Just got back from doing the Goldfields Railway myself(yes I'm in Melbourne right now). Thanks a lot for this video as my family really enjoyed the ride in this clunky but wonderful journey😊.
Facts about the line: The Maldon branch actually was a branch off the Maryborough-Castlemaine line which you rode a bit on but they diverged before you left Castlemaine. The Maryborough-Castlemaine line was the original line to Maryborough before the more direct route via Ballarat was built. The line is not disused and cut at both ends but track, bridges and old station buildings do remain to this day. Maldon was also not the very end of the line. The line continued to Shelbourne with plans to link onto another line (forgot to town where it was meant to join). Similarly to Daylesford, from Maldon you could continue along the line but had to reverse (leave the same direction you came from) and the junction wasn’t far from the station. The Shelbourne line was primarily used for goods services but there was some passenger services run there.
Thank you for this video. The rail runs behind my house, and you can hear the train horn all over town. The walks next to the track are good for taking a stroll along too. Thanks for including the history as well. I didn't realise how relatively recently the historic railway had begun operating.
I have done this trip too. I did it in 2015 when my daughter was hiking the PCT. I met an interesting woman who had done the same hike the year before. Several children along the way wanted to wave to the people on the train. Lovely trip.
Thanks for the review. We had a terrific time on Monday in excursion class. They’d put on a special extra service for the Labour Day public holiday and it seemed that not many were aware of this so we had the cabin all to ourselves. During March the steam locomotive is under maintenance so they used a reconditioned V-Line diesel hauler, kids travelled free with adults as a form of compensation. The wife enjoyed Maldon with its many cafes and shops, though my son and I there for the train. A highlight was the sheer number of locals who come out to wave and mountain bike riders attempting to beat the train. We’re lucky in Victoria to have so many tourist railways, and next up is Queenscliff for the ride and silver service lunch. A quirky one is the Yarra Valley rail motor, but we’ll have to wait until the volunteers have finished works on the brick tunnel.
That sounds like a great day out. Glad you found the review helpful. Yes, you’re lucky to have so many heritage railways in Victoria. I need to check a few more of them out. Cheers!
That was awesome Adam!! Felt like we were up there riding with you!! Great filming and very entertaining.. Dad and I always look forward to your videos.. We love your smiles and waves to the camera too!! See you on your next adventure 💙🙂
Thank you, Adam, always enjoy your train videos, clear and simple. I am planning a trip to Melbourne end of year with my family. Thinking of this one-day train trip.
Another great episode Adam, we went in this train some 30 years ago when it only went a short distance back then, another item for the bucket list as well as the Stony Point line👍🙏😇
Great video. Something you didn’t quite catch at Maldon was there version of Thomas The Tank Engine. Interesting thing about the J class loco is they were the last steam engines built in Australia, and rank possibly among the last built in the world. An unusual feature of many of theses Red Rattlers used on the trains was an unusual tri axel or 3 axel bogey. Possibly used to reduce the axel load on these lightly laid rural lines or maybe a smoother ride on the rough poorly maintained tracks. Keep it up.🇦🇺
Thank you. Yes, I sort of missed the tank engine. Interesting about the J Class. 🤔 I did notice some of the carriages with three axles and found it quite unusual but didn’t know the reason for it. Interesting. Thanks for watching!
I miss that ‘clickety clack’. I grew up a stones throw from what is now an almost redundant station in NSW. Back then, it was actually safe for younger girls to catch the train wherever you wanted to go. So i went by train everywhere. With the old red rattlers, the doors & windows wide open and usually hanging out the door. There’s a blast from the past! Those chairs in 1st class needed to be set up facing the windows. Apart from that, what a fantastic journey. Another great video, Adam.
Thanks so much Linda. When I was young, we had Redhen suburban railcars in Adelaide, with manual doors which you could also leave open. It was a wonderful experience! Cheers.
@ 12:02. On right hand side is the groomer I take my dog to. Just down from that an excellent bakery. And on the left hand side about 300 metres down some good cafes. And a pub.
My family has been on this train twice in excursion class, nice to wave to people who stop to see the train. Excellent video. I also took video of the loco on the turntable. Interesting info about The Dress Maker movie, I loved that film.
Great video! Always been a steam fanatic so having a showcase for this heritage line is a good find! Will definitely be paying it a visit when I eventually get round to visiting Australia 🇦🇺
Loco J516 was a static installation in a Greensborough park (Poulter Reserve) during the 70s and 80s - I have many happy memories of playing on it as a kid, and I saw it daily when I started catching the train to secondary school and walked past it taking my short-cut to the station. I believe the Yarra Valley Railway Co. acquired it. I hope they get it running, I would love to take a ride on it someday.
Great railway. Interesting comparison, in first class when you have to pay for eats and drinks on top of that fare for and 1.5 hr return trip. I just did the Pichi Richi and paid $75 for a 78 km return trip through the Flinders ranges with 2hrs in Qourn - all up 6 hr trip. (No drinks or nibbles)
Yes, very interesting. Heritage railways are notoriously expensive to run so I guess there’d be a range of factors that affect why some have much higher prices than others. 🤔
The train crosses the Bendigo - Maldon Road. ua-cam.com/video/BlqXuClcS8w/v-deo.html Train to Maldon, have lunch in town, and back to Castlemaine in the afternoon. A great day out. 🚂 Another thing to try is to ride up the rail trail from Castlemaine by bicycle, and train it back. The guard is very friendly and accommodating.
Watched your video again and thoroughly enjoyed it once more. Just wondering have you thought of traveling on Puffing Billy in the Dandenong ranges, it’d would be well worth it?🇦🇺
I am most impressed with your editing, script and sound. Just an enquiry - there seems to be excessive base in your location sound on the train. What are you using for location sound?
Thank you! So if you’re referring to the natural sound this would have been a GoPro or an iPhone 12 Pro Max. But I’m now using an iPhone 15 Pro Max and a DJI Osmo Pocket 3, so hopefully audio has improved.
That explains it. I’m in my 80s and have just started video editing and videoing our Pioneers SA events and started their Video Channel in South Australia a few months ago years ago. Sound is the hardest thing to do. Of course our meetings are not rolling stock just boring old farts sitting through presentations. Started out with a friends 12 year old HD handycam. I think I’ve got the live lectern sound right but I had a background in sound. UA-cam ‘Pioneers SA’ if you’re interested.
@@FromtheWindowSeat I tried to reply from my phone - not sure if it worked however, I'm in my early eighties and have just started on the video editing thing but the hardest thing to do is the sound. (I do the PA also) I have started a UA-cam channel for the Pioneers Association of South Australia ('Pioneers SA') and it has developed from a couple of 14 year old handycams given to me. We video our events and put them up for other members to view. I use AI to denoise the lectern mic then add atmosphere back in when I need it such as laughs and applause. It is very enjoyable but challenging. Your editing skills to me are awesome. I can hear room-effect in your voice over. AI would remove it but, its not at all bothersome. What mic set up are you using for voiceovers? I have noticed that many people are choosing the Shure SM7b however, I don't like the proximity effect. For me the Electroivoice RE20 is just a tweeny weeny bit better. If you look at my stuff you'll notice that I use Rode NT3 and split that to the camera and PA mixer. Your not in a position to do that kind of set up because you are mobile. Thank you for the chance to share info because I feel I'm working in total isolation.
@@Currym0n Wow - you've gone deep into a very professional setup. I record my voiceovers at home (rather than when travelling) using as Rode NT-USB mic. It's nowhere near as professional as the Shure mic you mention. When travelling I used to use the Rode Mic Go but have now transitioned to using the DJI Mic 2 but with a RODE Lavalier II mic. Sound is hard, as you say - and I'm no expert. Mostly self taught from watching other UA-camrs.
Dear Adam I particularly don't use the Shure as other UA-camr's do. I avoid it like the plague. At the Lectern I use a Rode NT3 Hyper cardioid 3/4" condenser mic with a Sennheiser XSW-d XLR wireless link to the mixer and from the mixer I use another Sennheiser link to the camera. I understand completely how you have to do sound on the run and you do it very well. I have the privilege of being able to have a mixer on site at the venue. I know It sounds elaborate however the signal chain is basically a split from the PA mixer to the camera via wireless link. Here is a shot of our SA Governor at the lectern with the Rode mic in 2022 ua-cam.com/video/Kh0a42hjFU0/v-deo.html Here is the same mic at the same venue a year later using AI to de-noise the audio - using to AI de-noise the sound seems to have a studio sound quality in a live environment. I think the AI treatment is wonderful. I value your opinion. Paul @@FromtheWindowSeat
Amazing video, I recently started watching them and they are great. I do want to ask, why was there a diesel engine at the return journey. Is it pushing the stream loco and the carriages?
Thank you so much! The diesel is used to shunt at Maldon and I’m not sure but I think they always have a diesel attached as a backup in case the steam engine fails. 🤔
Very nice. Just a suggestion, why don’t you point out some tourist attractions in Maldon during your next trip so that others who want to ride after watching this video will roughly know what to do during the 2hr break in Maldon.
Good suggestion - thank you! I originally had an idea along those lines, and was going to visit the Maldon Museum, but because I spent a while watching the movements in Maldon yard, I sort of ran out of time. Will try to be more organised next time! ;)
Have you done the Walhalla Goldfields Railway? I would be interested to see which "Goldfields Railway" is best. I know I want to do the "Goldfields Railway" on my next trip to Victoria but I get myself confused on which one I am actually thinking about.
I think Southern Cross station in Melbourne is the worst city station in Australia,I was there in September 2022 and I had forgotten how bad the fumes are.Clearly a bad building design .
You need to stop showing your face continuously through the video.People are not watching to see your face,they want to see the video.Also stop reverse filming of yourself in the mirror. 😮
This UA-cam channel deserve more views and subscriptions than any other travelogue documentaries. So, it's my humble request to our esteemed subscriber to share this UA-cam channel as much as you can. It will be the true subscription to this beautiful and unique channel. Thank you 💝 💝💝
I could see by your face you were loving that! Great video, your train vlogs are awesome.
I was 💯. Thanks so much!
Our next holiday around Australia for sure we will travel by train
Wonderful!
My husband drove that J-Class Engine a few years ago for his birthday. He loved every minute of it.
Oh wow - that would have been a brilliant experience! :)
Just got back from doing the Goldfields Railway myself(yes I'm in Melbourne right now). Thanks a lot for this video as my family really enjoyed the ride in this clunky but wonderful journey😊.
Clunky but wonderful - good description! Cheers!
@@FromtheWindowSeat Thanks mate
Facts about the line:
The Maldon branch actually was a branch off the Maryborough-Castlemaine line which you rode a bit on but they diverged before you left Castlemaine. The Maryborough-Castlemaine line was the original line to Maryborough before the more direct route via Ballarat was built. The line is not disused and cut at both ends but track, bridges and old station buildings do remain to this day.
Maldon was also not the very end of the line. The line continued to Shelbourne with plans to link onto another line (forgot to town where it was meant to join). Similarly to Daylesford, from Maldon you could continue along the line but had to reverse (leave the same direction you came from) and the junction wasn’t far from the station. The Shelbourne line was primarily used for goods services but there was some passenger services run there.
Well there you go - good to know. Thank you for sharing!
thanks for giving us the rail experience to the far place..we enjoyed it while laying on bed
Thank you. Glad you enjoyed it.
Once I travelled from Ankara to Tehran crossing Lake Van. That was very excitement good thanks 😊
Oh wow - sounds like a great experience.
Thank you for this video. The rail runs behind my house, and you can hear the train horn all over town. The walks next to the track are good for taking a stroll along too. Thanks for including the history as well. I didn't realise how relatively recently the historic railway had begun operating.
Oh wow - how cool. Thank you for the great feedback. 😃
I love the trip to Maldon from Castlemaine...must do it again soon and maybe try 1st class. 🤗👍😜
Yes - it’s great. I definitely recommend giving first class a go. 👌
A lovely video Adam, and so great to see passionate people preserving railway history.
Thank you! Yes, it’s great to see railways lovingly preserved like this.
I have done this trip too. I did it in 2015 when my daughter was hiking the PCT. I met an interesting woman who had done the same hike the year before.
Several children along the way wanted to wave to the people on the train.
Lovely trip.
Great to hear. Thank you!
Thanks for the review. We had a terrific time on Monday in excursion class. They’d put on a special extra service for the Labour Day public holiday and it seemed that not many were aware of this so we had the cabin all to ourselves. During March the steam locomotive is under maintenance so they used a reconditioned V-Line diesel hauler, kids travelled free with adults as a form of compensation.
The wife enjoyed Maldon with its many cafes and shops, though my son and I there for the train.
A highlight was the sheer number of locals who come out to wave and mountain bike riders attempting to beat the train.
We’re lucky in Victoria to have so many tourist railways, and next up is Queenscliff for the ride and silver service lunch.
A quirky one is the Yarra Valley rail motor, but we’ll have to wait until the volunteers have finished works on the brick tunnel.
That sounds like a great day out. Glad you found the review helpful. Yes, you’re lucky to have so many heritage railways in Victoria. I need to check a few more of them out. Cheers!
That was awesome Adam!!
Felt like we were up there riding with you!!
Great filming and very entertaining..
Dad and I always look forward to your videos..
We love your smiles and waves to the camera too!!
See you on your next adventure 💙🙂
Thank you Corinne. That is wonderful to hear! Certainly helps keep me motivated to keep making them. 😊
Excellent Presentation on our Past Steam Rail.
Thank you very much!
Adam fantastic we enjoy good jobs always !!!!!!!!
Thanks Anita!
I'm so delighted with your videos. I wish I could go back to Australia.
Thank you. Lovely to hear!
DMU....noise and vibrations in every passenger car....really hate those.
But your Vlog really is 1st class, thank you.
Thank you!
I love trains and this was a real fun to watch. Great work Adam✌️🍻🚂🚃🚃
Wonderful to hear - thank you! 😀
really nice to see older style loco kept going including the carriages. i love the older style interiors such class.
Yes, it’s a wonderful experience. 😊
Great video! You gotta love the old steam engines. Who wouldn't love riding on a train pulled by one of these old beauties?
Thank you! Yes, sheer joy! 😃
Congratulations. I really enjoy your presentations which I believe to be highly informative. Well done you have certainly whet my appetite.👏👍🦘
Hi John. Thank you so much! Great to hear. 😊
Thank you, Adam, always enjoy your train videos, clear and simple. I am planning a trip to Melbourne end of year with my family. Thinking of this one-day train trip.
Great to hear that Bobby. Thank you! Hope you have a brilliant trip!
Sheldon Cooper would love your channel
He would! 🤓😝
Another great episode Adam, we went in this train some 30 years ago when it only went a short distance back then, another item for the bucket list as well as the Stony Point line👍🙏😇
Happy to hear I'm adding to your bucket list. Thanks for watching! 😊
I just booked this trip yesterday for August 10 and today your excellent review popped up!
Thank you! Hope you enjoy it as much as I did.
Great video. Something you didn’t quite catch at Maldon was there version of Thomas The Tank Engine. Interesting thing about the J class loco is they were the last steam engines built in Australia, and rank possibly among the last built in the world. An unusual feature of many of theses Red Rattlers used on the trains was an unusual tri axel or 3 axel bogey. Possibly used to reduce the axel load on these lightly laid rural lines or maybe a smoother ride on the rough poorly maintained tracks. Keep it up.🇦🇺
Thank you. Yes, I sort of missed the tank engine. Interesting about the J Class. 🤔
I did notice some of the carriages with three axles and found it quite unusual but didn’t know the reason for it. Interesting. Thanks for watching!
I miss that ‘clickety clack’. I grew up a stones throw from what is now an almost redundant station in NSW. Back then, it was actually safe for younger girls to catch the train wherever you wanted to go. So i went by train everywhere. With the old red rattlers, the doors & windows wide open and usually hanging out the door. There’s a blast from the past!
Those chairs in 1st class needed to be set up facing the windows. Apart from that, what a fantastic journey. Another great video, Adam.
Thanks so much Linda. When I was young, we had Redhen suburban railcars in Adelaide, with manual doors which you could also leave open. It was a wonderful experience! Cheers.
A really well made video. Thank you. 👍
Thanks so much!
The locomotive and coaches look absolutely stunning. Great video as always!
Thank you very much!
Very well done!
Thank you very much!
@ 12:02. On right hand side is the groomer I take my dog to. Just down from that an excellent bakery. And on the left hand side about 300 metres down some good cafes. And a pub.
Oh wow - small world! Good to know. :)
This is so cool. Great job.
Thank you! Cheers!
Very very enjoyable educational video. From the narration, you spent a lot of time on your research. Thank you for your commitment and hard work.
Thank you so much! So great to read that. Yes, it’s something of a labour of love.
Great video. Interesting to see the Janney coupler and thr lowered semaphore signal towards the end.
Thanks Andrea! I thought this one might be your cup of tea. 😉
Very cool.
Thanks!
Excellent coverage as always Adam. Cheers mate.
Cheers! 😃
Hi Adam what a lovely old train and steam engine love the sound. Thank you very much for the video.
Hi Maureen. Yes, it was a lovely trip. Glad you liked it.
That's an another master piece of Video from You !!!
I am really impressed 😁😁
A lots of love from India 💕💕😘😘
Very kind of you - thank you! :)
My family has been on this train twice in excursion class, nice to wave to people who stop to see the train. Excellent video. I also took video of the loco on the turntable. Interesting info about The Dress Maker movie, I loved that film.
Thanks so much! Yes, it’s a lovely train trip. ☺️
Haven’t been on this train for about 20 years. At that time it only ran from Maldon to Muckleford then went back.
Cool.
Great video! Always been a steam fanatic so having a showcase for this heritage line is a good find! Will definitely be paying it a visit when I eventually get round to visiting Australia 🇦🇺
Wonderful to hear. Hope you enjoy it!
Loco J516 was a static installation in a Greensborough park (Poulter Reserve) during the 70s and 80s - I have many happy memories of playing on it as a kid, and I saw it daily when I started catching the train to secondary school and walked past it taking my short-cut to the station. I believe the Yarra Valley Railway Co. acquired it. I hope they get it running, I would love to take a ride on it someday.
Good to know. Cheers!
yo! very cool ~mate. 🤗
Thank you! Cheers!
Excellent coverage !!!
Thank you! 🙏
Amazing
Thanks!
Great railway. Interesting comparison, in first class when you have to pay for eats and drinks on top of that fare for and 1.5 hr return trip. I just did the Pichi Richi and paid $75 for a 78 km return trip through the Flinders ranges with 2hrs in Qourn - all up 6 hr trip. (No drinks or nibbles)
Yes, very interesting. Heritage railways are notoriously expensive to run so I guess there’d be a range of factors that affect why some have much higher prices than others. 🤔
Always travel on the verandah when its at the rear of the train
Yes, good suggestion.
Looks like fun. I thought licensed premises had to provide toilet facilities. LOL
It was. That’s true but perhaps they have an exemption. 🤔
The train crosses the Bendigo - Maldon Road. ua-cam.com/video/BlqXuClcS8w/v-deo.html
Train to Maldon, have lunch in town, and back to Castlemaine in the afternoon. A great day out. 🚂
Another thing to try is to ride up the rail trail from Castlemaine by bicycle, and train it back. The guard is very friendly and accommodating.
Yes, certainly is a great day out. Good tip re the rail trail. Cheers!
Watched your video again and thoroughly enjoyed it once more. Just wondering have you thought of traveling on Puffing Billy in the Dandenong ranges, it’d would be well worth it?🇦🇺
Thank you! I have been on Puffing Billy before but not since I started making videos. Definitely one to consider. 🤔
Another great film Adam. I was especially pleased to see the turntable at Maldon. Is there one at Castlemaine?
Thank you! Yes, I believe there is one but it’s behind a shed so you can’t see it from the railway station.
I am most impressed with your editing, script and sound. Just an enquiry - there seems to be excessive base in your location sound on the train. What are you using for location sound?
Thank you! So if you’re referring to the natural sound this would have been a GoPro or an iPhone 12 Pro Max. But I’m now using an iPhone 15 Pro Max and a DJI Osmo Pocket 3, so hopefully audio has improved.
That explains it. I’m in my 80s and have just started video editing and videoing our Pioneers SA events and started their Video Channel in South Australia a few months ago years ago. Sound is the hardest thing to do. Of course our meetings are not rolling stock just boring old farts sitting through presentations. Started out with a friends 12 year old HD handycam. I think I’ve got the live lectern sound right but I had a background in sound. UA-cam ‘Pioneers SA’ if you’re interested.
@@FromtheWindowSeat I tried to reply from my phone - not sure if it worked however, I'm in my early eighties and have just started on the video editing thing but the hardest thing to do is the sound. (I do the PA also) I have started a UA-cam channel for the Pioneers Association of South Australia ('Pioneers SA') and it has developed from a couple of 14 year old handycams given to me. We video our events and put them up for other members to view. I use AI to denoise the lectern mic then add atmosphere back in when I need it such as laughs and applause. It is very enjoyable but challenging. Your editing skills to me are awesome. I can hear room-effect in your voice over. AI would remove it but, its not at all bothersome. What mic set up are you using for voiceovers? I have noticed that many people are choosing the Shure SM7b however, I don't like the proximity effect. For me the Electroivoice RE20 is just a tweeny weeny bit better. If you look at my stuff you'll notice that I use Rode NT3 and split that to the camera and PA mixer. Your not in a position to do that kind of set up because you are mobile. Thank you for the chance to share info because I feel I'm working in total isolation.
@@Currym0n Wow - you've gone deep into a very professional setup. I record my voiceovers at home (rather than when travelling) using as Rode NT-USB mic. It's nowhere near as professional as the Shure mic you mention. When travelling I used to use the Rode Mic Go but have now transitioned to using the DJI Mic 2 but with a RODE Lavalier II mic. Sound is hard, as you say - and I'm no expert. Mostly self taught from watching other UA-camrs.
Dear Adam I particularly don't use the Shure as other UA-camr's do. I avoid it like the plague. At the Lectern I use a Rode NT3 Hyper cardioid 3/4" condenser mic with a Sennheiser XSW-d XLR wireless link to the mixer and from the mixer I use another Sennheiser link to the camera. I understand completely how you have to do sound on the run and you do it very well. I have the privilege of being able to have a mixer on site at the venue. I know It sounds elaborate however the signal chain is basically a split from the PA mixer to the camera via wireless link. Here is a shot of our SA Governor at the lectern with the Rode mic in 2022 ua-cam.com/video/Kh0a42hjFU0/v-deo.html
Here is the same mic at the same venue a year later using AI to de-noise the audio - using to AI de-noise the sound seems to have a studio sound quality in a live environment. I think the AI treatment is wonderful. I value your opinion. Paul @@FromtheWindowSeat
Looking forward to this trip Adam,really enjoy your videos.But hate the word Lavatory instead of toilets.So old English.Lol
Thank you. Ha - yes, it’s an old school term.
Amazing video, I recently started watching them and they are great. I do want to ask, why was there a diesel engine at the return journey. Is it pushing the stream loco and the carriages?
Thank you so much! The diesel is used to shunt at Maldon and I’m not sure but I think they always have a diesel attached as a backup in case the steam engine fails. 🤔
Do you get around Steamrail Victoria and their tours?
Not yet. Although I went on a short segment between Warrnambool and Camperdown back in Feb.
What was the purpose of the diesel locomotive at the back on the return trip? Thanks for yet another nice video!
Thank you! Someone else may be able to confirm but I think it’s to help with shunting and as a backup in case the steam engine fails. 🤔
Very nice. Just a suggestion, why don’t you point out some tourist attractions in Maldon during your next trip so that others who want to ride after watching this video will roughly know what to do during the 2hr break in Maldon.
Make your way to the Kangaroo Hotel for a great pub lunch. When I’ve been there I’ve often seen passengers come in for lunch.
@@xr6lad Good to know!
Good suggestion - thank you! I originally had an idea along those lines, and was going to visit the Maldon Museum, but because I spent a while watching the movements in Maldon yard, I sort of ran out of time. Will try to be more organised next time! ;)
@@FromtheWindowSeat Noted. Can’t wait to see your Ararat adventure.
To be honest, by the time you walk into town, have lunch, and poke your head in a shop or two, that's your time up.
Have you done the Walhalla Goldfields Railway? I would be interested to see which "Goldfields Railway" is best. I know I want to do the "Goldfields Railway" on my next trip to Victoria but I get myself confused on which one I am actually thinking about.
I haven’t. It’s on my to do list! ☑️
Where can we see the bar menu?
You could try contacting them. Couldn’t find a menu on their website.
www.vgr.com.au/first-class-travel
you'll have to try the R class steam loco's to Geelong
Would love to! :)
❤❤❤❤❤
🙏
好棒好喜欢好漂亮快乐幸福健康好开心好好🙏🙏🙏👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️🌹🌹🌹🏆💯💯💯💐💐💐👏👏👏🎉🎉🎉🎉
Thank you! 🙏
The steam loco was converted into oil burning which has a huge tank on the top
I think half were ordered as coal burning and half as oil burning.
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victorian_Railways_J_class_(1954)
@@FromtheWindowSeat uh, i c
I didn’t know Victorians had invented the wheel yet
🙊
I think Southern Cross station in Melbourne is the worst city station in Australia,I was there in September 2022 and I had forgotten how bad the fumes are.Clearly a bad building design .
I think it looks impressive architecturally but yes, not great for diesel fumes.
No toilets? HELP!
You just need to go to the toilets on the platform at either end of the trip.
Nice trip, HORRIBLE MUSIC! YUK
Cheers!
You need to stop showing your face continuously through the video.People are not watching to see your face,they want to see the video.Also stop reverse filming of yourself in the mirror. 😮
Ok. Thanks for the feedback.
xox= luv =xox elizabeth NZ
Thank you!
This UA-cam channel deserve more views and subscriptions than any other travelogue documentaries.
So, it's my humble request to our esteemed subscriber to share this UA-cam channel as much as you can.
It will be the true subscription to this beautiful and unique channel.
Thank you 💝 💝💝
Thank you so much. Very kind of you to say! 🙏
@@FromtheWindowSeat Sir, I wish I could've been working with you.