #29 has such a 7 chime, so there is not only 7 chimes extent, but one in service as well
Pretty much every arrangement of chimes and notes you can imagine have been built at some point... Certain arrangements became more common than others as most don't sound very pleasant. 1, 3, and 6 became the most common with 5 and 4 also used in various places. Others were much more rare.
hyce you have helped me decide that i want to drive trains
This was actually insanely helpful. I have the parts to weld together a 5” 3 chime, and plan to put it together, and do a 5 and 6 chime later on.
Never seen anyone else do this.
Great job!
Cheers mate! If you have any questions, please let me know. :)
Watching hyce smile and laugh maniacally like a little child with a new toy when he heard his whistle for the first time ever is so wholesome and beautiful
Nice whistle there Hyce :) also very nice to hear your whistle signature in video form, much more subtle and reserved than I am used to hearing from most engineers
Congratulations my friend! Your joy brought tears to my eyes as well! What a beautiful sound.
Thanks for putting this video together. Not only did you make an awesome whistle, it was so refreshing to see how much you really enjoyed not only blowing the whistle but running the train. I am envious of the joy you have in the work you do. Keep it up!
I'm glad your whistle made it home and you got to put it on 491 for the day. Also really cool shots of the running gear. You can bet your brass that I want to see a video of switching moves at the round table!
it sounds great. i think it sounds like a mix of a horn and a whistle but its the most bad ass whistle ever
Back in the late 1990’s . I took Amtrak from Detroit to Denver, nice sleeper car. Rented a car and visited the Colorado Railroad Museum for a few days. Then Amtrak back home to Michigan.
The Railroad Museum is fantastic and someday I would like to return.
Your videos will have to do for now.
Your enthusiasm for these engines really comes through in your videos. Thank you for that. It must be EPIC to drive a train like that with your own touch(the whistle) added to its character.
I really loved how happy you was when you got to blow that whistle for the first time but that laugh though 😂
Hey Hyce, yet another brilliant vid. I completely understand what you mentioned about 'back to reality' - being away from the railway where you volunteer and not being able to go as often is not fun, I'm in the same boat at the moment due to uni. I love hearing your railway preservation stories, keep them coming!
Whether it is irl or in game, keep making train content and we will keep watching.
I love the fact the whistle itself has a story itself. Every part of a loco has a piece of heart put into it, I feel. So I really love watching a steam loco rolling and feeling alive. Also, that low tone suits it well. Thanks for showing the view of the engine bay. I enjoy seeing it in working situations. I've always wanted to be an engineer
Your whistle sounds great, I bet in person it sounds amazing! Congratulations!
thats one heck of a story to the making of your whistle!! Thanks for sharing with us!
OMG what a beautiful sounding whistle. Congratulations Mark! Excellent story and perfection video. Thanks so much for sharing. BTW I just read in the Iron Horse News that you are now working at the CRM. Congrats on that too they are lucky to have you there as a staffer. 🎉
19:10 That is the sound of one happy Hyce. Now I REALLY want to go to the CRM and see the trio o little big guys.
That is an absolutely GORGEOUS whistle!!! Shows what a musician can do! Thanks so much for sharing this with us. Hope to hear it in person some day. Love your channel.
Hearing this whistle brings back so much nostalgia. So awesome.
That’s awesome man!!! Now I see why you’re so passionate about Railroads online. Awesome video thanks for taking us on this journey.
You guys should do more special freight runs! I'd love to see it!
Love it! I own a 15” gauge loco in the UK and fitted that with a whistle that was way too big, but it sounded awesome. I also drive on the large standard gauge heritage railway and wish some of our locos had better whistles...that’s heritage for you!
I hope you plan to use it again at some point, definitely a beauty to hear! For a custom whistle it's quite impressive
I like the nuances of blowing the whistle that experienced engineers seem to have. Happy for you!
Yesterday i was just thinking about maybe learning how to design and build one to replicate the sound of SP 4449's old six chime, but then i see this in my recommended. Wow the coincidences! You did a really great job on your whistle btw, sounds awesome!
Awesome whistle so glad you saw it through to completion. Id totally have this as my ring tone on my phone just for an excuse to hear it all the time lol
For anyone who doesn’t know what the high pitched sound is it is called a dynamo which takes a little steam from the boiler and get sent through a turbine in the machine that generates electricity to power the lights in the cab and this is no new technology btw
I've been off and on working on creating a replica Hancock 3 chime for a few years now. Its all cad files as of now, but I'd like to get all the parts cast in bronze.
that would be awesome :)
Super cool! I had goosebumps just listening to it! Couldn't even imagine how good it sounds in person!
Sounds incredible! Was worth the 6 year wait! Thank you so much for sharing and building this, I think some people should do this more often. I also want to say that it either sounds similar to SPL 2472's whistle, AT&SF 3751's whistle, or a combination of both. Either way it sounds AWESOME!
Thanks! One of the greatest steam locomotives whistles I've heard!
You guys should become brakeman so you can get this cool lantern like me😎
it is pretty neat :) hand traced by yours truly, lol
That is a flippin' GORGEOUS whistle.
We need that engine and whistle just as they are in RROL. What a sweet sounding whistle!! Congratulations on a job well done sir!
That's a great sounding whistle!
Absolutely beautiful made whistle, reminds me of Santa Fe 2926 or a nyc steamer! It came out great and we need to hear it more!
The whistle sounds awesome! I love to see more turntable use and switching.
At some point in my life I want to have a little throttle time on something like this. It's on the bucket list.
Congratulations. Great work and great sounding whistle. You must be proud of hearing that fantastic work of art.
I'm not a fan of any whistles but I'm in love with this one. 😲☺️
What?
Wow that WHISTLE is so cool! Congratulations Mark!
It'd be neat to see the welds ground down and the whistle polished up with brass fittings and all that. That'd be worth it. Huber 6 chime is my favorite whistle. :)
the amount of times I have watched the freight train section are in the hundreds. I absolutely love the sound of it!
The second I heard this whistle I left my depression deeper than the boiler room of you-know-what and immediately put it at the top of my favorite whistle list. It shattered the CofG 6 chime placed on the SOU 630.
Dude, Hyce, driving the 491 (or any steam engine for that matter) must be so much fun, im jealous
That whistle is better sounding than any other I’ve heard in my life! I flippin love the American styled whistles! (I think they’re American, idk)
16:30 ---- 34:22 That whistle sounds beautiful and the sounds of the locomotive is working hard I'm putting this on my SFX playlist this is awesome
I’m broke but that whistle looks pretty cool.
Yes
Username checks out.
@@PowerTrain611 bruh
@@northernhillbilly2882 Hey, if you saw the prices of some of those models, you'd understand.
Such a wild story over 6 years! Glad it came to a happy conclusion!
That is amazing. Now I wanna put a locomotive whistle on my Kenworth.
I want it on my Fiesta
This whistle sounds so good!
Sounds absolutely awesome. Hoping we get to hear that on 491 more in the future!
"if the neighbors will let us"
Having been the the museum, I got a huge kick out of this.
I don't even like trains or anything like it but this whistle sounds so timeless . like old movies and John Wayne movies
I Like that you thought all steam whistles were alike but then found out they aren't....it's kind of a life lesson, don't think you know it all.
I kind of had the same lesson when I lived in Japan....taught me a lot about how other people live and how you don't Have to live One way
LMAO at the two bursts and the happy giggle, stuff like this makes you feel like a kid again and is just so damn cool. Really need to come visit the museum.
Your whistle is da bomb! Best one I've ever heard! Keep up the good work and thanks for sharing!
Honestly, one of the most beautiful sounds of the modern age, especially paired with a brass bell. Not only the sound itself, which is majestic and nostalgic, but what it represents. The invention and discovery of the steam locomotive changed the face of mankind as we know it. It represents human imagination and innovation.
What a great video! Just watching you work the engine made me smile. You're just a big kid having a blast! ❤
Your knowledge of steam railroading machinery is just astounding! I almost think of you as a national treasure, like the samurai sword makers in modern Japan.
That Whistle sounds so damn good I wish I was there in person to hear it!!! And what a awesome story to go with it!
Sounds Great Mark. Congrats on the Six Chime whistle. I love the deep sound and would love to hear that out here. Would be awesome to hear that on one of Mt. Rainier SRR.
Now that's a great sounding whistle. And what a cool train!
Found the video on your six-chime whistle. I love it! I also appreciate your unbounded joy at sounding your whistle, which sounds absolutely magical. Congratulations on your achievement.
I have one question that I simply cannot find anywhere without trying to work through some questionable geometrical calculations from the original Santa Fe six-chime is the notes of the whistle. Could you or would you be willing to share the notes of the whistle?
Again, I absolutely love the whistle, and your efforts to make it come to fruition.
Notes I'd have to get back to you on. Notes and whistles are a bit of a silly thing, because they change based on steam flow and pressure. Full quill of the same whistle on different engines can yield a whole step or more in terms of what note they play in difference, and each chime scaled differently, so they're not exactly perfectly tuned notes no matter what.
That I understand. The tones change through a whole host of situations, from steam pressure, to bowl position, to amount of steam being introduced into the whistle, plus the resonance of the whistle and a whole host of other things that we have not thought of.
The basis of my question is that I have wanted a make a wind chime with the six basic notes of the Santa Fe six-chime passenger whistle.
I have found a blueprint of the cast steel six chime whistle and the equation to approximate the note that requires a whole bunch of algebra to get there. If you have the basic notes, that would be great, if not, it looks like I need to pull out my calculator and go through that exercise and check my work on the piano.
Your assistance would be greatly appreciated. Thank you in advance for any assistance in this matter.
That 6 chime sounds awesome! I love that sound! That is what a steam locomotive should sound like.
Awesome Vids Hyce. Keep em coming. You've got one of the most amazing Train Whistles EVER.
This is a great sounding whistle! I hope every time you hear it you beam with pride!
Dude yes! Glad you finally got your 6 chime back and running. The pitch is chefs kiss**.
I am so glad you went to work for the CRRM. You and the rest of the crew are some of the best (and most jovial) people I know. I love your channel! Keep it up.
Me too Rob! Thanks :)
We are here for trains, MORE TRAINS! ooh and uuh, train operations stuff too....
This thing sounds INCREDIBLE love the whistle
Its a beautiful sounding whistle Hyce! Even more impressive that it was built from scratch! The Santa Grande 6 chine almost sounds like the 6" Boston and Maine 6 chime that's mounted to the tiny 2 foot gauge Monson Railroad #3 owned by the Maine Narrow Gauge Railroad Museum
As you get more whistle sound files, I'd be fine seeing several options with the same visual appearance - since it's not easy to have universal whistles. Naturally the most fun would be the ability to put any whistle on any engine but that's a lot of extra work for asthetic.
It sounds AWESOME, totally worth the wait.