NS' Chicago Line: A Railroad Superhighway Part 1

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  • Опубликовано: 30 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 108

  • @scotts5637
    @scotts5637 4 года назад +3

    Give me a SD 40-2 any day of the week!!!! Love the coverage. Thank you.

  • @thebusterdog6358
    @thebusterdog6358 6 лет назад +4

    You make by far the finest Railfan videos on RUclips. Good job.

  • @NorthernMetro
    @NorthernMetro 4 года назад +2

    One of the most outstanding series out there, thanks for sharing with us

  • @oldtown6240
    @oldtown6240 6 лет назад +3

    Excellent, just the right length and content. Keep up the good work. These documentaries are much better than ordinary railfanning.

  • @timdodge7845
    @timdodge7845 Год назад

    nice video, waiting for your next series

  • @Dan-uv5lw
    @Dan-uv5lw 4 года назад +1

    Awesome railfanning
    Greetings from New Hampshire

  • @jtc1947
    @jtc1947 6 лет назад

    I have just started and LIKING THIS ALREADY!

  • @Brad-.-.-.-.howitzer
    @Brad-.-.-.-.howitzer 3 года назад

    Excellent videos

  • @BNSFFREAK747
    @BNSFFREAK747 4 года назад +1

    A treasure trove of RR information. Thanks to you I also figured out the route that NS runs between KC and Hannibal, MO continues on to Detroit. That would explain the long boxcar trains heading to the Ford plant in KC. You sir have a new subscriber! Excellent videos!

  • @barrywalsh9790
    @barrywalsh9790 6 лет назад +1

    Great video. I grew up in Goshen, trains were part of our daily routine!

  • @cgluigiyt
    @cgluigiyt 4 года назад

    My Grandma lives in Wawaka. I was there last month and I had my scanner programmed to the NS Chicago line and I get the defect detector of MP 386.3 in Brimfield

  • @Bhil3
    @Bhil3 4 года назад +1

    I so enjoy your productions. Keep up the good work.

  • @Roadhogg24
    @Roadhogg24 6 лет назад +1

    Outstanding!!!!! Great job,!!!! Thanks

  • @jbrat4313
    @jbrat4313 6 лет назад +1

    All I can say bravo... well done 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @mik3r0wave
    @mik3r0wave 4 года назад +1

    I love your videos. Top tier editing too. Keep up the great work!

  • @XxXuzurpatorXxX
    @XxXuzurpatorXxX 6 лет назад +1

    I love these. I often track the route on google. One day I'll just go to the US just to railfan.

  • @TrainsNStuff
    @TrainsNStuff 6 лет назад +6

    This is an amazing series, I like these types of series. You should definitely keep these up...and if you ever get the chance, you should do one on the "I-5 corridor" (Union Pacific line from Portland, Oregon into Sacramento California), which has some really cool scenery, and some grades. Also, you could try the Portland/Fallbridge subs for BNSF and UP, in the Columbia River Gorge, some fast trains and really cool scenery. Just some ideas. Love the shots in this video.

  • @Steven_Williams
    @Steven_Williams 6 лет назад +1

    Great video! Love the info! I railfan this line from the Chicago and NW Indiana side often.

  • @JonnyCrash
    @JonnyCrash 4 года назад +2

    5:56 I remember news reports when I was a kid in the '90s about piggyback trailers on trains taking business away from truckers.

  • @JonBvideo
    @JonBvideo 6 лет назад +1

    Great videos! Glad you went back and fixed the audio from the previous uploads.

  • @MrSheed92
    @MrSheed92 6 лет назад +6

    33:14 actually thats the new AC4400CWM rebuild for CP.

  • @generationll
    @generationll 6 лет назад +1

    I have 2 dvds put out by Greenfrog videos that cover from just west of Butler into Ohio.THe other one covers from Butler all the way into Chicago.Very facinating.Live long way down off the Wabash.Those John Deere tractors were coming from Waterloo.Iowa.i know alot about in the video because of the 2nd GF dvd I have,We get no piggybacks down here

  • @gmacattack12
    @gmacattack12 3 года назад

    I enjoy the narration
    I'd love to see the Indianapolis area rail system 😀

  • @MikeInPlano
    @MikeInPlano 6 лет назад

    Like the segment around 31:20 about the new flyover and resulting improvements.

  • @OptimusForTrains117
    @OptimusForTrains117 4 года назад

    42:03 omg that was the spot that I railfanned after my 14th birthday!

  • @TheOneTrueDragonKing
    @TheOneTrueDragonKing 4 года назад +1

    Nice foreign power on this line. I'm seeing a lot of that in your videos and TBH, I like it.
    I also like your use of language in narration:
    "This unit was apparently too clean for the camera as it temporarily gets confused on how to focus."
    That made me laugh and was pretty awesome.

    • @ThornappleRiverRailSeries
      @ThornappleRiverRailSeries  4 года назад +1

      Ha, yeah that line was one of my favorites...and pretty accurate, too!
      The Sony cameras I've used my entire life have always had exceptional autofocus, but sometimes, it gets a bit confused!

  • @irvinklugh8858
    @irvinklugh8858 4 года назад

    LOVE IT

  • @UnitedRailroader
    @UnitedRailroader 6 лет назад +4

    Very informational’ the commentary is perfect...not too much, not to little.

    • @kylehill3643
      @kylehill3643 5 лет назад

      Try it with CC. Butler is the only at grade railroad prostitute. What is it like to snuggle with a railroad prostitute?

  • @charleskesner1302
    @charleskesner1302 6 лет назад

    Very nice.

  • @davidcoleman958
    @davidcoleman958 10 месяцев назад

    Unbelievable how busy this line is! How often do you get to railfan the Chicago Line?

  • @southwestohiorails4645
    @southwestohiorails4645 5 лет назад

    Wonderful Video!

  • @ChadsRailfanExperience
    @ChadsRailfanExperience 2 года назад

    Are you still using the Sony FDR and if so, how is it holding up? I got mine in Feb of 19 and was curious of the longevity.

    • @ThornappleRiverRailSeries
      @ThornappleRiverRailSeries  2 года назад

      I got mine in November of 2016 and it’s still with me with no issues whatsoever as my primary.

    • @ChadsRailfanExperience
      @ChadsRailfanExperience 2 года назад

      @@ThornappleRiverRailSeries that's great to hear, I've really enjoyed this camera so far. Great series on the Chicago Line when it had a bunch of trains!

  • @marquestainter4131
    @marquestainter4131 6 лет назад

    I've watched all three, By far the best I have watched. Now if we could get someone out west to do this. :-)

  • @ericthered1140
    @ericthered1140 4 года назад

    Now this is Midwest Railroad Weather.....

  • @DelmarvaRailProductions
    @DelmarvaRailProductions 4 года назад

    36:07 I didn't know 9322 had a K5LA before. Now it has a K5LLA.

  • @r.b.holmes2779
    @r.b.holmes2779 6 лет назад

    ALEX, just a technical point. Those empty " trailers " as you call them, for containers, those are actually called " chassis " is the correct term. GREAT video, thanks.

    • @ThornappleRiverRailSeries
      @ThornappleRiverRailSeries  6 лет назад

      I concur with your point here. But since they can still be hauled around behind a truck without a container, I forward the argument that they can still be considered trailers. I've heard both thrown around in industry parlance.

  • @dwil8263
    @dwil8263 3 года назад

    Hey is that Daniel pulling that intermodal from Rails of highland valley

  • @anthonytidey2005
    @anthonytidey2005 4 года назад

    The new signals being installed are they LED types
    Thanks for the video

  • @railfansouth
    @railfansouth 2 года назад

    nice video

  • @logandetwiler4483
    @logandetwiler4483 6 лет назад

    Very nice video. I think you forgot to cover the other portion of the Chicago Line running between Selkirk, New York and Toledo, Ohio. You should cover Berea, Ohio. Berea is located at mileposts 194 on NS' Former Conrail Chicago Line and at milepost 22 on CSX's Cleveland Short line subdivision (the former big four main line between Cleveland and Columbus, the Former Conrail Columbus and Indianapolis Lines

  • @bradley.reim22
    @bradley.reim22 5 лет назад

    That Dash 9 At 7:37 Has No Flashing Ditch Lights

  • @maineman11
    @maineman11 6 лет назад +1

    Damn that was a lot of John Deere tractors. Also, at 23:56 what were those cars labeled "IBC" used for?

    • @ThornappleRiverRailSeries
      @ThornappleRiverRailSeries  6 лет назад +3

      Those are just standard intermodal well cars. "IBC" stands for inter-box connector, which is the hunk of metal used to lock the intermodal containers together when double-stacked.
      These new cars have those posts for the carmen to set the IBCs in closer to the height at which they are installed at - an ergonomic feature. Most intermodal wells have places for IBCs, but they're just kept in the main carbody.

    • @maineman11
      @maineman11 6 лет назад

      Ah, thanks so much for the knowledge and explanation.

  • @lonesomepine3
    @lonesomepine3 6 лет назад +2

    Really Like Thornapple Productions

  • @IGuessIDoThings
    @IGuessIDoThings 10 месяцев назад

    47:02 that’s an 80MAC!

  • @CombsTowerProductions
    @CombsTowerProductions 6 лет назад

    Can you please do an informational video of the NS Chicago District/Fort Wayne line?

  • @jerbear795
    @jerbear795 4 года назад

    Sd80mac 7212 trailing on the intermold at 47:02

  • @TrainSF
    @TrainSF 6 лет назад

    Nice Video!!

  • @Rich206L
    @Rich206L 6 лет назад

    Excellent video. Have you graduated yet? Looking forward to 2 & 3.
    Rich

  • @IVSC33682
    @IVSC33682 Год назад

    8:58 all jb hunts and 40 stacks is a sign that this train was bound for bnsf

  • @robscott8296
    @robscott8296 4 года назад

    3:02 what is the name of that horn I like it

  • @syahdanalwiardinsyah7821
    @syahdanalwiardinsyah7821 3 года назад

    Wow

  • @antonlewenhaupt357
    @antonlewenhaupt357 2 года назад

    anton jag älskar norfolf southern

  • @kylehill3643
    @kylehill3643 5 лет назад +2

    8:54 what happened to the snow?

  • @Paragneis
    @Paragneis 4 года назад

    In America, are there only ever westbound and southbound trains? What about northbound or southbound?

    • @ThornappleRiverRailSeries
      @ThornappleRiverRailSeries  4 года назад +1

      Most traffic is east and west due to the shape of the nation, but there are plenty of north-south corridors as well. Another factor is that many railroads only timetabled themselves as east/west, even if they were more north/south. For instance, on the Southern Pacific, going towards Sacramento was always westbound, away always east, even through they had their corridors running up and down the western seaboard.

  • @irish00011
    @irish00011 6 лет назад

    Alex: When you commence these lengthy RUclips projects, do you ever consider the possibility, it has already been done before but by someone else? I'm always curious about this. I'm almost positive, the Drayton Blackwell (DIB), or Michigan Central lines has produced a very similar approach and lengthy upload, maybe in 2017 or before. Should this be the case, and surmising, what is already out there, would you consider your contribution a different take on the same material, or possibly an update? You've presented a very complete expose, and I'm happy you were able to correct the audio issue, you had been experiencing with your most previous episodes with voice-over narration.

    • @ThornappleRiverRailSeries
      @ThornappleRiverRailSeries  6 лет назад +3

      I generally make my stuff to stand alone. DIB has not, to my knowledge, produced this sort of detailed look. He sure has quite a bit of Chicago Line stuff, but he's tended to do it in patches and not a full going-over. Ditto with Michigan Central Lines...both tend to stay further east.
      You might actually be thinking of my own video, which covered Goshen to Porter a couple years ago. This project is an expansion/update of that, now obviously covering Butler to Chicago. So I used a bit of the old footage to show "the way it was before", but 90% of it is new footage from 2017/2018.
      I consider my specialty to be full-line and day-in-the-life train documentaries, to get as far into the actual operations as possible. While strung together runbys can be interesting, I like building a narrative which includes as many facets of the industry as possible, from current operations to capital upgrades and locomotive power.
      That's the goal, at least!

  • @WedgeBoyd27
    @WedgeBoyd27 4 года назад

    If I may ask, what camera equipment do you use. This film is pretty clear, better than 4K

  • @paullasko2023
    @paullasko2023 5 лет назад

    Just curious, why does the locomotive and rolling stock look compressed length wise at 45:40?

    • @ThornappleRiverRailSeries
      @ThornappleRiverRailSeries  5 лет назад

      It's just the viewing angle. We're looking pretty much directly down the track instead of from a more side-on angle, so that's why it looks like it does. If you were there in real life it'd look the same.

  • @evanwaters1074
    @evanwaters1074 5 лет назад

    Would it be possible for a 4th part from Cleveland to Butler?

  • @Paragneis
    @Paragneis 4 года назад

    Why do the headlights of locomotives in North America softly blink alternatingly left right left right? Is this more a traditional thing from former times with steam locomotives? I can imagine that a modern strobing LED such as on emergency vehicles would much better warn traffic of the oncoming train.

    • @ThornappleRiverRailSeries
      @ThornappleRiverRailSeries  4 года назад

      Everything until the 1990s generally only had a single headlight. The FRA mandates those lower “ditch lights” about 30 years ago to reduce crossing accidents and improve visibility for the crew.
      Some railroads do not flash their ditch lights. CSX and NS are the two major roads that do. Amtrak does as well. They slowly flash because they are using incandescent bulbs. New locomotives with LEDs flash at the same frequency but are quicker at turning on and off, of course.
      A major reason for the lights is it makes it easier to judge speed and distance of approaching trains, as opposed to the single traditional headlight.

  • @minnesotarailfan12
    @minnesotarailfan12 3 года назад

    I thought the Chicago Line was the former PRR. CSX got mainly NYC trackage from the split. Is this a CSX or NS owned line? I doubt NS has a need for the old NYC as they have their own busy mainline on the old PRR.

    • @ThornappleRiverRailSeries
      @ThornappleRiverRailSeries  3 года назад

      The Chicago Line is the former NYC from Albany to Chicago. This became PC and then CR. When CSX and NS split Conrail, the NS got the line west of Cleveland, while the CSX got it east of there. In turn, the NS got the PRR via Pittsburgh, while the CSX got the line via Indianapolis to St Louis. This thus split the “big X” mainline network of Conrail.
      This happened because CSX did not need another double track line from Northwest Ohio to Chicago, nor one from Northwest Ohio to the East Coast/Baltimore/Philly/DC. They already had the B&O to do that. Likewise, the NS had the Nickel Plate into New York which would suit their needs just fine.
      Ultimately, the PRR was greatly downgraded after the NYC-PRR merger because Penn Central and later Conrail found the NYC to be superior and a better fit for the combined giant.

    • @ThornappleRiverRailSeries
      @ThornappleRiverRailSeries  3 года назад

      So to sum it up, the Chicago Line is the former NYC. The PRR main across Indiana and most of Ohio is now the CFE.

    • @minnesotarailfan12
      @minnesotarailfan12 3 года назад

      @@ThornappleRiverRailSeries Oh yeah, I got it now. Thanks so much. I grew up along the NS main line thru PA which was the old PRR, so I assumed the old PRR main was NS the whole way to Chicago.

  • @joshblauser6559
    @joshblauser6559 6 лет назад

    Any reason why NS hasn’t upgraded the NYC signals to the PTC-capable Vaders on the east end of CP 358 in Butler?

    • @ThornappleRiverRailSeries
      @ThornappleRiverRailSeries  6 лет назад

      They're working on it. First priority were the more complex areas running east from Chicago. With Butler to Chicago effectively done now, and Toledo to Cleveland also nearing completion, Toledo to Butler is really on borrowed time now!

    • @FFred-us9tw
      @FFred-us9tw 2 года назад

      Wayside signal types have absolutely nothing to do with PTC. You could have Semaphores with PTC, it's irrelevant to PTC's operation.

  • @christopherkratz7104
    @christopherkratz7104 4 года назад

    Where do you find the interlocking diagram like at 1:56

  • @atmofendi2764
    @atmofendi2764 Год назад

    The best locomotive trains NS cichago line from Drs Atmofendi Gondomono Blitar city eastern java Republic of Indonesia country

  • @kylehill3643
    @kylehill3643 5 лет назад

    how can signals be upgraded? They all mean the same things? some are besides the usual green/yellow and red arespeed restrictions/line junctions and I think no whistle zone.etc. They mean what they mean.

  • @choochoovroomvroom7612
    @choochoovroomvroom7612 4 года назад

    👍

  • @mijyadoc5374
    @mijyadoc5374 5 лет назад

    I appreciate your work.... but the ZOOM is wrecking the train shots.

  • @Hobbytrem
    @Hobbytrem 6 месяцев назад

    I feel like crying for not seeing the locomotives in Conrail paint scheme over those tracks anymore. Everything looks so dark since the fleet vested the Norfolk Southern paint scheme which is not ugly, but it is not vibrant and inspiring luke Conrail's. 💙🤍

  • @danielkennedy1524
    @danielkennedy1524 4 года назад

    Was chicago Line former NY central or Penn?

  • @qnw4368
    @qnw4368 5 лет назад

    those signals aren't very bright, seems like it would be hard to see what they read.

    • @ThornappleRiverRailSeries
      @ThornappleRiverRailSeries  5 лет назад

      They're focused beams, so while you can see them a bit from the side, if you're not directly in line of them they aren't all that bright.

  • @maineman11
    @maineman11 6 лет назад

    If you limited your video length to 25 minutes or less, then you would have more postings, and posting more often. Food for thought.

    • @ThornappleRiverRailSeries
      @ThornappleRiverRailSeries  6 лет назад +1

      I don't like breaking up these long-form documentaries, though. The greatest barrier to me posting more often is work/life related, not due to video length.

    • @maineman11
      @maineman11 6 лет назад

      I can understand all that. It was just a thought/idea. Your video's still come out great, no matter what.

  • @yardlimit8695
    @yardlimit8695 4 года назад

    nice video BUT could you please stop trying to talk over the horns,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,you lose every time.............

  • @theeye2661
    @theeye2661 6 лет назад

    First