BIG Coal Trains in South Australia's North

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  • Опубликовано: 5 июн 2024
  • This video shows some movements in the final month of operation for the Leigh Creek Coal train, which ran from the Thomas Playford Power Station at Port Augusta, to the Leigh Creek Coal mine located at Copley, 250 km's ( 155 miles ) to the north.
    The train is powered by 3 x Pacific National 82 class, which are locally built GM-EMD with a 12-710G3A power plant, producing 3000 hp for traction.
    The train usually ran with around 165 wagons, ( which varied slightly at times ) with an overall length was around 2.7 km's, or 1.67 miles, or 8860 feet.
    The last vehicle on the train is a compressor wagon to help with keeping up air pressure in the trains brakes.
    The scenes were filmed between Tue 29/03/16, and Fri 01/04/16.
  • Авто/МотоАвто/Мото

Комментарии • 93

  • @21mozzie
    @21mozzie Год назад +2

    My Grandfather (or so I understand) was in charge of designing the town of Leigh Creek in the 50s and chose the route for the railway. It went downhill the entire way so the trains didn't need to do much pulling once the train was started. (Happy to be corrected if my understanding is wrong.)

  • @manlybaker3098
    @manlybaker3098 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you for posting!! As an American, I have a concept of DISTANCE. Europeans can never seem to understand how just how much bigger the world is compared to their ELITIST patch.
    👍👍👍👍

  • @romeowhiskey1146
    @romeowhiskey1146 3 года назад +6

    161 CARS...yup...I COUNTED them.

  • @Keithlfpieterse
    @Keithlfpieterse 4 года назад +3

    Thanks for the upload. It reminded me of my childhood in South Africa. One of my favorite pastimes was to count the number of wagons while my thoughts ranged far and wide. As for the landscape - very familiar. Appreciate the photography and the editing. I wish you well.

  • @TrevsOutbackandGoldAdventures
    @TrevsOutbackandGoldAdventures 7 лет назад +22

    I have watched many ,many aussie train videos and even made a few myself ,so when I say this is best aussie train video I've ever come across I don't say it lightly.A totally enthralling video framed within majestic South Aus desert scenery.
    Thanks for covering the last of the Leigh Creek coal trains.
    One of my greatest and most memorable train experience was of the LC coal train about 25 years ago.I was on a camping trip out Parachilna way ,and as I always, whenever near,set up camp a rail line..I had propped near a rail bridge over when of the many dry creeks running westwardly off the Flinders.It was a very dark,moonless night and as usual in wide open aussie desert areas you can see lights for tens of miles off in the distance.In the dark I could see a bright light in the far distance to the south west.As always it is very hard to judge the distance of bright lights in the distance in the desert.But I knew whatever it was it was a long ways off.A look at my map made it clear it would have to be a train's light. Any way after half an hour passed and I could just start to perceive the familiar rumble of some serious locomotive power an innumerable steel wheels on steel rails headed my way on that still,mild and beautiful desert night.After ten minutes that distant rumble had become a bone shaking,visceral cacophony and ground literal began to shake as the massive beast of a train drew level with me and passed over that small bridge.It literally must have been doing 110 kph and even at that massive speed the damn thing took at least ten minutes to pass.
    I figured later that at that sort of speed it must have been at least 50 or 60 kms away when I first spotted its head light in the distance.
    It was a truly memorable experience and one that has ever since etched a vivid and lasting impression in my mind.
    So I can only feel great regret at the passing into history this iconic train of the South Australian landscape.
    With kind regards,Trev.

  • @jenesisjones6706
    @jenesisjones6706 Год назад

    I kept getting distracted by the flies 🙃 BUT the approach to Leigh Creek was visually superb! I love SA, used to live in Hammond until 2013.

  • @nancyhobson9710
    @nancyhobson9710 4 года назад +3

    Wonderful video. Thanks for posting, as it's a part of Australia most rarely see.

    • @tubbylunchbox5693
      @tubbylunchbox5693 Год назад

      That explains a lot! 😃That beast has been as long as 169 wagons.

  • @jimcrawford5039
    @jimcrawford5039 5 лет назад +2

    Magnificent video! I love that country over there! Riverina, NSW.

  • @chillimocha
    @chillimocha 5 лет назад +2

    Great footage, thanks for uploading.

  • @sam8alex12
    @sam8alex12 6 лет назад +1

    A very good film to watch ,thank you.

  • @nihongo02341
    @nihongo02341 7 лет назад +1

    By the way, a great video!!! Thanks for sharing with everyone great history! Hope the TV stations ask for it someday!!!

    • @emd645e3c
      @emd645e3c  7 лет назад +1

      Thanks...re the TV stations, they don't ask, they just take it and hope you don't notice.

  • @narendrashukla1198
    @narendrashukla1198 6 лет назад +5

    i love Australian landscape.

  • @rupee0987
    @rupee0987 7 лет назад +2

    Hi Steve, a wonderful vlog capturing a part of Australia that most never see. A sight now consigned to history. Thankyou. Cheers

  • @Railfan6675
    @Railfan6675 7 лет назад +6

    First time I've seen a compressor wagon, or at least knew what it was. They don't use them here in Canada that I know of.
    Had to look this place up on Google Earth. That is a massive mine, about 7 km wide!
    Thanks for posting and the very good description of locos and wagons.

    • @emd645e3c
      @emd645e3c  7 лет назад +6

      Thanks for actually reading it. Most people don't even bother, they find it's just easier to ask even though the answer is right there in front of them !!

    • @vsvnrg3263
      @vsvnrg3263 5 лет назад

      @@emd645e3c ,i was going to ask about the out-of-place wagon at the end of the train till i read the description. lovely stuff this video. and leigh creek isn't in your backyard either. a lot of time and effort to make it.

  • @dodgieandsami
    @dodgieandsami 7 лет назад +1

    Awesome Video.

  • @colinwilkie2279
    @colinwilkie2279 6 лет назад +2

    Those are ex NSWGR's coal hoppers, I remember them from the 1980's on the hunter valley coal trains.
    We use to ride them, all through the night. Great fun.

    • @cityraildude
      @cityraildude 4 года назад

      Aren't they a different gauge?

    • @JBofBrisbane
      @JBofBrisbane 4 года назад

      Port Augusta to Marree was relaid to standard gauge in 1956.

  • @SantaFe19484
    @SantaFe19484 7 лет назад

    Awesome video! Greetings from the USA.

  • @revisoressi7845
    @revisoressi7845 3 года назад +1

    Que hermosos lugares amigos, yo soy de México, que padre poder observar siquiera los paisajes de su hermoso país

  • @korinuthefish1861
    @korinuthefish1861 6 лет назад

    Wow! The 3rd one was the longest one I've ever seen!

    • @emd645e3c
      @emd645e3c  6 лет назад +4

      They are all the same train. I just chose not to show the WHOLE train in some views to avoid people falling asleep !!

  • @tubbylunchbox5693
    @tubbylunchbox5693 Год назад +1

    GREAT Video as always😃 but those 12-710's are 3030BHP, so 2850ish for traction? I'd like to know do the 81 Class pull any more weight than the 82 Class. 🤔

  • @marcosinnes5999
    @marcosinnes5999 6 лет назад +1

    Super video cool

  • @allanchapman6250
    @allanchapman6250 6 лет назад +3

    The trains are loaded to maximum grade they encounter on the line maximum speed on these grades are 10 mph or 16 kph . Ex NSWGR fireman 60's & 70's .

  • @imacgra1
    @imacgra1 6 лет назад

    cool video - good one for posterity. It must be pretty flat to have hauled so much with that horsepower: to get 48 of those same wagons up to Waterfall (Southern Sydney, NSW) they need 4 x 82s for 48 of them! Damn 1 in 40 grades.

  • @stuatbendigo
    @stuatbendigo 4 года назад

    Many thanks for the vid Steve! Was at Parachilna a few years ago and saw that the old Ghan line passed through there before it was more further west. Do you know if these coal trains out of Leigh Ck used part of the old Ghan line down to Port Augusta? Cheers, Stu

  • @erichulgan2572
    @erichulgan2572 7 лет назад +5

    Is the track shutting down as well or does it run other freight? If it is shutting down you should build a track cart and ride the line, it's a blast.

    • @jimcrawford5039
      @jimcrawford5039 5 лет назад +1

      Eric Hulgan I believe the track only goes to the mine. I think the central Aus. line is further west.

  • @callum_bracht
    @callum_bracht 3 года назад

    It wasn’t until 8:20 when I realised, woe that’s longer than I thought

  • @antonioaraujo3029
    @antonioaraujo3029 Год назад

    Parabéns belo vídeo

  • @matthewmassarotti2596
    @matthewmassarotti2596 5 лет назад +1

    i know the port augusta is now closed but what about leigh creek what r they going to do with all of the coal?

  • @kefelonia1
    @kefelonia1 3 года назад

    jacinda likes to play with train sets, but she really loves plain with the drivers.

  • @turuncude33
    @turuncude33 3 года назад

    How many tons of cargo does the train carry in total? There is no ramp on the way of the train, it seems

  • @johno6366
    @johno6366 5 лет назад +2

    Do you know what sucks, when you are coming back from Kalgoorlie after a holiday you decide to stop over because it is getting late and stay at the Kunderdin caravan park next to the grain depot and and where the train tracks run along side Great Eastern Highway and next to the caravan park, what sucks is that every F¥€$£# hour a freight train drives past, honks it's bloody horn; MUAAAAAAAAAA, MUAAAAA, AND THE CLICKETY CLICK NOISE OF THE CARRIAGES DURING THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT! Hmm... Good sleep...

  • @whorayful
    @whorayful 7 лет назад +3

    That will become valuable historic footage of the last days of South Australia before it became a third world state. You managed to get some fantastic angles and lighting with this video, it's beautiful country and you have shown it at it's best. Pity about the flies! What has happened to the rollingstock? Was it abandoned at Leigh Creek or left down at Port Augusta for reuse somewhere, not too many coal mines in SA?.
    Ray.

    • @emd645e3c
      @emd645e3c  7 лет назад +3

      A couple of my recent videos show them being transfered to NSw after SSR purchased them

    • @nancyhobson9710
      @nancyhobson9710 4 года назад

      Yes,beautiful country

  • @stnicholas54
    @stnicholas54 3 года назад

    8229 was a very busy boy.

    • @sector5514
      @sector5514 2 года назад

      82 classes are real work horses

  • @geoffreyblack5982
    @geoffreyblack5982 5 лет назад +2

    Why are the coal wagons not loaded to capacity? Very nice footage. Pity its finished.

    • @vsvnrg3263
      @vsvnrg3263 3 года назад

      there might be load restrictions on the track. because it was known the coal trains were ceasing maintenance might have been stopped.

    • @tubbylunchbox5693
      @tubbylunchbox5693 Год назад

      The mine closed the previous year, that was the last of the stockpile.

  • @andybowen34
    @andybowen34 6 лет назад +1

    g'day mate my name andy bowen from taree in nsw i am very interested in wanting to find out how many coal wagons are on these big bloody monsters newcastle on the nsw hunter valley coal train carry 90 wagons long it will be great to here back from you

  • @spencerwood2093
    @spencerwood2093 4 года назад

    I would pull three hundred fifty coal wagons with eighteen engines to the mines for loading!

  • @johnmoore8016
    @johnmoore8016 7 лет назад +3

    what is the max grade on the rail line in Australia? a very outstanding video. love to watch in on wide screen the view of the country side is something else. what was on the flat car at the end of the train? thanks

    • @imacgra1
      @imacgra1 6 лет назад +1

      according to the description it's a compressor car so the brakes work optimally at the rear of the train (so far from the locos!). As for the grades, it really depends on where you are. In the Blue Mountains west of Sydney it's as steep as 1 in 33, and the other main lines out of Sydney all have sections of 1 in 40.

  • @TheWizardGamez
    @TheWizardGamez 2 года назад +1

    Australia has got to come up with some new state names. The title had me baffled cause I was thinking, that’s just central Australia, why didn’t they say that. It would be better if it was like ‘north Kansas’

    • @tubbylunchbox5693
      @tubbylunchbox5693 Год назад

      It was part of the Northern Territory not that long ago. Adelaide & thereabouts should be part of Victoria.

    • @AppleseedVid
      @AppleseedVid 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@tubbylunchbox5693 It's the other way around. Before 1911, Northern Territory was a part of South Australia.

  • @rodzor
    @rodzor 4 года назад

    8800 ft? That's a short train on the CN in Canada. Regularly running 11000+ ft

    • @emd645e3c
      @emd645e3c  4 года назад +3

      Yea, but with DPU's though.

  • @CarlosGonzalez-kt5be
    @CarlosGonzalez-kt5be 3 года назад +1

    I like to know how many car pusch this locom.?

  • @yunassaxer7119
    @yunassaxer7119 4 года назад

    super

  • @tutekohe1361
    @tutekohe1361 3 года назад

    Was that a private track or the same line the ‘Ghan’ runs on?

    • @vsvnrg3263
      @vsvnrg3263 3 года назад +1

      yeah/nar. it was the original ghan track that was reconstructed from 3'6" to 4'8" and realigned in places. so yeah/nar, mostly yeah. i think the original ghan used to get piggy-backed on sg wagons as far as about leigh creek then meander to alice springs from there. until the new track to alice springs was built. i may stand to be corrected on this. best of luck finding video or pikkys of the piggy-back service. they are rare.

  • @sahirkhan1581
    @sahirkhan1581 6 лет назад +1

    The train speed pleas

  • @R00RAL
    @R00RAL 2 года назад

    How does a driver feel with all that steel behind you ?

    • @sydneymartin6941
      @sydneymartin6941 Год назад +1

      Replying to Dennis Latter Greetings from South Africa As an old driver I can tell you The feeling of controlling all that power is so unbelievable Either with electric or diesel Your adrenalin goes up a notch or 2 with the roaring of the diesels but either one it it just unbelievable Sure miss those days

  • @johno6366
    @johno6366 5 лет назад

    Imagine being at a boom gate when that train is approaching, do you speed across or wait...

  • @santoshrao7430
    @santoshrao7430 6 лет назад +1

    nice

  • @chuckufarly5
    @chuckufarly5 7 лет назад +3

    Australia is weird, you have locomotives from north america as well as some that have the Europe style....

    • @chuckufarly5
      @chuckufarly5 7 лет назад

      okay, but i mean in terms of looks....this video is more Euro style, yet other videos i have seen have north american styles....

    • @TrainsinToronto
      @TrainsinToronto 6 лет назад +1

      chuckufarly5 the iron ore trains basically look American. And they use ex-DM&E units

    • @zagan1
      @zagan1 6 лет назад +2

      It's because some of the mining companies have us rail lines in australia.
      So they don't comply with australian standards but us standards in every way so procedures, signaling, guage etc are all usa standard.
      It's easier to just buy a us Loco then ship it over and start using it, they do change dust filters etc on them and train drivers to the usa standards, if you were a us driver you would probably find it easy to just start driving as you'd already know 95% of everything.
      As far as I know it's the only place with full us standard rail lines not in the usa.

    • @miauwgabriel3547
      @miauwgabriel3547 2 года назад

      @@chuckufarly5 This does not like euro style. We had our own oceanic style of trains.

    • @tubbylunchbox5693
      @tubbylunchbox5693 Год назад

      Near stock American in the Pilbra. The 82 Class JT42C Clyde-EMD is the predessor of British Rail's Type 66 Class, you can still get them in 2023 brand new as JT42CWRM EMD's from Progress Rail for EU use.😀

  • @5520397547
    @5520397547 5 лет назад

    Why closed the mine?

    • @emd645e3c
      @emd645e3c  5 лет назад +2

      The mine only existed to serve one power station at Port Augusta, and they closed the power station.

    • @5520397547
      @5520397547 5 лет назад

      @@emd645e3c thank you

    • @1arritechno
      @1arritechno 5 лет назад +4

      The real reason is that the state Govt is totally for Renewable Energy and wanted to close all Coal powered electricity generation. Mine closure & no Coal generation , has led to higher energy cost, sucking on power from other States and more blackouts...........

    • @stefenosthepom2649
      @stefenosthepom2649 4 года назад +1

      Because the SA government are dickheads..

    • @alans9806
      @alans9806 2 года назад +1

      @@1arritechno Rubbish. The 'coal' was crap but the owners Alinta closed the station and mine for pure economic reasons. SA's wholesale power price dropped due to solar and wind and is sometimes negative. The state regularly runs on 100% renewables, blackouts are rare and we export a lot to Vic and soon NSW.

  • @mattr7118
    @mattr7118 7 лет назад

    I counted 162 the first clip

  • @RailAndVlogsPK
    @RailAndVlogsPK 3 года назад +1

    210 coal trin

  • @harinderpalsingh2232
    @harinderpalsingh2232 4 года назад

    Wagons are small

    • @tubbylunchbox5693
      @tubbylunchbox5693 Год назад

      92t Wagons, 132t Locos. Hunter Valley Coal is where you find the 120t Wagons & a lot of 180t Locos (90 Class, 5000 & 5020 Class)

  • @magpiesextreme123
    @magpiesextreme123 6 лет назад +2

    Someone re-uploaded your video and hasn't credited you.
    ruclips.net/video/UNeGs9BY8k8/видео.html