32:00 "But it's 273 degrees outside!" Actually, since it's an absolute scale, kelvin is not referenced in degrees, but in kelvins directly. The reason the others have degrees is due to using a thermodynamically arbitrary endpoint.
I live by some train tracks and i actually see exactly this through my window a lot on the tracks. Its a pickup with retractable rail wheels to lock it into the track. Its super cool, i really wanna get in one and just zoom around in the track
Hey Kan, I just wanted to let you know that I love your videos on Railroads Online. I have a love for trains and want to be an engineer when I finish college. In fact I have Railroads Online and haven't been able to play due to my studies, but your videos give me ideas for when I get back into it. Keep making amazing content!
In Maine there also is a one foot gauge railroad and it's used for some freight and mail and they still use steam. It's pretty cool to watch, it's on UA-cam.
Ok here's a list for what you guys need to do for the smelter's on your next video: -Make a y loop for the entire smelter's -Buy a shunter engine to keep it's yard (yes yard) tidy -Buy a turntable to turn engines around (if needed) -Make loop lines for the loading and unloading platforms
I agree. The line should wrap around the north side of the smelter with a pair of switches to get off the main and into the separate industry yard. Like where it joins now next to the loading area should be a switch (or just not connect here) to continue the main line around the back side and off towards the mines, with maybe a pair of switches on the unload side to get off the main on that side. Definitely would need a turntable and maybe a shed.
Somewhere around 12:00 or 13:00, you seemed to be struggling to get the perfect curve radius in circle mode since the grid was set to “10.” Depending on what your keybinds are, there should be a key that adjusts the radius grid (1, 10, 50, 100). I believe the default key is the asterisk (*). ;)
I was told * then press L and then * again gives you 1 degree increments..? It works for me.. Edit: Sorry, all you need to do is press * and it will go to 1 increment, press * again and it will go to 100 and * again it will go back to increments of 10 and so on.. I was told to use L key in the forums but later learned that just the * key was all that was needed.
Great tip! Something I found is when snapping to a spline, if the yellow link icon isn’t present then you will get the kinked rail, if it is present then it will generate an auto curve. Hoping Kan see’s this so he can lay track properly!
Amazing video once again Kan. I love watching your videos. I binged all of your Season 1 RO videos while my wife was in the hospital. So I'm really glad you started playing RO again! Keep up the amazing work!
I would love to have you and/or Hyce stop by the South Jersey & Western's narrow gauge line at some point. I have a different philosophy in laying track as I've worked for a short-line railroad and Amtrak, so everything is laid more or less to mainline standards.
At 21:47 the Ffestiniog and Welsh highland railways are on a 1 ft 111⁄2 in (597 mm) narrow-gauge and have been used in the slate business (Ffestiniog) and passenger work (WHR). P.S tell Hyce that 00 is 1:72 scale.
32 cheeseburgers divided by the 00 buck shotgun shells you have in your pocket coverted over to freedom temperature (°F) multiplied by World War wins equals how many cups you need to provide the FRA. It's so simple. I don't understand why everyone has such a problem with it. Kan, you can sub in .025 moose or 53 hockey pucks if needed. I'm sure the TI-84 has a hot key. Lol 😆 I love the conductor/engineer dynamic the new videos have. Always love hearing from Hyce. Cheers fellas
Hey Kan and Hyce, you shoul check out the Rochfort bridge north west of Edmonton in Alberta, Canada. It's similar to your bridge across that gulch at 26:20. It's got quite the history too.
to add onto the 2ft gauge talk, it was ALOT more common in places like europe and aus to have 2ft and 2ft 4in narrow guage. tho we dont have alot of 3ft that i know of. 2ft and 2ft 4in narage gauge stock tho is freaking adorable. its so quirky and small but was the backbone of some of the touquest industries over here. logging for example, i know here in aus there were quite a few 2ft 4in and/or 2ft 6in shay style pistol/craft shaft style steam locos (similar to the hyceler in the game but with more side pistons) that dominated the mountains back in the day.
Fun Fact for the "Units of messurement" Diskussion: Kelvin is a absolute unit. You don't have "degrees Kelvin", just "Kelvin" like you have "Meter" or "foot"
Kan, you should definetly watch Hell on Wheels. Besides being a really good historical drama series set in this era, it's centered around the building of the transcontinental railroad. And it features a lot of the stuff you and Hyce talked about in this episode
You guys made me play this game and it's sooo much funn. And thx to your video's i get a good idea on how to lay good track. Really keep making these vids they're amazing !!
15" in considered the minimum useful gauge, and is actually somewhat common. Mostly for industrial things, I know some farms in the UK will have minimum gauge railroads, to move wagons of fertilizer and vegetables around, sometimes with proper locomotives, sometimes just by hand. There's also at least one guy in the UK who has a 7.5" railroad he uses for actual work, although in that case "actual work" means taking compost the 20 feet across his backyard, or pushing around wagons of wet laundry to hang them on his clotheslines. his series is called "minimal expectations".
Idea. Sidings. Common thing in rail lines (or atleast British). Let's you put a less important train out of the way so another can pass, and then continue on your way. Could be good. Another thing you could have also done on the line you built today is basically.... well I don't know the word for it. I saw it on a video about a Chilean rail line, where on an incline they basically had a switch some way up the incline, and they would basically pass the switch with the train, stop, throw the switch, and reverse further along the slope. Basically seesawing their way up (or down) a mountain.
The name of that track layout is called a switchback. Very common in mountainous regions, especially when the goal is to get up the mountain rather than to the other side (where a tunnel is usually more efficient in the long run).
A great series to watch is Rocky Mountain Railroad. Its about the Canadian Pacific, and the train that runs from Cochrane to Moosonee. Its awesome! They have 8 full episodes on the FD Real channel.
31:40 not that it matters, but Kelvin isn't a unit of "degrees". It's just Kelvin. 32 degrees Farenheit, 0 degrees Celsius, 273.15 Kelvin. "Degrees Kelvin" is not an accurate term.
Hey Kan, an fyi that I've noticed when laying track, if you align the end of the spline when you're joining to a piece already laid, then it will have far smoother transitions when placed. Hope that helps, and thanks for your time making great content.
This is unacceptable, folks. Kelvin is not measured in degrees. The starting point is not arbitrarily placed somewhere in the middle, it isn't a circle. Kelvin is is just measured in Kelvin. Freezing Point is at 273.15 Kelvin, not 273.15 degrees Kelvin. Okay, pedantry over, great video folks, love watching you play the game and listening in on Hyce's expertise, it's great fun.
Steam boilers in general have to be inspected every 3 years. It’s largely to ensure the safety of the pressure vessel. Live steam can do very bad things if it is not respected. I own a 1916 40 hp Case traction engine and dove in the rabbit hole a year ago to bring her back to life. Going to be a long road, but we’ll worth it.
Speaking of the ties being soaked in creosote, there is a storage yard for ties near where I live and they used to have 4-5 giant piles of them. Well a couple months ago they ended up catching on fire and because of all the creosote nothing was left but ash by the end. Burned for the better part of a week too
wouldn't you also get better alignments if you used the 4/6 keys to rotate the ends of a spline to mate with what you're connecting to, rather than just drag n drop connect splines?
For anyone wondering, the 'peeing in a cup' reference means to take a drug test. That's how a drug tests are done, the doctors or whoever test your urine for drugs that way.
Kan the thing Hyce said about the train companies staging accidents to not pay workers also happened in Canada when the Chinese immigrants came over to build the first massive railway to connect the coasts.
Have either of you two seen Hell On Wheels? Fantastic semi-fictional series about the construction of the Union Pacific railroad. By far one of my all time favorite TV shows and it follows the construction crew of the railroad in their moving town called Hell On Wheels.
Ok, OO is 1:76. HO is 1:87.3. Both run on 16.5mm gauge track. HO is accurate to standard gauge on 16.5mm gauge track, while OO is slightly oversized. OO was originally designed to allow the production of UK steam locomotive models for that gauge of track, as they would be too small to house an electric motor in HO scale back when OO was first established. The Hornby OO live steamers are unique in that they are track power "fired", and then controlled with pulsed signals via a specialized power pack. They use an electric heating element. They run on very low pressure steam and can run for a couple minutes before needing to be refilled.
I think this game could use a plotting tool. Where you layout a ghost line with nods that you can move around freely, and once happy with how the plot line is, you then build the rail on it
Fun fact, when talking about the temperature kelvin, you don't need to say degrees infront nor do you need to capitalize the K. Star talk has a good explainer about me.
I found this while playing. you take a crossover peace nonplaced and hover it under your feet. you will enjoy a ride. (make sure you're on top of the crossover.)
You could build a challenge for yourselves. you set brakes before uncoupling the cars and try to throw a switch when you pass sending the cars towards their destination as you go into the turntable. May want Betsy at the smelter for shunting.
On a ruler All fractions are odd It is much easier to see were each fraction are due to the different size tick makers Can go down as small as you can see the tick marks size ( if you know how to use it ) Metrics has all the same small tick marks and is harder to go smaller ( without make a mistake) This is just my thought on advantages of imperial Of corse metric has it advantages too
To add to this, I also know that for decimal systems, it is easier for metrics, but duodecimal imperial system is easier, but only if you know the duodecimal system, which imperial doesn't accurately represent
Here in the UK the Talyllyn Railway is 2 ft 3 inches, this has the Rev W.Awrdy Museum he was the creator of The Railway Series which lead to Thomas the Tank Engine
I do not have this game so I cannot verify this fix. Around the 16:30 mark Conn's having problems with the flickering ground texture, if I remember correctly Kerbo solved this problem back when he was playing by changing the height of one of the sections by one difference. Also I do think you guys should make at least one section of double track made as a race area. After all wouldn't a race track fit the C. R. A. P. frame of mind?
The Hornby 00 Mallard live stream is a pretty awesome model Gauge 1 is the more common smallest scale live stream for the UK I think there is also live stream O gauge as well
i have an ho rail at my current house, and had an n scale as a kid, i dont have any live steam engines, but i do have a model live steam generator, i modified from a kit, it used to make a small led light up, but i changed the pulley sizes and got a better generator, made a charging circuit board, and now it can charge usb devices like a cell phone, battery pack, and what not (edit) its a wilesco d9
Hey Kan the reason us Americans use the Imperial system all the way to today is because it would cost industries to much to swap all the machining equipment and such!
I think water is in fact broken currently. It seems to increase instead of decreasing when you open the regulator regardless of how much water is in the tender. I don't think it ever decreases, the number just gets bigger and bigger.
@@SImrobert2001 I know, I'm saying that the water in the boiler is broken. It increases without bounds even if the tender is empty. It did not do that when I last played ages ago. Back then it did behave exactly like Hice explains. I assume it's a bug that got in recently. It's not really a big deal though just means you never need to refill water.
The devs need a height variance on the trees. Coming into the Smelter was kind of freaky with all the trees exactly the same height. Looked like someone took huge hedge trimmer to it.
Here's a better idea make a roundhouse for different trains slit up into 2 houses for 2 trains labeled the same number and each set of trains has a different job that way it will be less confusing. It will also help with organization of trains used for specific jobs. Also can be used for your favorite trains also add multiple lines next two eachother so you can both run trains right next to eachother going to the same place or somewhere different or just to drive alongside one another.
1) Hyce's screams when the locomotive made me laugh so loud.
2) kAN has a wife? Cool! I learned something new.
3) I like these videos.
Same on two lol, did not know that. Good for him! 😄
He got her to help him with something on a RoboCo video too
not only this. She can program in Python.
She spoke onStream in his RoboCo Stream. May check it out :)
She sounds cute
yeah i know right? in old videos he would mention his girlfriend on occasion, good job kAN!!!
What do you mean Kan and Kosmo/Scrapman aren't dating each other.
Idk, it's kinda like those cringe ships in any series
57 minutes of train entertainment and zen; this is just what I need.
32:00 "But it's 273 degrees outside!"
Actually, since it's an absolute scale, kelvin is not referenced in degrees, but in kelvins directly. The reason the others have degrees is due to using a thermodynamically arbitrary endpoint.
oh,god, thank you.... it bugs me so much when people say degree Kelvin....
What defines a train? Could I slap some homemade wheels on a car put it on the tracks and call that a train?
Some rail maintenence vehicles are basically just that, but the rail wheels are retractable
Simply put no. What defines a train is a locomotive and rail cars coupled together, If you mean a locomotive then technically yes.
I live by some train tracks and i actually see exactly this through my window a lot on the tracks. Its a pickup with retractable rail wheels to lock it into the track. Its super cool, i really wanna get in one and just zoom around in the track
One thing everyone's forgetting is in Australia there's trains that go on the road. They're effectively super sized 18 wheelers in the USA
@@alexanderslazakowski5137 so do what the og top gear guys did and link a bunch of camper trailers together with train wheels too?
Hey Kan, I just wanted to let you know that I love your videos on Railroads Online. I have a love for trains and want to be an engineer when I finish college. In fact I have Railroads Online and haven't been able to play due to my studies, but your videos give me ideas for when I get back into it. Keep making amazing content!
In Maine there also is a one foot gauge railroad and it's used for some freight and mail and they still use steam. It's pretty cool to watch, it's on UA-cam.
Where?
Ok here's a list for what you guys need to do for the smelter's on your next video:
-Make a y loop for the entire smelter's
-Buy a shunter engine to keep it's yard (yes yard) tidy
-Buy a turntable to turn engines around (if needed)
-Make loop lines for the loading and unloading platforms
I agree. The line should wrap around the north side of the smelter with a pair of switches to get off the main and into the separate industry yard. Like where it joins now next to the loading area should be a switch (or just not connect here) to continue the main line around the back side and off towards the mines, with maybe a pair of switches on the unload side to get off the main on that side. Definitely would need a turntable and maybe a shed.
For the shunter problem, maybe they keep Betsy there are buy a third and more powerful engine for mainline transport work
Somewhere around 12:00 or 13:00, you seemed to be struggling to get the perfect curve radius in circle mode since the grid was set to “10.” Depending on what your keybinds are, there should be a key that adjusts the radius grid (1, 10, 50, 100). I believe the default key is the asterisk (*). ;)
I was told * then press L and then * again gives you 1 degree increments..? It works for me..
Edit: Sorry, all you need to do is press * and it will go to 1 increment, press * again and it will go to 100 and * again it will go back to increments of 10 and so on.. I was told to use L key in the forums but later learned that just the * key was all that was needed.
Great tip! Something I found is when snapping to a spline, if the yellow link icon isn’t present then you will get the kinked rail, if it is present then it will generate an auto curve. Hoping Kan see’s this so he can lay track properly!
@@ryancoy8534 i noticed if i dont have the yellow link icon i cant even place the rail
I can’t wait to see what engine you get next. Can’t wait to see what engine gets added next too, especially looking forward to when they add duplexes
Hyce's scream was amazing now that's what I need in the morning.
I enjoy listening to nice pleasnt conversation about the railroads with the occasional interruption as Hyce does his best Kirk impression
16:47 easily the best moment in this video
Amazing video once again Kan. I love watching your videos. I binged all of your Season 1 RO videos while my wife was in the hospital. So I'm really glad you started playing RO again! Keep up the amazing work!
If I had to describe you and hyce playing train games together, I would say train in podcast great job by the why
I would love to have you and/or Hyce stop by the South Jersey & Western's narrow gauge line at some point. I have a different philosophy in laying track as I've worked for a short-line railroad and Amtrak, so everything is laid more or less to mainline standards.
At 21:47 the Ffestiniog and Welsh highland railways are on a 1 ft 111⁄2 in (597 mm) narrow-gauge and have been used in the slate business (Ffestiniog) and passenger work (WHR). P.S tell Hyce that 00 is 1:72 scale.
32 cheeseburgers divided by the 00 buck shotgun shells you have in your pocket coverted over to freedom temperature (°F) multiplied by World War wins equals how many cups you need to provide the FRA. It's so simple. I don't understand why everyone has such a problem with it. Kan, you can sub in .025 moose or 53 hockey pucks if needed. I'm sure the TI-84 has a hot key. Lol 😆 I love the conductor/engineer dynamic the new videos have. Always love hearing from Hyce. Cheers fellas
Thanks to you and Hyce for more great stuff!
Hey Kan and Hyce, you shoul check out the Rochfort bridge north west of Edmonton in Alberta, Canada. It's similar to your bridge across that gulch at 26:20. It's got quite the history too.
I started this series to watch you play a game. Now, I know way to many facts about trains and their history. Double win
16:50 that noise he makes lmao
8:35 ooo....OOOOOO That is going to hurt a small child 🤣🤣 had me rolling
Really appreciating all the educational commentary in this series!
to add onto the 2ft gauge talk, it was ALOT more common in places like europe and aus to have 2ft and 2ft 4in narrow guage. tho we dont have alot of 3ft that i know of. 2ft and 2ft 4in narage gauge stock tho is freaking adorable. its so quirky and small but was the backbone of some of the touquest industries over here. logging for example, i know here in aus there were quite a few 2ft 4in and/or 2ft 6in shay style pistol/craft shaft style steam locos (similar to the hyceler in the game but with more side pistons) that dominated the mountains back in the day.
You put the kibosh on double tracking everything, which means there is only one thing to suggest: Triple track.
Fun Fact for the "Units of messurement" Diskussion:
Kelvin is a absolute unit. You don't have "degrees Kelvin", just "Kelvin" like you have "Meter" or "foot"
Love these videos with hyce keep it up kan
Kan, you should definetly watch Hell on Wheels. Besides being a really good historical drama series set in this era, it's centered around the building of the transcontinental railroad. And it features a lot of the stuff you and Hyce talked about in this episode
You guys made me play this game and it's sooo much funn. And thx to your video's i get a good idea on how to lay good track. Really keep making these vids they're amazing !!
I like how Hyce speaks with passion about trains, but he also loves to scream whenever an opportunity arises
I converted the Midwestern Branch into a logging branch because of these videos, Love them
Would love to see a loop around line for the smelters too for any engines that may be too big for the turntable you guys place at it
RO already added a larger turn table, it holds the biggest biggo train and still has room to spare.
I love it when the trees are in the groundwork and you cut them and they just go weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
33:00 you could say.. its an all-train vehicle 😎
This is the best series on this channel
The smelter track is like the horseshoe curve. In Pennsylvania.
15" in considered the minimum useful gauge, and is actually somewhat common. Mostly for industrial things, I know some farms in the UK will have minimum gauge railroads, to move wagons of fertilizer and vegetables around, sometimes with proper locomotives, sometimes just by hand. There's also at least one guy in the UK who has a 7.5" railroad he uses for actual work, although in that case "actual work" means taking compost the 20 feet across his backyard, or pushing around wagons of wet laundry to hang them on his clotheslines. his series is called "minimal expectations".
Idea. Sidings. Common thing in rail lines (or atleast British). Let's you put a less important train out of the way so another can pass, and then continue on your way. Could be good.
Another thing you could have also done on the line you built today is basically.... well I don't know the word for it. I saw it on a video about a Chilean rail line, where on an incline they basically had a switch some way up the incline, and they would basically pass the switch with the train, stop, throw the switch, and reverse further along the slope. Basically seesawing their way up (or down) a mountain.
The name of that track layout is called a switchback. Very common in mountainous regions, especially when the goal is to get up the mountain rather than to the other side (where a tunnel is usually more efficient in the long run).
A great series to watch is Rocky Mountain Railroad. Its about the Canadian Pacific, and the train that runs from Cochrane to Moosonee. Its awesome! They have 8 full episodes on the FD Real channel.
31:40 not that it matters, but Kelvin isn't a unit of "degrees". It's just Kelvin. 32 degrees Farenheit, 0 degrees Celsius, 273.15 Kelvin. "Degrees Kelvin" is not an accurate term.
HO loosely = OO, you can use things like buildings together on HO and OO.
Excellent episode
Enjoying railroad trivia time
Hey Kan, an fyi that I've noticed when laying track, if you align the end of the spline when you're joining to a piece already laid, then it will have far smoother transitions when placed. Hope that helps, and thanks for your time making great content.
Excited for railroad crosses to finally get ✨adjustable angles✨
that would help alot actually
This is unacceptable, folks. Kelvin is not measured in degrees. The starting point is not arbitrarily placed somewhere in the middle, it isn't a circle. Kelvin is is just measured in Kelvin. Freezing Point is at 273.15 Kelvin, not 273.15 degrees Kelvin.
Okay, pedantry over, great video folks, love watching you play the game and listening in on Hyce's expertise, it's great fun.
Steam boilers in general have to be inspected every 3 years. It’s largely to ensure the safety of the pressure vessel. Live steam can do very bad things if it is not respected. I own a 1916 40 hp Case traction engine and dove in the rabbit hole a year ago to bring her back to life. Going to be a long road, but we’ll worth it.
Speaking of the ties being soaked in creosote, there is a storage yard for ties near where I live and they used to have 4-5 giant piles of them. Well a couple months ago they ended up catching on fire and because of all the creosote nothing was left but ash by the end. Burned for the better part of a week too
The frantic Hyce screaming when the Zooma got tossed had me laughing so hard.
FYI if you want fine grained control of the curve radius, the grid size also changes the increments by which you change that
wouldn't you also get better alignments if you used the 4/6 keys to rotate the ends of a spline to mate with what you're connecting to, rather than just drag n drop connect splines?
@@deathwishdrang1780 that i dont know, ive not tested that, but maybe
For anyone wondering, the 'peeing in a cup' reference means to take a drug test. That's how a drug tests are done, the doctors or whoever test your urine for drugs that way.
Kan the thing Hyce said about the train companies staging accidents to not pay workers also happened in Canada when the Chinese immigrants came over to build the first massive railway to connect the coasts.
Love the videos. Will the world be open for others to play on or posted for others to enjoy?
16:53 those were the good times in Wild West.
KAN you should make a “ museum“ for all your oops engines and rolling stock for Hyce as a funny think
Time to watch another excellent video
Have either of you two seen Hell On Wheels? Fantastic semi-fictional series about the construction of the Union Pacific railroad. By far one of my all time favorite TV shows and it follows the construction crew of the railroad in their moving town called Hell On Wheels.
I was just saying "pitch that to netflix", but apparently it already exists (thanks, btw)
kAN - Asks a question about railroads.
Hyce - "Well it depends."
I absolutely love this.
I recommend watching way out west: they show some pretty practical minimal gauge rail operations.
Ok, OO is 1:76. HO is 1:87.3. Both run on 16.5mm gauge track. HO is accurate to standard gauge on 16.5mm gauge track, while OO is slightly oversized. OO was originally designed to allow the production of UK steam locomotive models for that gauge of track, as they would be too small to house an electric motor in HO scale back when OO was first established.
The Hornby OO live steamers are unique in that they are track power "fired", and then controlled with pulsed signals via a specialized power pack. They use an electric heating element. They run on very low pressure steam and can run for a couple minutes before needing to be refilled.
Yes!! Back to the smelter we come!
I think this game could use a plotting tool. Where you layout a ghost line with nods that you can move around freely, and once happy with how the plot line is, you then build the rail on it
The screams at 16:50 were hilarious
Kan & Hyce, you both should get Dapper and if possible, bring back Caboose Racing and locomotive ROLLERCOASTERS!! Lol
16:56 oh so THATS why Hyce is a bird😂
Hour long train podcast? Yay.
The engine flew, Kan, Hyce and specially the Bird screamed a lot.
Fun fact, when talking about the temperature kelvin, you don't need to say degrees infront nor do you need to capitalize the K.
Star talk has a good explainer about me.
You supposd to always lowr reverser too with breaks full, youll have loose/tight grip wheels it lifts the train up, ( Some oppoezid gear lifts)
12:00 FOR ROCK AND STONE BROTHERS!!!
I found this while playing. you take a crossover peace nonplaced and hover it under your feet. you will enjoy a ride. (make sure you're on top of the crossover.)
full reg full forward, im literally watching unstoppable where he got off the train at full power and full forward! yall almost roll playing a movie
I love the content! You made me like trains!
You could build a challenge for yourselves.
you set brakes before uncoupling the cars and try to throw a switch when you pass sending the cars towards their destination as you go into the turntable.
May want Betsy at the smelter for shunting.
On a ruler
All fractions are odd
It is much easier to see were each fraction are due to the different size tick makers
Can go down as small as you can see the tick marks size
( if you know how to use it )
Metrics has all the same small tick marks and is harder to go smaller ( without make a mistake)
This is just my thought on advantages of imperial
Of corse metric has it advantages too
To add to this, I also know that for decimal systems, it is easier for metrics, but duodecimal imperial system is easier, but only if you know the duodecimal system, which imperial doesn't accurately represent
Duodecimal just means base 12 rather than base 10, which is more commonly used
Ah yes, good old C.R.A.P., est. 18whatever
God I love this series 😂
I would love to see a full episode of just hauling, making money, driving around collecting all the things
Huh, I live in Colorado, and fairly close to the museum, I’ll have to go and annoy Hyce, and ask him RRO questions. Lol.
Planning out that Narrow Gauge High Speed Rail
South Africa had a lot of two foot gauge with some massive locomotives like the size of the class 70
Oml Hyce's screaming got me crying😂
This video in a nutshell:
kAN: *Asks question*
Hyce: "It depends..."
Here in the UK the Talyllyn Railway is 2 ft 3 inches, this has the Rev W.Awrdy Museum he was the creator of The Railway Series which lead to Thomas the Tank Engine
If you put one track on top of the other it doesn't take up more space, and you could double track.
I do not have this game so I cannot verify this fix. Around the 16:30 mark Conn's having problems with the flickering ground texture, if I remember correctly Kerbo solved this problem back when he was playing by changing the height of one of the sections by one difference. Also I do think you guys should make at least one section of double track made as a race area. After all wouldn't a race track fit the C. R. A. P. frame of mind?
thanks for the shoutout to kentucky kan 😎
Thanks for the “crap” train series. Good content
this is great side content to watch while farming rare items in an rpg
30:00 The US started a metric conversion in the 70s but like many good ideas of the 70s, Reagan stopped it.
The Hornby 00 Mallard live stream is a pretty awesome model Gauge 1 is the more common smallest scale live stream for the UK I think there is also live stream O gauge as well
Passing tracks are way better than sitting through hours of double tracking to everywhere.
i have an ho rail at my current house, and had an n scale as a kid, i dont have any live steam engines, but i do have a model live steam generator, i modified from a kit, it used to make a small led light up, but i changed the pulley sizes and got a better generator, made a charging circuit board, and now it can charge usb devices like a cell phone, battery pack, and what not (edit) its a wilesco d9
Hey Kan the reason us Americans use the Imperial system all the way to today is because it would cost industries to much to swap all the machining equipment and such!
I think water is in fact broken currently. It seems to increase instead of decreasing when you open the regulator regardless of how much water is in the tender. I don't think it ever decreases, the number just gets bigger and bigger.
They talk about that. ITs the level of water in the boiler, and not the tender.
@@SImrobert2001 I know, I'm saying that the water in the boiler is broken. It increases without bounds even if the tender is empty. It did not do that when I last played ages ago. Back then it did behave exactly like Hice explains.
I assume it's a bug that got in recently. It's not really a big deal though just means you never need to refill water.
@@-slasht OH, I understand now.
19:57 words to live by
41:40, the train was *slowly* inching back onto the tracks, it was gnna work until kan put the bridge there
3:25 if you crouch down infront of the engine there is a water gauge
21:35 There are railways, capable of carrying passengers, with a gauge of 5 inches.
The devs need a height variance on the trees. Coming into the Smelter was kind of freaky with all the trees exactly the same height. Looked like someone took huge hedge trimmer to it.
Here's a better idea make a roundhouse for different trains slit up into 2 houses for 2 trains labeled the same number and each set of trains has a different job that way it will be less confusing. It will also help with organization of trains used for specific jobs. Also can be used for your favorite trains also add multiple lines next two eachother so you can both run trains right next to eachother going to the same place or somewhere different or just to drive alongside one another.