I grew up in stanwix heights ..outside of rome..we had old abandoned rail lines..around the area.. great for snowmobiles.. back when snow was snow..lol. And cold.. moved on .. from there.. great place to be raised..
I caught about a dozen of your videos while I was working on a resin freight car model. They are very relaxing and informative. Thanks, I appreciate it!!! And, of course gave them all Thumbs Up!!
Very professional production! I worked on the track crew for one season (I think it was 2006) and then got laid off. Great bunch of guys - Dale and Big John the signal maintainer. (Bob)
Thanks for your kind words! Jon K still works for the MA&N. Check out my FB group, "Railroading Rambler," for more Mohawk Valley/Adirondack railroading features.
Beautiful diesel-electric locomotive made by ALCO!! Damn, I wish ALCO never went bankrupt and that it was a major competition to GE and Caterpillars EMD nowadays...
This is great ! I love to see action on these historic rails, as they once belonged to the Utica & Black River Railroad. In the 1800's, vacationers would go from Utica, to Trenton Falls or continue through Carthage and on to the Thousand Islands and Ogdensburg along the St. Lawrence river. Lumber trains would return loaded with lumber from the mills in Watertown all the same tracks. That whole area north of Utica is a true early American railroading frontier.
Yup and it's all gone now. There was track all over the St Lawrence Valley and most of it is gone. Used to be 2 lines coming into Ogdensburgs port. Just a single line from Canton now and it hardly gets used. Sad to see.
@@Bret4207 I can verify that. I'm from Ogdensburg. I had the pleasure of riding with the crews of the Penn Central back in the early 70's. Ogdensburg to Dekalb Jct. Never been on the other RR, (the old Rutland), but yes, at least those tracks are still there, with limited use. (operated by Vermont Railroad now)
Not to be a wise-ass, but it certainly seemed like the Jordan spreader was pretty much superfluous, on the wrong end of the locomotive, and of course, facing the wrong way. They somehow need to get that spreader turned 180 degrees and moved ahead of the locomotive. Not knowing the track conditions, or whether the Mohawk Adirondack and Northern has a turntable or a wye somewhere, I cannot criticize, only suggest. The C455 with a small plow did pretty well, but the crew certainly had to worry about derailing in hard pack snow. Unusual that the weather was at 59 degrees so soon after a heavy snowfall; that makes the snow wet and heavy and hard to push out of the way. Great video!
Good easy-viewing well-shot vid - We return-drive Rte 12 twixt Canada and CT twice a year. 'Relieved' to see the oilcars gone afetr several trips wondering whether they'd been forgotten - ha ha. Ever considered NY Up-State to be a beautiful and varied geographical Gem - do hope to see more from you in simialr vein and locale. Thanks!
Glad you liked the video, I had fun making it. The oilcars will be back, however, as the MA&N will again be storing them between Boonville-Lyons Falls. I expect they will begin bringing them north from Utica any day now (if they haven't already started).
you probably dont care at all but does anybody know a way to log back into an instagram account?? I was dumb lost the account password. I love any help you can give me
@Payton Clyde i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site through google and im waiting for the hacking stuff atm. I see it takes quite some time so I will reply here later with my results.
As a former conductor, I can tell you it's really stressful when you're on a thru freight that 14,000 ft long and the rails are covered with snow. You're trained to watch the rails, it's scary when you can't see them at 60mph and they're covered with snow. You need to see switch points, gage etc. Foamers think it's a great job. It's not. It's really hard
You're just a sissy and whiner. Lot's of the best things in life are hard, also this guy was just filming quietly and out of the way. Stop trying to put people down just to feel better about yourself you little man.
This Alco predates me by about a decade yet it looks and sounds better. Great to see an old Alco even still running, but being in such good condition... that's impressive.
Easier to open the branch and crossings with the engine the when coming back they will clear the snow from the rails with the flanger on the Jorden spreader. I've done a couple of branch lines when I worked for Conrail as an engineer only my power was an a pair of Alco RS-3's back in 1974.
I'm sure the RR believes its safer to cut the flangeways with the heavier loco on the way out , and then use the spreader to push the snow farther away from the ROW on the return trip.
To bad the tracks were torn out between Booneville and Lowville, that would have made a great scenic railroad. I worked for the MA&N back in in the early 90's out of Carthage. A cool video though.
The tracks are actually in place in the 10 miles between Boonville-Lyons Falls. The New York Central pulled out 14 miles between Lyons Falls-Lowville in the early 1960's thereby severing its St Lawrence Division. This was done to reduce the amount of property taxes the Central had to pay.
You are right, My mistake I got my towns mixed up. I actually switched Lyons Falls pulp and paper when I worked for the "MA&N" in 93 I think it was, then they like so many other mills and industries in New York went belly up. Still think that line would have made a great tourist RR.
Up until the mid 1980's I spent quite a bit of time in Boonville, and still occasionally visit. I don't recall ever seeing any train activity. Is this a reactivated line?
No. 2456 cleared the tracks northward. The real purpose in bringing the spreader was to really clear the ROW between Lyons Falls-Boonville on the return trip. For whatever reason, this operating preference works best for the railroad. The MA&N is likely to store cars on the 10-mile stretch of tracks between Boonville-Lyons Falls just as they have done the past few years.
A Jordan spreader can clear large amounts of a lot of things, including snow. It just has to be setup properly. Here is one in deep snow. ua-cam.com/video/S2lYIZPD094/v-deo.html Short plow on front is adjustable on both while the one in the link has the required upper sections of the plow.
pashon4percushon, Could have been like days I've had. Snow on the ground and in the 70s. In Feb of 1988 while at Ft Eustis ( Virginia ) it was sub freezing in the morning, rapidly melting ice and snow by noon with temps in the 70s, raining by 1300, hail by 1330, and snow by 1400. And then I got out of that crazy weather and flew back south to Florida.
Fantastic film, love the snow, the clarity and the ALCO. Over here in the UK we have lost all our first generation diesels, all the new stuff is boring and they sound like hair dryers. I've seen locomotives similar to this in India and Sri Lanka, and love the low revving pulse of the engines. When was she built? My guess is about 1970, although I may be wrong ten years either way. Thanks for posting this, Tony, London UK
tony wolton all GVT power was built by American locomotive company between 1951 and 1965. The only none Alcos are a EMD GP9 from the DL&W and a 1935 EMC prototype loco also built for the DL&W.
At the beginning of the vid (at 0:09) it says "59°". How can there be that much snow at 59° Fahrenheit or Celsius or whatever else? (Well... I guess it is not Kelvin!!!) Another thing I find ...lets say "amusing" or "astonishing" is that the locomotive first opens the way though the snow ...for the snow plow!!!
I was thinking the same thing - between the guys (several that we see, not just one) wearing T-shirts and how sticky the snow was I think it can be concluded it was quite warm.
Tom Servo I lived in Vancouver for many years. You could always tell the people who grew up back East or The prairies in the winter, while we were all togged up in down jackets, hats and gloves they were sitting outside Tim Hortons drinking double doubles in T-Shirts!
I think it did hop the rail at the last crossing in the video (mid point in the video) you can see the engine jilt to the side and hear somone yell. I think that's why the left the spreader behind on the 2nd attempt.
When I was a locomotive engineer I owned the New England produce switcher which has as power a SW-1500 assigned there. Many a time in the winter as a lot of trackage the flange ways would freeze solid and one off them at a 350 foot crossing, back and forth would usually take anywhere from 15 minutes to over an hour going forward until you saw the lead truck vearing off where the track is stop, back up just creeping along. No track crew available. The ice would add a couple of hours to our day every day in the winter to open up the tracks so we could set our refrigerator cars for each consigned customer. Once it melted it was a lot easier work.
@@jamesshanks2614 No pick or pry bar in the cab to manually clear the flange ways? A locomotive in Colorado derailed and tipped about 25 degrees at a grade crossing. Crew too lazy to clear hard ice from the flange ways? No need to clear all. Just enough.
Freedomtower Studios Genesee Valley Transportation operates this line, lowville Beaver river, falls railroad, Depew Lancaster and western, and “the” Delaware Lackawanna.
What a beautifully maintained old century series Alco! Thanks for the video! What's that white stuff he's pushing around? lol. We don't get a lot of snow in Dallas.
Dave White They can ride up on packed snow and ice but usually crews are going slow so it’s more common to see them basically spin out. The flange on the wheels isn’t very large so just a little lift is all that’s needed and the locomotive is spinning on the packed ice.
When you consider that the load on each wheel is nominally 16.25 tons, what chance do you think ice on a railhead would have? (Ans: none.) The snow's (obviously) just pushed aside. Many spreaders incorporate flangers, sometimes protrusions below the plow blade, to toss some of the snow between the rails. And, they do have sanders for traction if needed- pretty self-sufficient.
Dave White YES, a large road unit and will derail on iced up flangeways. Snow isn't that big of a problem, but when you have traffic packing snow into the flangeways at a grade crossing, then it freezes, you can get in trouble very fast. I've been around and work on derailments where this occurred. Track gangs need to pick out the ice and apply rock salt, or some other form of ice melt material. The signal department may not like salt used at a crossing with gates, but sometimes you do what you have to do. I've seen loco's in snow service pulling a Flanger (a piece of snow equipment developed by the former Southern Pacific) have snow build up under the fuel tanks and walk right off the track while going around a curve. Never even damaged the track. We got it rerailed and it took off plowing like nothing happened.
In the fall, on the former Yellowstone Branch, we used our maintenance air compressor and a wand to blow out all of the dirt and rocks that accumulated in the flangeways during the warmer months. We were always concerned about ice buildup in the crossings and between the switch points on turnouts.
Interesting video but I don't understand why the snow plow on the engine does not seem to be fit for the job. Baby plow for a pretty serious snow fall.
Beautiful paint scheme!!
I'm in both Remsen and Boonville occasionally for my work but never laid eyes on this beauty wish I had!
Absolute great rail therapy....Thanks for sharing
This was very satisfying to watch.
I grew up in stanwix heights ..outside of rome..we had old abandoned rail lines..around the area.. great for snowmobiles.. back when snow was snow..lol. And cold.. moved on .. from there.. great place to be raised..
I caught about a dozen of your videos while I was working on a resin freight car model. They are very relaxing and informative. Thanks, I appreciate it!!!
And, of course gave them all Thumbs Up!!
Cool Engine! The plowing action is great, too!
I live a mile from the HP Depot. Love seeing these videos of local rail.
Very professional production! I worked on the track crew for one season (I think it was 2006) and then got laid off. Great bunch of guys - Dale and Big John the signal maintainer.
(Bob)
Thanks for your kind words! Jon K still works for the MA&N. Check out my FB group, "Railroading Rambler," for more Mohawk Valley/Adirondack railroading features.
Subbed on the first vid! Keep up the great work...
🚂 Awesome videos ! 👍🏻
What a cool vid of MA&N pushing through that heavy snow. That Utica, NY area looks nice.
Enjoyed watching - and hearing - an old Alco run.
Great video. Snow and men wearing short sleeves! Please keep these videos coming.
Awesome video!
THANK YOU FOR SHARE THE VIDEO
Nothing like taking your toys out to play in the snow....LOL. Great video.
Superb captures !!
Thanks!
Beautiful diesel-electric locomotive made by ALCO!! Damn, I wish ALCO never went bankrupt and that it was a major competition to GE and Caterpillars EMD nowadays...
Wait ALCO desnt exists?
Very nice paint scheme.
This is great ! I love to see action on these historic rails, as they once belonged to the Utica & Black River Railroad. In the 1800's, vacationers would go from Utica, to Trenton Falls or continue through Carthage and on to the Thousand Islands and Ogdensburg along the St. Lawrence river. Lumber trains would return loaded with lumber from the mills in Watertown all the same tracks. That whole area north of Utica is a true early American railroading frontier.
Yup and it's all gone now. There was track all over the St Lawrence Valley and most of it is gone. Used to be 2 lines coming into Ogdensburgs port. Just a single line from Canton now and it hardly gets used. Sad to see.
@@Bret4207 I can verify that. I'm from Ogdensburg. I had the pleasure of riding with the crews of the Penn Central back in the early 70's. Ogdensburg to Dekalb Jct. Never been on the other RR, (the old Rutland), but yes, at least those tracks are still there, with limited use. (operated by Vermont Railroad now)
All that snow just North of us in Oneida, 72 here today, and watch him at crossing in the T-shirt, Only in NY. Damn good video. Thanks.
Not to be a wise-ass, but it certainly seemed like the Jordan spreader was pretty much superfluous, on the wrong end of the locomotive, and of course, facing the wrong way. They somehow need to get that spreader turned 180 degrees and moved ahead of the locomotive. Not knowing the track conditions, or whether the Mohawk Adirondack and Northern has a turntable or a wye somewhere, I cannot criticize, only suggest. The C455 with a small plow did pretty well, but the crew certainly had to worry about derailing in hard pack snow. Unusual that the weather was at 59 degrees so soon after a heavy snowfall; that makes the snow wet and heavy and hard to push out of the way. Great video!
Cool video on the improper use of a Jordan Spreader.
Good easy-viewing well-shot vid - We return-drive Rte 12 twixt Canada and CT twice a year. 'Relieved' to see the oilcars gone
afetr several trips wondering whether they'd been forgotten - ha ha. Ever considered NY Up-State to be a beautiful and varied
geographical Gem - do hope to see more from you in simialr vein and locale. Thanks!
Glad you liked the video, I had fun making it. The oilcars will be back, however, as the MA&N will again be storing them between Boonville-Lyons Falls. I expect they will begin bringing them north from Utica any day now (if they haven't already started).
you probably dont care at all but does anybody know a way to log back into an instagram account??
I was dumb lost the account password. I love any help you can give me
@Beckham Kellan Instablaster =)
@Payton Clyde i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site through google and im waiting for the hacking stuff atm.
I see it takes quite some time so I will reply here later with my results.
@Payton Clyde it did the trick and I now got access to my account again. I'm so happy!
Thank you so much you saved my account :D
Boonville -- there is also a Boonville, Missouri. Once had MKT and MoPac running through it, now just UP along the riverbank.
Nice looking livery...
Looks like they should have had that Jordan Spreader ahead of the locomotive and facing the other way when they got to Port Leyden.
I remember snow like that when I lived in Misawa, in the 1970's.
These videos make me GLAD I live in the South.
yeah & I live in West Nebraska & snows don't get this deep where I is usually
I spend a lot of time in western Nebraska and thankful of that too.
yeah? cool
2:02 Guy in green thinking "But I've just plowed this road!"
1:40 seems a bit pointless for it to be backing into the snow if the plow is on the other side
I thought the same thing.
Their must be a protocol or rule which is why they did this I guess.
That's quite a contrast. Plowing snow and you all are wearing T- shirt's. BTW the C425 looks and sounds fantastic.
Thanks for sharing.
As a former conductor, I can tell you it's really stressful when you're on a thru freight that 14,000 ft long and the rails are covered with snow. You're trained to watch the rails, it's scary when you can't see them at 60mph and they're covered with snow. You need to see switch points, gage etc. Foamers think it's a great job. It's not. It's really hard
You're just a sissy and whiner. Lot's of the best things in life are hard, also this guy was just filming quietly and out of the way. Stop trying to put people down just to feel better about yourself you little man.
Shut up Nancy boy and stop projecting about "Foamers" you fake wannabe.
Very nice video! Greetings
Nice catches! Always video a train approaching a grade crossing so we can hear the horn and in case a vehicle is hit.
Great video and daily report! Greetings from Italy. Ciao, Stefano :-)
Thanks so much, glad you liked it!
Great video
Beautiful!! Nice work
Awesome video.
That was freaking awesome.
nice looking ALCO
This Alco predates me by about a decade yet it looks and sounds better. Great to see an old Alco even still running, but being in such good condition... that's impressive.
And then they realize they had the plow on the wrong end
I think that's just for controlling the snow pushed off to the side.
Nice video
Hoje é o dia do Maquinista PARABÉNS a todos os maquinistas.
Easier to open the branch and crossings with the engine the when coming back they will clear the snow from the rails with the flanger on the Jorden spreader. I've done a couple of branch lines when I worked for Conrail as an engineer only my power was an a pair of Alco RS-3's back in 1974.
Thanks for your comment!
James Shanks was that before or after the RS-3s were rebuilt with EMD engines
That is a cool job !
very satisfying !!!
great video!
Excelente video!!
Love the short sleeve shirt LOL. Cold, whats cold.
I'm sure the RR believes its safer to cut the flangeways with the heavier loco on the way out , and then use the spreader to push the snow farther away from the ROW on the return trip.
Nice to see old iron still working hard.
To bad the tracks were torn out between Booneville and Lowville, that would have made a great scenic railroad. I worked for the MA&N back in in the early 90's out of Carthage. A cool video though.
The tracks are actually in place in the 10 miles between Boonville-Lyons Falls. The New York Central pulled out 14 miles between Lyons Falls-Lowville in the early 1960's thereby severing its St Lawrence Division. This was done to reduce the amount of property taxes the Central had to pay.
You are right, My mistake I got my towns mixed up. I actually switched Lyons Falls pulp and paper when I worked for the "MA&N" in 93 I think it was, then they like so many other mills and industries in New York went belly up. Still think that line would have made a great tourist RR.
Best example of putting the cart before the horse. Gee Wiz. PS. Great video. Thanx
Up until the mid 1980's I spent quite a bit of time in Boonville, and still occasionally visit. I don't recall ever seeing any train activity. Is this a reactivated line?
Nice video! Thank you. 1:50 Why so slow? Concerned ice in flangways may derail some wheels?
good video!!!!!!!!!
Little puzzled why the spreader wasn't being pushed along, spreading ?
No. 2456 cleared the tracks northward. The real purpose in bringing the spreader was to really clear the ROW between Lyons Falls-Boonville on the return trip. For whatever reason, this operating preference works best for the railroad. The MA&N is likely to store cars on the 10-mile stretch of tracks between Boonville-Lyons Falls just as they have done the past few years.
That spreader is made for clearing yard not large amounts of snow, that's why it has such a short plow on the front.
A Jordan spreader can clear large amounts of a lot of things, including snow. It just has to be setup properly. Here is one in deep snow. ua-cam.com/video/S2lYIZPD094/v-deo.html Short plow on front is adjustable on both while the one in the link has the required upper sections of the plow.
I'm Little puzzled why they're wearing T-shirts
pashon4percushon, Could have been like days I've had. Snow on the ground and in the 70s. In Feb of 1988 while at Ft Eustis ( Virginia ) it was sub freezing in the morning, rapidly melting ice and snow by noon with temps in the 70s, raining by 1300, hail by 1330, and snow by 1400. And then I got out of that crazy weather and flew back south to Florida.
Fantastic film, love the snow, the clarity and the ALCO. Over here in the UK we have lost all our first generation diesels, all the new stuff is boring and they sound like hair dryers. I've seen locomotives similar to this in India and Sri Lanka, and love the low revving pulse of the engines. When was she built? My guess is about 1970, although I may be wrong ten years either way. Thanks for posting this, Tony, London UK
Thanks for your kind words. No. 2456 was built in October 1964 by Alco.
tony wolton all GVT power was built by American locomotive company between 1951 and 1965. The only none Alcos are a EMD GP9 from the DL&W and a 1935 EMC prototype loco also built for the DL&W.
Also from the UK, county Essex. I echo all that was said by tony. Great video, thoroughly enjoyeable.
"..sound like hair dryers." Haha. That's true.
Nice, I enjoyed this !!!
At the beginning of the vid (at 0:09) it says "59°". How can there be that much snow at 59° Fahrenheit or Celsius or whatever else? (Well... I guess it is not Kelvin!!!)
Another thing I find ...lets say "amusing" or "astonishing" is that the locomotive first opens the way though the snow ...for the snow plow!!!
Train Engineers have all the fun
awesome
That's some heavy,wet snow!
2:03 , t-shirt , snow .. I'm confused
they just chillin
I was thinking the same thing - between the guys (several that we see, not just one) wearing T-shirts and how sticky the snow was I think it can be concluded it was quite warm.
Tom Servo I lived in Vancouver for many years. You could always tell the people who grew up back East or The prairies in the winter, while we were all togged up in down jackets, hats and gloves they were sitting outside Tim Hortons drinking double doubles in T-Shirts!
At the beginning of the video it says that it’s 60 degrees.
in canada we call that summer
Nice job clearing...I'd be so afraid of the locomotive riding up on the hard-packed snow and derailing.
I think it did hop the rail at the last crossing in the video (mid point in the video) you can see the engine jilt to the side and hear somone yell. I think that's why the left the spreader behind on the 2nd attempt.
When I was a locomotive engineer I owned the New England produce switcher which has as power a SW-1500 assigned there. Many a time in the winter as a lot of trackage the flange ways would freeze solid and one off them at a 350 foot crossing, back and forth would usually take anywhere from 15 minutes to over an hour going forward until you saw the lead truck vearing off where the track is stop, back up just creeping along. No track crew available. The ice would add a couple of hours to our day every day in the winter to open up the tracks so we could set our refrigerator cars for each consigned customer. Once it melted it was a lot easier work.
like what he said!!
@@jamesshanks2614 No pick or pry bar in the cab to manually clear the flange ways?
A locomotive in Colorado derailed and tipped about 25 degrees at a grade crossing.
Crew too lazy to clear hard ice from the flange ways? No need to clear all. Just enough.
@@rearspeaker6364 nnnnnnnnn ji ji
Need to find a wye boys. Got to be one around there somewhere.
EARTH ANGEL 😇. NICE shots!!!👍🚂. THREE feet of now and tee shirts???!!!👍🤗🤣
Wow cool! There's still snow up there? Is it cold? Today in northern NJ it was 70 and sunny haha!
Got up to 60 here today then temps plummeted by early afternoon.
I bet it's not going to stay 70 for long :P
BVERailer 21 degrees C
Doesn't the snow plow go on the end that's pushing ?
what type of engine was behind it? looked like it might been dropping sand maybe?
very nice
Awesome!
Why did they not put the snow plow forward and use it?
NOT WHY!
Superb
Utica, NY...even in the summertime, an incredibly grim place. Must be even worse in the winter.
what's that black rust bucket that it's always pulling along
Tell me please. normally, the plow must be placed in front of the locomotive ?
Maybe the spreader is used on the return trip?
any photo of the snow blower actually blowing?
This is what I see when someone uses their locomotive in the garden railway and plows right through the snow 3:10
Since you were way faster keeping up ahead they should've just made you clear the snow. Hehehe
Show de bola parabéns
Outstanding!!!! How do I get paid to do this?
I noticed that this railroad has the same paint as the Delaware Lackawanna and Western Railway
Freedomtower Studios Genesee Valley Transportation operates this line, lowville Beaver river, falls railroad, Depew Lancaster and western, and “the” Delaware Lackawanna.
What a beautifully maintained old century series Alco! Thanks for the video! What's that white stuff he's pushing around? lol. We don't get a lot of snow in Dallas.
Why didn't they run the plow in front of the engine
What is that behind the locomotive?
How often is this line used?
I used to drive past the tracks in Boonville for years and have never seen a train
2:15-2:35 SO SATISFYING!!
Nice horn she’s got in this vid, is that an old cast p5 I assume?, if it is it sure sounds nice!
Why are the PULLING the Jordan spreader instead of PUSHING SNOW out of the way with it???
I wonder if he does driveways
Do they use that snow plow/spreader much?
There's a steam plow rusting away here in Norwich NY
It amazes me that a heavy loco can actually ride up on top of snow and ice at crossings, or is that not true?
Dave White
They can ride up on packed snow and ice but usually crews are going slow so it’s more common to see them basically spin out.
The flange on the wheels isn’t very large so just a little lift is all that’s needed and the locomotive is spinning on the packed ice.
When you consider that the load on each wheel is nominally 16.25 tons, what chance do you think ice on a railhead would have? (Ans: none.) The snow's (obviously) just pushed aside. Many spreaders incorporate flangers, sometimes protrusions below the plow blade, to toss some of the snow between the rails. And, they do have sanders for traction if needed- pretty self-sufficient.
Dave White YES, a large road unit and will derail on iced up flangeways. Snow isn't that big of a problem, but when you have traffic packing snow into the flangeways at a grade crossing, then it freezes, you can get in trouble very fast. I've been around and work on derailments where this occurred. Track gangs need to pick out the ice and apply rock salt, or some other form of ice melt material. The signal department may not like salt used at a crossing with gates, but sometimes you do what you have to do. I've seen loco's in snow service pulling a Flanger (a piece of snow equipment developed by the former Southern Pacific) have snow build up under the fuel tanks and walk right off the track while going around a curve. Never even damaged the track. We got it rerailed and it took off plowing like nothing happened.
In the fall, on the former Yellowstone Branch, we used our maintenance air compressor and a wand to blow out all of the dirt and rocks that accumulated in the flangeways during the warmer months. We were always concerned about ice buildup in the crossings and between the switch points on turnouts.
Here is a video of a locomotive that derailed because of ice build up at crossing.
ua-cam.com/video/-cjfU-XPUHY/v-deo.html
that train logo's like kiss emoticon 😂😂 with the big lips 😂
ry. an radiarn
ryan radian to
ryan radian y
Marco. Antonio. Solisw
De jó hangja van a mozdonynak.
Interesting video but I don't understand why the snow plow on the engine does not seem to be fit for the job. Baby plow for a pretty serious snow fall.
whats that thing its pulling behind it?