2:59: A German train "taking a special trip to Poland"? And then the engineer mentions that the locomotive's wheels and chassis entered service in 1939. The Germans are so oblivious to the jokes!
The british steam engine Mallard is the holder of the world speed record for steam locomotives at 126 mph (203 km/h). The record was achieved on 3 July 1938.
@@alastairgray5648 lol that's an entirely different thing but it seems like you just want to be at the top of the stairs at any price, no matter the damage or hazard. It's ridiculous. Luckily that never was our focus ...
More specifically, the German 05 002 casually set a World Record while catching up a Delay, and wasn't even running on its Limit according to the Footplate Crew. Mallard bet that by just one or two km/h on a dedicated Record Run, while going downhill and still burnt out a Bearing. Please don't accuse me of German Bias though, because there are numerous Records of Pennsylvania S1 and especially T1 Locomtives reaching 230 km/h while catching up Delays, but no one there cared if that was a World Record back then, so it never was offcially recognised. Today there is a Project to rebuild a T1 Locomotive and break Mallard's Record.
i love these docos not because they show the greatest in the world but because they constantly get it wrong and show something from the top 5 or 10 in the world. Nice change to see the others
Japan Luxury train for the passenger (check) but no decent space for the service personnel..? you can't even stand straight inside the room, I thought it is a stock room..Hihihih... Aruy :(
I think they meant the fastest speed during regular operation. The A4s were designed to run at 144,8 km/h (100 km/h are roughly 60 mph) during regular operation and the 18 201 was designed to run at 180 km/h during normal operation. But the A4 Mallard has the official record of the fastest steam locomotive ever at 201,2 km/h. It was driving slightly downhill, though, and it was damaged at the end. Btw: American Locomotives probably could run faster than this later on but they never bothered to break the record officially.
@@RRAAZZAA The Class S1 is reported to be ran at 227km/h to drive in delay. It technically could have achieved it based on the power it had. But, as said, it was never an official record and the evidence is neither clearly declared reliable or unreliable.
The DR class 18 201 steam engine is the fastest loco still in operation. The LNER A4 "Mallard" holds the world speed record at 126mph, but is a static, non operational display only.
@@99Cafer99 Americans never bothered to break many records that only Britain was able to. Oh we could have broken them if we wanted. Yeh I really believe them not.
18;50 This is what worker pride looks like. A job well done sir. Well done. 30;00 This is what humility and obedient servitude looks like. God bless you.
The Japanese built that train to spread tourism to the less populated areas of Japan and that is exactly what you have to do to create businesses that grow the economy in those sparse regions… Great work
Seeing Shikishima Me: The hell, 2.800 until 10.000 USD for a trip to a small country like Japan? Who the hell want it?? Narrator: The Shikishima already fully booked until March 2019 Me: I'm just broke...
The shiki-shima train travel four days because the private train cars cost $10,000 each on a first class ride. I learn a lot of this episode. Someday i will take the whole ride of the train discuss here to have a lifetime experiences. Thank you. Sorry for bad grammar.
Yeah, im thinking the same. When you do that, please post ur experience here. When I get on it, I will post something here too :) Cheers from Indonesia
Der Typ der das spricht hat einen deutschen Akzent... Sowas passiert mir aber auch manchmal, wenn ich Englisch spreche und dabei einen deutschen Namen ausprechen muss spreche ich den ausversehen Englisch aus.
1989 Record: South Africa. Run on 26-27 August 1989, comprising 660 wagons, 7.3 km long and a total mass of 71 765 tons on a 1 067 mm gauge line. The train comprised 16 locomotives (9 Class 9E 50 kV AC electric and 7 Class 37 diesel-electric) on the 861 km Sishen - Saldanha iron ore railway 2001 Record: Australia. Run on 21 June 2001, comprising 682 wagons, 7.35 km long and a total mass of 99 734 tons on a 1 435 mm gauge line. The train comprised eight GE AC6000CW diesel-electric locomotives on the 275 km BHP iron ore railway to Port Headland. Production ore trains: Sishen - Saldanha 375 wagons - 4 km (2018} BHP, Port Headland 336 wagons - 3 km (2011)
Steam locomotives exist that could easily equal the German loco for speed but which are restricted to 75mph/120kph because of the destructive 'hammer effect' caused by those massive connecting rods pounding up and down several times a second on the track.
Do your research ... BHP ore train in Western Australia, 682 cars and 7.3km long, once carried 82,000 metric tons of ore for a total weight of the train, largest in the world, of 99734 tonnes. It was driven by eight locomotives distributed along its length to keep the couplings loads and curve performance controllable.
yes John ,they also got it wrong about the worlds fastest stream loco- everyone knows that honor went the the british "MALLARD " steam loco at 126 mph - unbeaten to this day !!
Everyone texting about how cool the ICE and german trains are in general: The narrator basically said it. Only when a lot of people use the trains, they get PROFITABLE. A governmental infrastructure system should not be profit orientated. Since the "Deutsche Bahn" went to the stock exchange, they were forced to make profit. As a result, a lot of the infrastructure has been neglected and apart of a few very modern and VERY expensive luxurious projects like Stuttgart 21 AND also the ICE 4, almost everything is going down and gets dilapidated. But for further details, and why this is the case, please read articles for yourself, because it would be way too much to conclude it in a short stupid UA-cam comment.
The ICEs were quite well-utilised though, at least when I was in Germany a few summers ago, albeit a little slow by HSR standards (~140km/h on many stretches). Quite a number of the commuter trains I was on were underutilised however.
Which one ? - European or Eastern, Oriental Express. The European one is what passes for the original version. The Eastern version, is the former "Silver Star", which was run by N.ZR. .
The South African ore train example at 41:33 is tiny compared to Worlds longest and heaviest train - Australia's iron ore train. The 7·3 km train was formed of 682 wagons, gross weight was 99734 tonnes. This series not a very reliable source.
47:31 2 km is very short considered the length of the train - it stops in less that half it's over all length - I want to see a car that is capable of doing that even from 50km/h.
More specifically, the German 05 002 casually set a World Record while catching up a Delay, and wasn't even running on its Limit according to the Footplate Crew. Mallard bet that by just one or two km/h on a dedicated Record Run, while going downhill and still burnt out a Bearing. Please don't accuse me of German Bias though, because there are numerous Records of Pennsylvania S1 and especially T1 Locomtives reaching 230 km/h while catching up Delays, but no one there cared if that was a World Record back then, so it never was offcially recognised. Today there is a Project to rebuild a T1 Locomotive and break Mallard's Record.
The steam is heated twice in 18 201 through the superheater tubes and just about every other steam engine is the same. The Swiss have moved it up a notch now with heavy oil firing being old technology and the Swiss have developed light oil firing or diesel fuel for steam engines. The burner looks like a huge domestic gas stove and could be the way for the future. Couple with a Lemphor exhaust which is much better than the Giesel ejector that 18 201 has thus making the engine much more efficient. So the 18 201 is like a Mercedes it goes very well but when it needs repair it's damn expensive the same for all steam engines as there are no spares any more for any of them.
Incorrect the USA did NOT have the fastest steam locomotive in the world. The British Mullard A4 still holds the fastest steam locomotive at 128 MPH in 1929.
Small but also important detail you forgot on the ICE4 that the ICEs before didn't have, is that it is able to lean into turns, so they are more comfortable and also be taking a bit faster.
Fastest operating the should have said. Apart from that we all know that Mallard reached that 204kph on a downhill stretch. But noch need to argue whether BR05 or Mallard on flat would have been faster. Pennsy S1 in the US was faster than both.
A problem the ICE-4 faces: the tracks in Germany are quite bad in a lot of areas. So quite often the trains will not even reach 250km/h, but somewhere around 100-150km/h. Also the new trains probably won't really help with the terrible service record the Deutsche Bahn has. Good trains do not make a bad company good as well...
@@EnjoyFirefighting Yes, so the speed can only be gone on some parts in Germany. Went on the ICE 3 to Aachen, it went up to 300kmh. The tilting technique is also not possible on every track ( if I am not mistaken) and I guess thats the reason that the "fastest" trains always have the longest delays... ;) Went a lot with DB and still don't like them.
JustABoringJoha 36 so? Other A4 Pacific’s are, and other locos had contentions to being even faster (but unconfirmed). This seems to just rewrite history by not saying factually Mallard was the fastest ever confirmed speed of a Steam Locomotive
JustABoringJoha 36 “Silver Link” had held the record for some number of years at 113mph. And that was one of the first 4 models built. I think it’s safe to say that ANY of the A4s should have been able to achieve this, and later versions which had slight tweaks should have reached 125. That includes “Bittern”, “Sir Nigel Gresley” and “Union of South Africa”
great documentary and very interesting about the German steam loco - although its described as the worlds fastest steam loco - I always thought that honor went to a British A4 4-6-2 pacific class loco called "MALLARD" desigined by Sir Nigel Gresley !
More specifically, the German 05 002 casually set a World Record while catching up a Delay, and wasn't even running on its Limit according to the Footplate Crew. Mallard bet that by just one or two km/h on a dedicated Record Run, while going downhill and still burnt out a Bearing. Please don't accuse me of German Bias though, because there are numerous Records of Pennsylvania S1 and especially T1 Locomtives reaching 230 km/h while catching up Delays, but no one there cared if that was a World Record back then, so it never was offcially recognised. Today there is a Project to rebuild a T1 Locomotive and break Mallard's Record.
The Mallard set a record speed of 140mph or 224kph. I don't think any of the still mobile A4 class are currently doing more than short tourist runs. So, the German steam train is the fastest currently in use.
electrification of a complete line for a mere million swiss franc. meanwhile today it costs 40 million to add a simple station to an existing tram/light rail line.
My reaction as well, but Mallard is now restricted to 120 kph (for reasons I gave above) although it certainly broke the steam speed record before such restrictions. And yes, North America currently has locomotives of impressive size/performance that would equal if not better the Br 18 ... I think a "Big Boy" has been restored to running status.
But it isn't in service anymore. The BR 18 201 is the fastest steam locomotive in service but not of all time. The Pennsylvania Rail Road S1 is the fastest of all time anyway.
@@steffenreimann2854 The Pennsylvanian record however wasn't officially timed, and based on what the crew claimed (the timing supports their claim, but there were no speedometers). Officially, a speed record also has to be set going both directions, which didn't happen there. The Mallard holds the official record, however it's running gear had to be replaced afterwards. The Br05 got very close to the record, however the engineers avoided pushing it too far to avoid damage.
And maybe because a steam locomotive might be heavier in weight (I guess so?) We got a lot of rails that still have the wooden planks and can't even support regional trains at full speed.. let alone the ICE that needs special rails to fulfill its sliding technique.
@@ranjapi693 Nope, the maximum Weight per Axle even was increased since Steam Locomotives were built. Back then, it was 15 Tons on Branch Lines and 20 Tons on Main Lines, today it's 18 and 22 Tons.
I saw the shikishima in Noribitsu last year it pulled into the platform just after i disembarked a train from Sapporo. if i had known then what i know now i would have taken a bit of a longer look at it.
Fastest steam loc is Mallard in England, it can do over 200km/h. This is one of the fastest and comfortable to drive (oil heating instead of coal shoveling), but not The Fastest one.
More specifically, the German 05 002 casually set a World Record while catching up a Delay, and wasn't even running on its Limit according to the Footplate Crew. Mallard bet that by just one or two km/h on a dedicated Record Run, while going downhill and still burnt out a Bearing. Please don't accuse me of German Bias though, because there are numerous Records of Pennsylvania S1 and especially T1 Locomtives reaching 230 km/h while catching up Delays, but no one there cared if that was a World Record back then, so it never was offcially recognised. Today there is a Project to rebuild a T1 Locomotive and break Mallard's Record.
A train from 1939 doing a "special tour" in record speed from germany to poland.
Technik die begeistert.
haha you guys are crazy
"Da werden Erinnerungen wach" - Friedrich (98)
Ƕì
Ƕօա ìʂ ìէ ցօìղց ժҽąɾ
Blitzkrieg
Schneller als ein ICE
2:59: A German train "taking a special trip to Poland"? And then the engineer mentions that the locomotive's wheels and chassis entered service in 1939. The Germans are so oblivious to the jokes!
WAIT A MINUTE
..only the wheels are '39, the Train went on "tour" in '61..
instablaster.
There are still Reichsbahn plates on it.
16:13 "Es ist einfach nur geil" Gotta love that phrase lol
I guess the narrator is also a German speaker? Otherwise I'm impressed by the pronunciation of German words.
Nahhh, they are pronounced pretty badly
He's german
Jan Janzen No
Jan Janzen wenn man zu einem Englischen Publikum spricht verenglischt man die Namen mit Absicht manchmal.
Great idea from the Chef, thick sauce across the plates to stop the food rolling off, very clever man !!
It's really nice to see some of South Africa's technological achievements being broadcasted to the world. Hello from Cape Town!
Hello fellow Capetonian, they nogals keep the best for last
Africa and technology :D
But evidently you've only been on the internet since yesterday
Hello from Joburg🙌
Hello from JHB I haven’t seen the CPT section yet haha
The british steam engine Mallard is the holder of the world speed record for steam locomotives at 126 mph (203 km/h). The record was achieved on 3 July 1938.
while slightly driving downhill and being damaged on that run ... "great" way to win. DR Class 05 reached a doubless documented speed of 200.4 km/h
@@EnjoyFirefighting A win is a win. Deal with it. No one has a whinge about Formula 1 cars that win a race and use the engine only once. Grow up FFS.
@@alastairgray5648 lol that's an entirely different thing but it seems like you just want to be at the top of the stairs at any price, no matter the damage or hazard. It's ridiculous. Luckily that never was our focus ...
More specifically, the German 05 002 casually set a World Record while catching up a Delay, and wasn't even running on its Limit according to the Footplate Crew. Mallard bet that by just one or two km/h on a dedicated Record Run, while going downhill and still burnt out a Bearing. Please don't accuse me of German Bias though, because there are numerous Records of Pennsylvania S1 and especially T1 Locomtives reaching 230 km/h while catching up Delays, but no one there cared if that was a World Record back then, so it never was offcially recognised. Today there is a Project to rebuild a T1 Locomotive and break Mallard's Record.
Glad u corrected them Driver Jo Duddington ECML
19:24 Now he's allowed to go full throttle
Signal displaying speed limit 40 kmh: Ima stop you right here
The Japan train,a beauty
i love these docos not because they show the greatest in the world but because they constantly get it wrong and show something from the top 5 or 10 in the world. Nice change to see the others
Biggest plane, biggest ship, biggest train which we cannot enjoy now because of a "small" virus. Hope life can return to normal very soon.
Japan Luxury train for the passenger (check) but no decent space for the service personnel..? you can't even stand straight inside the room, I thought it is a stock room..Hihihih... Aruy :(
ICE trains and Japanese trains and Chinese trains are really cool!
*German trains
Chinese trains are German.
South Africa my homeland, loving this
The A4 Pacific: Mallard is the fastest steam locomotive in the world. That locomotive reached 126mph or 203kmh to everyone else.
I think they meant the fastest speed during regular operation. The A4s were designed to run at 144,8 km/h (100 km/h are roughly 60 mph) during regular operation and the 18 201 was designed to run at 180 km/h during normal operation. But the A4 Mallard has the official record of the fastest steam locomotive ever at 201,2 km/h. It was driving slightly downhill, though, and it was damaged at the end. Btw: American Locomotives probably could run faster than this later on but they never bothered to break the record officially.
Cafer what American steam train would break the record?
@@RRAAZZAA The Class S1 is reported to be ran at 227km/h to drive in delay. It technically could have achieved it based on the power it had. But, as said, it was never an official record and the evidence is neither clearly declared reliable or unreliable.
The DR class 18 201 steam engine is the fastest loco still in operation. The LNER A4 "Mallard" holds the world speed record at 126mph, but is a static, non operational display only.
@@99Cafer99 Americans never bothered to break many records that only Britain was able to. Oh we could have broken them if we wanted. Yeh I really believe them not.
Wonderful high speed train
Love trains too.
becoming an ICE train driver, im so proud
You would think that people doing doco's like this would do a little research and get their facts correct...
😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
😊
This steam engine is much faster than our metro rail way transit.
yeah ur rigth..MRT always have accidents..
Trains in Africa are faster than American "rapid" transits.
Paname514 Public Transport in America is a joke lol
Nice stuff need to watch more
Amazing to see Transnet talent being celebrated.
Very interesting
Hello from kuching MALAYSIA
18;50 This is what worker pride looks like. A job well done sir. Well done.
30;00 This is what humility and obedient servitude looks like. God bless you.
Very good!
16:12 he doesn't say "awesome", he says "wicked" in german :D it really sounds like he is enjoying his work ;D
The fastest steam locomotive in the world is the Mallard from the UK with a world record speed of 202.78 kph
126mph still stands as the fastest
What is kph?
The Japanese built that train to spread tourism to the less populated areas of Japan and that is exactly what you have to do to create businesses that grow the economy in those sparse regions… Great work
Seeing Shikishima
Me: The hell, 2.800 until 10.000 USD for a trip to a small country like Japan? Who the hell want it??
Narrator: The Shikishima already fully booked until March 2019
Me: I'm just broke...
Bahkan KAI Sleeper pun juga laris manis 😅
22:29 "4 seasons island", to be exact
well patungan sama temen tapi coman bisa satu tiket😅
The shiki-shima train travel four days because the private train cars cost $10,000 each on a first class ride. I learn a lot of this episode. Someday i will take the whole ride of the train discuss here to have a lifetime experiences. Thank you. Sorry for bad grammar.
Yeah, im thinking the same. When you do that, please post ur experience here. When I get on it, I will post something here too :)
Cheers from Indonesia
The steam locomotive is faster than our diesel and electric regional trains. (Australia)
Same across the ditch - that's if you're able to find one operating.
Amazing👍👍👍👍 compilation of trains . You have missed the slowest train in world . Romanian CFR trains
That moment when you are from Hamburg-Eidelstedt
14:12
P.S.:
Damn, why can't Americans not say one German word correctly? :D
Der Typ der das spricht hat einen deutschen Akzent... Sowas passiert mir aber auch manchmal, wenn ich Englisch spreche und dabei einen deutschen Namen ausprechen muss spreche ich den ausversehen Englisch aus.
Wenn man in der Kanalinfo nachguckt steht da ein Impressum
I like programmes like this to flex on the yanks.
wow
1989 Record: South Africa. Run on 26-27 August 1989, comprising 660 wagons, 7.3 km long and a total mass of 71 765 tons on a 1 067 mm gauge line. The train comprised 16 locomotives (9 Class 9E 50 kV AC electric and 7 Class 37 diesel-electric) on the 861 km Sishen - Saldanha iron ore railway
2001 Record: Australia. Run on 21 June 2001, comprising 682 wagons, 7.35 km long and a total mass of 99 734 tons on a 1 435 mm gauge line. The train comprised eight GE AC6000CW diesel-electric locomotives on the 275 km BHP iron ore railway to Port Headland.
Production ore trains:
Sishen - Saldanha 375 wagons - 4 km (2018}
BHP, Port Headland 336 wagons - 3 km (2011)
Beaten by BHp in West Australia over 8kms long and 100,00- tonnes
@@toodogs23 but they dont run now since the line was doubkled so this South African one is the longest regular one still running
wow
Steam locomotives exist that could easily equal the German loco for speed but which are restricted to 75mph/120kph because of the destructive 'hammer effect' caused by those massive connecting rods pounding up and down several times a second on the track.
What is kph?
Kilometers per hour.
@@brianfraser2495 That would be km/h.
Finally a narrator that tryies to pronounce german words correrctly. A rare thing sadly
i subd yes
I admire that ICE
На 9:21 забавно выглядят вагоны РЖД на станции в Берлине :)))
Doing a 120kmph is impressive Considering when it was built. The air pollution is also at an impressive level
😂😂😂 niaje bro
@@codeaperture acha kunianika banaa. 😂😂😂
What is kmph?
The only green about that engine is the paint. Great machine nonetheless.
Leipzig Berlin 2 1/2 hours. ICE makes it in 58 minutes. 250 km.
Only in autumn or spring.. ;)
Imagine waiting at an intersection for the last train to pass...
"Well, just 14 and a halv minutes left now..."
Snowpiercer brought me here...Mr. Wilford lol
More carbon emissions than all my ancestors did,,hats of 👍
Do your research ... BHP ore train in Western Australia, 682 cars and 7.3km long, once carried 82,000 metric tons of ore for a total weight of the train, largest in the world, of 99734 tonnes. It was driven by eight locomotives distributed along its length to keep the couplings loads and curve performance controllable.
john morrison “once carried”. Might be the difference
yes John ,they also got it wrong about the worlds fastest stream loco- everyone knows that honor went the the british "MALLARD " steam loco at 126 mph - unbeaten to this day !!
@@martinc.720
So we descend to a semantic argument? This video is riddled with errors; evidence of someone who does very sloppy research.
Germany rocks!
Why is there Hangul (Korean) written on the side of the Pilatus?
Maybe ITS multyple language slogan?
Everyone texting about how cool the ICE and german trains are in general: The narrator basically said it. Only when a lot of people use the trains, they get PROFITABLE. A governmental infrastructure system should not be profit orientated. Since the "Deutsche Bahn" went to the stock exchange, they were forced to make profit. As a result, a lot of the infrastructure has been neglected and apart of a few very modern and VERY expensive luxurious projects like Stuttgart 21 AND also the ICE 4, almost everything is going down and gets dilapidated. But for further details, and why this is the case, please read articles for yourself, because it would be way too much to conclude it in a short stupid UA-cam comment.
The ICEs were quite well-utilised though, at least when I was in Germany a few summers ago, albeit a little slow by HSR standards (~140km/h on many stretches). Quite a number of the commuter trains I was on were underutilised however.
shiki train new idea?
Check Orient Express ;-)
Which one ? - European or Eastern, Oriental Express.
The European one is what passes for the original version.
The Eastern version, is the former "Silver Star", which was run by N.ZR. .
Have you heard about the A4 mallard? It can do 200 Kph. Therefore making the A4 the fastest steam loco
What is kph?
The South African ore train example at 41:33 is tiny compared to Worlds longest and heaviest train - Australia's iron ore train. The 7·3 km train was formed of 682 wagons, gross weight was 99734 tonnes.
This series not a very reliable source.
Its actually really reliable. The Australian one is "only" 2,8km long since 2015.
This series is about the "now" not the "was at some point"
💕💕❤❤💘💘
29:51 she was fired after saying that... :v
How do you know?
@@jackchapo2011 its a joke.. 😒
there's a term for train driver, it's called machinist
Shiki-Shima; "eggs in one basket".
47:31 2 km is very short considered the length of the train - it stops in less that half it's over all length - I want to see a car that is capable of doing that even from 50km/h.
So Germans still keep steam trains from 1939 to visit Poland...okay.
21:54 , And it took 30 years for my Dad to buy milk
And I thought the fastest steam train is the LNER A4, which achieved a speed record of 203km/h in 1938
More specifically, the German 05 002 casually set a World Record while catching up a Delay, and wasn't even running on its Limit according to the Footplate Crew. Mallard bet that by just one or two km/h on a dedicated Record Run, while going downhill and still burnt out a Bearing. Please don't accuse me of German Bias though, because there are numerous Records of Pennsylvania S1 and especially T1 Locomtives reaching 230 km/h while catching up Delays, but no one there cared if that was a World Record back then, so it never was offcially recognised. Today there is a Project to rebuild a T1 Locomotive and break Mallard's Record.
The steam is heated twice in 18 201 through the superheater tubes and just about every other steam engine is the same. The Swiss have moved it up a notch now with heavy oil firing being old technology and the Swiss have developed light oil firing or diesel fuel for steam engines. The burner looks like a huge domestic gas stove and could be the way for the future. Couple with a Lemphor exhaust which is much better than the Giesel ejector that 18 201 has thus making the engine much more efficient.
So the 18 201 is like a Mercedes it goes very well but when it needs repair it's damn expensive the same for all steam engines as there are no spares any more for any of them.
26:54 Dear Narrator it is HO KAI DO
not Ho Kai YI Do
Close enough...
strange that i got block for trying to correct the pronunciation
Ming Yuan Heng It’s because it does not matter.
@@martinc.720 well lets try to butcher your name....
m.... artin... cee
Ming Yuan Heng You think that bothers me? Wow. Just wow
I believe the longest train is located in Western Australia and nearly twice as long as this South African one???
Same thought. Iron ore trains, Northern West Australia &, or, the Kimberly's, to Perth ! ?🤔
@@davidarundel6187 To the iron ore port at Port Hedland, actually.
my fav is Chinese bullet trains and old green trains
👍👍👍
Else . . . can write your story .
Incorrect the USA did NOT have the fastest steam locomotive in the world. The British Mullard A4 still holds the fastest steam locomotive at 128 MPH in 1929.
18 201 is my favorite steam locomotive. So sexy. Its a shame that she is not driving anymore.
longest trains are in Australia...
Agreed, like the longest journey passenger trains being the indian pacific or ghan
@@sharkyy3995 the locomotive in the video can reach 180 km/h
@@sharkyy3995 it was said, the locomotive can reach 180 km/h. however, it runs on oil and maybe thats where the difference lies
@@robinledowski9920 Would the Trans Siberian or Trans Mongolian be the world's longest passenger train journey?
19:39 This s a lie!
2:31
Can we talk about that tiny little "Köf" locomotive pulling that giant steam engine out of storage?
Why do transnet dont build additional lines to Cape town.
$$$$. Can't spend what they don't have
Should wear properly her hard hat (Japanese segment)
The pillars in the cockpit are soo huge..
Small but also important detail you forgot on the ICE4 that the ICEs before didn't have, is that it is able to lean into turns, so they are more comfortable and also be taking a bit faster.
The ICE T had that feature before the ICE 4
@@thembani5900 ICE 4 isn't a tilting train....
Terrorist im Flugzeug yeah I know I read about it after replying to the other guys comment
Fastest steam engine is actually Mallard it can reach 201 kph / 126 mph
Fastest operating the should have said. Apart from that we all know that Mallard reached that 204kph on a downhill stretch. But noch need to argue whether BR05 or Mallard on flat would have been faster. Pennsy S1 in the US was faster than both.
@@qora01m Not the longest train either.That goes to BHP in western australia 8kms long and 100,000 tonnes..
What is kph?
This documentary is wrong. Fastest steam locomotive is Mallard. 200+ kmh
They say FAR the fast! Losten to what is said!
And the tgv and agv trains are far more advanced than the ice
A problem the ICE-4 faces: the tracks in Germany are quite bad in a lot of areas. So quite often the trains will not even reach 250km/h, but somewhere around 100-150km/h. Also the new trains probably won't really help with the terrible service record the Deutsche Bahn has. Good trains do not make a bad company good as well...
the point is that the tracks aren't in poor shape but that they share ordinary tracks with other trains, tracks which aren't dedicated for HSR
@@EnjoyFirefighting Yes, so the speed can only be gone on some parts in Germany. Went on the ICE 3 to Aachen, it went up to 300kmh. The tilting technique is also not possible on every track ( if I am not mistaken) and I guess thats the reason that the "fastest" trains always have the longest delays... ;) Went a lot with DB and still don't like them.
"Fastest steam train in the world"
*Sad Mallard Noises*
But the mallard is not active anymore
JustABoringJoha 36 so? Other A4 Pacific’s are, and other locos had contentions to being even faster (but unconfirmed).
This seems to just rewrite history by not saying factually Mallard was the fastest ever confirmed speed of a Steam Locomotive
JustABoringJoha 36 “Silver Link” had held the record for some number of years at 113mph. And that was one of the first 4 models built.
I think it’s safe to say that ANY of the A4s should have been able to achieve this, and later versions which had slight tweaks should have reached 125. That includes “Bittern”, “Sir Nigel Gresley” and “Union of South Africa”
The world fastest steam train
Me: Oh no that means more pollution
Hahahahahahahahaha the narrator obviously not heard of mallard lol
6:48 Pretty sure Mallard is fastest...
7:45
Note that they hooked up two tenders, since there's very few places to refuel nowadays.
great documentary and very interesting about the German steam loco - although its described as the worlds fastest steam loco - I always thought that honor went to a British A4 4-6-2 pacific class loco called "MALLARD" desigined by Sir Nigel Gresley !
It did. This is not the fastest steam loco in the world.
More specifically, the German 05 002 casually set a World Record while catching up a Delay, and wasn't even running on its Limit according to the Footplate Crew. Mallard bet that by just one or two km/h on a dedicated Record Run, while going downhill and still burnt out a Bearing. Please don't accuse me of German Bias though, because there are numerous Records of Pennsylvania S1 and especially T1 Locomtives reaching 230 km/h while catching up Delays, but no one there cared if that was a World Record back then, so it never was offcially recognised. Today there is a Project to rebuild a T1 Locomotive and break Mallard's Record.
The Mallard set a record speed of 140mph or 224kph. I don't think any of the still mobile A4 class are currently doing more than short tourist runs. So, the German steam train is the fastest currently in use.
Actually, fastest steam train is the Mallard. Can reach 203 km/h
electrification of a complete line for a mere million swiss franc. meanwhile today it costs 40 million to add a simple station to an existing tram/light rail line.
Br 18 Fastest in world? Mallard is what?
My reaction as well, but Mallard is now restricted to 120 kph (for reasons I gave above) although it certainly broke the steam speed record before such restrictions. And yes, North America currently has locomotives of impressive size/performance that would equal if not better the Br 18 ... I think a "Big Boy" has been restored to running status.
The Br 18 is just the fastest steam engine in the world which still is in service..ö
The fastest in service is BR 18 201. The fastest of all time is PRR S1.
i was Hoping to see James May in the Shiki Shima
😃🤗😊☺️👍👏👏👏
12:45 am äußeren wurde nichts geändert... Ist das denkmalgeschützt?
I thought the Mallard was the fastest steam locomotive...?
But it isn't in service anymore. The BR 18 201 is the fastest steam locomotive in service but not of all time. The Pennsylvania Rail Road S1 is the fastest of all time anyway.
@@steffenreimann2854
The Pennsylvanian record however wasn't officially timed, and based on what the crew claimed (the timing supports their claim, but there were no speedometers). Officially, a speed record also has to be set going both directions, which didn't happen there.
The Mallard holds the official record, however it's running gear had to be replaced afterwards. The Br05 got very close to the record, however the engineers avoided pushing it too far to avoid damage.
@@steffenreimann2854 It's used from time to time.
Snow Piercer should be here
A free documentary with adverts?
Fun Fact: Many of the german rails actually wouldn't support the steam locomotive at top speed, since many of them are rated for about 100/120 km/h
And maybe because a steam locomotive might be heavier in weight (I guess so?) We got a lot of rails that still have the wooden planks and can't even support regional trains at full speed.. let alone the ICE that needs special rails to fulfill its sliding technique.
@@ranjapi693 It would depend on how the weight is distributed, but it probably would still be heavier, you're right.
@@ranjapi693 Nope, the maximum Weight per Axle even was increased since Steam Locomotives were built. Back then, it was 15 Tons on Branch Lines and 20 Tons on Main Lines, today it's 18 and 22 Tons.
I saw the shikishima in Noribitsu last year it pulled into the platform just after i disembarked a train from Sapporo. if i had known then what i know now i would have taken a bit of a longer look at it.
no comments about pilatustrain😢
Fastest steam loc is Mallard in England, it can do over 200km/h. This is one of the fastest and comfortable to drive (oil heating instead of coal shoveling), but not The Fastest one.
More specifically, the German 05 002 casually set a World Record while catching up a Delay, and wasn't even running on its Limit according to the Footplate Crew. Mallard bet that by just one or two km/h on a dedicated Record Run, while going downhill and still burnt out a Bearing. Please don't accuse me of German Bias though, because there are numerous Records of Pennsylvania S1 and especially T1 Locomtives reaching 230 km/h while catching up Delays, but no one there cared if that was a World Record back then, so it never was offcially recognised. Today there is a Project to rebuild a T1 Locomotive and break Mallard's Record.