How looooooooooooooooong is that train!!?
Only in the U S of A, surely?
Snowplough on the front?I'm amazed it didn't derail.
Yep, Canada much more likely but I am more expert in English and European steam locomotives. Definitely is across the pond.
I didn't know you were a train spotter, Eve-on![]()
S
Snowplough on the front?
I'm not sure he could.For sure, but the sheer mass of the snow, the speed it was going I'd have guessed (and I am no scientist) would have derailed it.
Obviously not although I'd love to know how the driver could see where he was going![]()
Nooooooooooooo.... I mean apart from anything else, I don't own an anorak!
![]()
....Neither did I when I spent many days of my youth train spotting. In spite of the distractions by girlies, I still kept my basic interest in steam engines - Traction engines and steam lorries and then later petrol fuelled hot cars.
I'm not even sure how many locomotives this train had ... Railfanning Post Blizzard of 2015 Storm #3. Canadian National Railway locomotive 2304 (ES44DC) plows through huge snow drifts and gives me a big ass snow shower as it leads the daily CN manifest train 406 West (Moncton, NB to Saint John, NB) at Salisbury, New Brunswick. I'm not sure how the train crew can even see with all that snow on the locomotive's nose! Southern New Brunswick was hit with three major blizzards in less than a week, and there is more snow in the forecast.
Sorry, they really don't do it for me, although I can appreciate what wonderful pieces of engineering they are. My main clue for guessing where was the amount of snow and the fact it was a VERY long train, so somewhere with a lot of space probably.
The BFI have a very good selection on their Youtube channel, I have quite a few of them on DVD bought several years ago before they decided to share them for free. The first one I put up was by Geoffrey Jones, he's got a really distinctive style. Alongside photographers like Colin Gifford I think the film makers and photographers of industrial Britain in the 1960s were a lot more progressive than we are today.I enjoyed that little film, Alastair![]()
I enjoyed that little film, Alastair![]()
Closer to home..
New Brunswick and I'm assuming they use more than one engine to power through these drifts
Think our roads are bad...
]
Doesn't look like they go for block working on those Chinese NG rails..
Some good programmes on Eisenbahn Romantik
- www.swr.de/eisenbahn-romantik/
- www.youtube.com/user/Eisenbahnromantik