I just can't understand why 9 people gave this the thumbs down! In the heyday of steam, the only way to film something like this was from an aeroplane. This is an excellent piece of film and whether by luck, chance or maybe planning, has produced one of the best pieces of film of steam in action at speed. Well done to the cameraman/woman.
...I wish that here in the states more steam locomotives would have been so lovingly preserved. So many were lost to the scrapper's torch including a number of rather "iconic" ones. Incredible to see these grand old ladies still pushing 90 - 100 mph. I look forward to when I can make a visit and hope to time it out to take a run on one of them.
I worked at Tyseley many years ago... probably in the 1980's - I'd have to check. We had two main line engines back then - Clun Castle and Kohlapur, plus two GWR pannier tanks, B1 Mayflower and the Lady Armaghdale. At the back of the top shed was the graveyard, and that's where Earl of Mount Edgcumbe stood - just the frames, boiler and driving wheels - everything else had been stripped, so it just stood there, quietly rusting away. Every so often, the question came up of what to do with it - it came *that* close to being cut up. I have a box of photos somewhere that I took of it in it's derelict state, and I did a painting of it. I grew quite attached to it in an odd way. I only recently learned that it had been restored and actually looked like a proper Castle again! Hello again old friend.... you're looking considerably better than me after all these years!
GWR Castles rank as my favourite locomotive and this video amply defines why. Awesome and handsome engines built to precision by the finest British engineers designed on global best best practice of the day. Beautiful.
I keep coming back to this video if I want to see train action. This is an excellent piece of film. The sheer brilliance of mechanical hardware and design is aptly evident as the train paces through the countryside.
Is this not one of the BEST videos ever of a wonderful old machine doing exactly what it used to do, and STILL can do so many years after it was made? What a testament to the designer and engineers, and restorers. Thanks so much.
I have a serious soft spot for the GWR. I worked for them from 1959 when there were still plenty of steam trains all over the country. And all over the country I travelled free for many years enjoying myself as a young man. Now I live in Thailand and it is just wonderful to see and hear these wonderful machines doing nothing different from those old days. Thank you for the time, effort and skill you show in these videos that will give me pleasure into my old age!
It's a British thing that some outside the UK understand. It's very personal, we feel attached and responsible to these machines. There's a pride you don't often find.
These vids are so good, they capture the very essence of steam locos. Old technology, very heavy kit flying here there and everywhere and it all comes together to defy the none believer.
There is nothing more beautiful than a steam locomotive at speed. The greatest contribution the Victorian era made to transport and it's both miraculous and glorious that some of these engineering masterpieces are still available for us to see in action and ride on as well. Knowing that most of these trains are restored, maintained and operated by volunteers supported by donations just makes it all the more special.
The last time I saw anything like this was back in 1960 when travelling down to Cornwall, approaching Taunton, 'Usk Castle' ran neck and neck with us at Cogload Junction. It was only for a minute or so, but these things stay with us forever, don't they?
I used to stand on bridge in the 60s as they passed through, I still remember it like it was yesterday.such memories.👍 you can’t beat them. Also the deltic’s lovely sound.
Just fabulous. Thanks for sharing. My one and only train set, when I was a kid in the early sixties, was a Hornby Dublo 'Cardiff Castle' Castle Class engine with two or threes coaches, an oval of track, a de-coupling section of track and a very heavy cast metal transformer. I absolutely loved it. I was mesmerised watching the running gear moving. At the age of 62, I wish I still had it.
tman008 American locomotives aren't ugly, they're ruggedly handsome, they look like locomotives, not like they're made out of plastic, Still, nice to see any steam train at speed.
One of the best 3 minutes spent in my life is watching this video with "A walk in the Black Forest" by Horst Jankowski playing as background music. Just seems to match the sheer classiness of a GWR Castle and the way she effortlessly glides along the rails, practically waltzing.
Churchward, Collett, Hawksworth, Castles - legends all, and British engineering at its best. I grew up with the Southern Railway, but would cycle over to Maidenhead frequently to watch Castles and Kings at speed. Awesome and unforgettable. Thanks Ben - great video, and how I envy the crew!
One of the finest bits of film ever seen.I live a few miles from this track and as youngsters we would race the trains as this piece of the M5 road was the Cullompton bypass.We used to meet by the old Little copse cafe and try and keep up to the roundabout below Charlie Goffs garage .I had no chance but my brother had and has a 500 Speed twin and he could.
Brought back happy memories of my railway career I was a fireman at old oak common 81A back when the trains ran to time I have fired quite a few castles in my time if the driver set it up perfect you could have an easy time but if he decided to work against you it was hard work
i must watch this once a week when i feel down or overworked it brings such joy and emotion watching a crew hard at work bring that loco to live. i think a big thank you to all that saved and restored this mighty loco for all to young to see this type of working on the main line wonderful simpily wonderful. wipes a tear from eye:)
To whoever the cameraperson well done indeed. You deserve a medal. What a beautiful sight!!.. Wonderful engine working flat out and going along magnificantly. Excellent work by the fireman, on the mark and not blowing off. You can keep your diesels and electrics long live the Swindon expertise. I left the railway as a firemen at Cardiff Canton/ East dock, we had "The Earl" with us. I can never recall it being this clean!. God Bless the GWR.
Fantastic film... green with envy....passed this way last week and said what a view of the line if only we could stop and film...you had the right idea...
This took me back to 1960, when I got the last stopping passenger train from Bristol to Swindon via Badminton as a 10 year old. 5068 Beverston Castle. This is a fantastic record of the day they tried to reach 100mph. Wish I had been in the UK for it.
Fascinating. I drive on the M5 frequently and I have never noticed the section where the railway is so close to the road. How lucky yo have captured this footage. Its awesome. Such a magnificent locomotive.
What a thrill it must have been to actually be present to get this footage. Well done. Thanks so much for posting. Have watched this dozens of times it's so good.
OMG....WHAT a sight.....I know that road so well......what timing....and so great you used your gumption to get this epic footage.... Kudos to you.....I'm almost in tears watching that...........!!!!
Truly poetry in motion.I must have travelled the main line behind GWR express locos but it maybe hard to believe but I am not old enough to remember. Many thanks for posting.
This was an every day sight in my childhood.My uncle lived in Cullompton and we often watched trains race up to Tiverton Junc tion station.They really sounded great as they climbed up to Willand. As a youth we used the Cullompton bypass as a race track which is now part of the M5 and tried to keep up with trains.
Gorgeous, the "Sewing Machine" ticking and throaty growl reminds me of the King's thundering along from Snow Hill to London Paddington, sight and sounds never forgotten, great parallel filming along the Exe valley (Cullompton), Magnificent machines unfairly scrapped before their time, with the fitting of double bast pipes and 5-row superheaters in the late fifties/early sixties gave these locomotives many more years life before their untimely replacement by dubious diesel hydraulics. Well done Ben Jervis!
To add to my previous posts,the really amazing thing is this used to happen several times a day in the days of steam.Even now in 2020 the times to London are not much shorter than when I used to go to Paddington from Taunton in the late 1950,s.Some trains stopped at Tiverton Junction a mile further on from were the filming stopped.I used to get the returning empty milk trains early in the morning to get home .
That’s ace! The only time I’ve seen a steam hauled train on that section of line was when Braunton passed me heading towards Exeter a good few years ago. I was on the M5 heading north. And driving!
I was interested in the speed too. Assuming the footage is at normal speed. I timed 10 wheel revolutions and got about 2.2 seconds (with an actual timer on my phone) A 2032mm wheel travels 6.38 meters every revolution. Doing a little arithmetic you get about 105km/h (or about 65 mph for the Luddites). Great to see..
We're all Luddites - that's why we're here. What are these "km" and "mm" you mention? All speeds, speed limits etc on the railways (and roads) are in mph, and distances, even on official track diagrams, are in miles and chains and the dimensions of locomotives are in feet and inches, tons (proper ones) and hundredweights (all right, 50 kg if you must). The point about units is that they must be familiar to their essential users. Not much point me telling you that on Oct 19 last year I had a huge party of like-minded old nutters to celebrate my 27,000 days on this planet. What age is that? Well.
Umm.. did you really want to try to do that calculation in feet and inches? If we want following generations to carry on the interest/care for in beautiful Victorian engineering? WE old types should probably learn to describe it in terms they easily connect with ..or we can make it snobby and inaccessible..
When you said that the Castle's driving wheels were 2032 mm in diameter I had no idea if that was right or not but assumed it was. But if you'd said they were 6' 3" I'd have said immediately, "no, they're bigger than that". Millimetres and kilos etc are simply not the language of steam in the English-speaking world and very few steam enthusiasts think in metric. All the literature on steam is in Imperial units so going metric is a bit like speaking Hungarian, with all due respects to the Magyars.
Absolutely fantastic piece of camera work,what a beautiful sight seeing the best of British Engineering still working all these years later,it just goes to show how this country has lost its way over the years,we were world leaders in trains and ship building as well as car and truck building and what have we got now??? Mac Donald’s and Kentucky Fried Chicken,it’s a sad country we now live in,it’s no wonder the country is Skint we have to buy everything from abroad because we don’t manufacture anything anymore, it’s sickening.
its no surprise, as the standards of living goes up the workers want higher wages and soon manufacturing starts to become un profitable because their is always another country willing to do the same for cheaper. im sure if people were still getting paid a few shillings a week we would still be making everything
Thought I'd commented on this one but it appears not - which is quite an oversight! Fabulous bit of film, I enjoyed it very much indeed, right up there with my all time favourite pacing sequences. Thankyou! Tim
Quite remarkable! Thank you. I was looking for a John Huntley film of a GWR "Star" on the wheel lathe at Wolverampton (which is breathtaking). Harry Lee (stalwart of the West Somerset) was very fond of that class and he would have really been impressed by this video! He was a real gem, and so is The Earl!
This is a lovely piece of controlled driving. The engine is running fast and smoothly. Now and then there is just a whiff of steam from the safety valve, showing full pressure is being maintained but without any wasteful blowing off. The real hero of this performance is the fireman. You can see him bending his back and packing it in without much time for rest breaks. Remember the big Great Western shovel can hold up to 20 pounds of coal. That's hard work!
It's great to open them up and see what they can do! I'd say that the fireman was parched afterwards! Great filming from the side! You could hear it, see it and the crew!
@@arthurrytis6010 I hear that when you've fired a steam loco, especially at full whack, when you get to the pub after the beer hardly touches your mouth when you drink it! Mesmerizing footage. My most favorite. I always loved Gods Wonderful Railway. At home in Ireland I live near what was The Midland & Great Western Railway to Sligo.
Totally superb, I know this stretch of motorway very well and was driving on it on the 26th and 29th of December last year 1 1 15 today. David. Who sometimes visits Cheltenham.
I just can't understand why 9 people gave this the thumbs down! In the heyday of steam, the only way to film something like this was from an aeroplane. This is an excellent piece of film and whether by luck, chance or maybe planning, has produced one of the best pieces of film of steam in action at speed. Well done to the cameraman/woman.
You have said it all William--no point in me repeating it.
64k views, 9 morons, that is better than average. Kudos to the videographer. This is poetry. Just beautiful !
Harry Potter fans
Maybe they didn't like all the trees in the way. They're still dumb tho
I agree
I love how you Brits really let these old girls stretch their legs. Cheers from the US 🇺🇸
We don't have too much choice in some ways. These old girls have to keep up with everything else as our railway are quite busy :)
75mph is nothing for a castle
My Uncle Ralph (RIP) drove Castles from Cardiff to Tenby.
@@julianbassett5172 lucky you
Julian Bassett my dad was a fireman out of Cardiff to Paddington....Canton Sheds
Running like a 100 ton wristwatch what a sight
This has to be the best recording of a Steam Locomotive at speed I have ever seen- Incredible
...I wish that here in the states more steam locomotives would have been so lovingly preserved. So many were lost to the scrapper's torch including a number of rather "iconic" ones.
Incredible to see these grand old ladies still pushing 90 - 100 mph.
I look forward to when I can make a visit and hope to time it out to take a run on one of them.
Beautiful to see her running at full speed but still in the centre of the screen. Beautiful shots.
I worked at Tyseley many years ago... probably in the 1980's - I'd have to check. We had two main line engines back then - Clun Castle and Kohlapur, plus two GWR pannier tanks, B1 Mayflower and the Lady Armaghdale. At the back of the top shed was the graveyard, and that's where Earl of Mount Edgcumbe stood - just the frames, boiler and driving wheels - everything else had been stripped, so it just stood there, quietly rusting away.
Every so often, the question came up of what to do with it - it came *that* close to being cut up. I have a box of photos somewhere that I took of it in it's derelict state, and I did a painting of it. I grew quite attached to it in an odd way.
I only recently learned that it had been restored and actually looked like a proper Castle again!
Hello again old friend.... you're looking considerably better than me after all these years!
GWR Castles rank as my favourite locomotive and this video amply defines why. Awesome and handsome engines built to precision by the finest British engineers designed on global best best practice of the day. Beautiful.
That is a beautiful train. My favorite all time train, that's coming from the States.
I keep coming back to this video if I want to see train action. This is an excellent piece of film. The sheer brilliance of mechanical hardware and design is aptly evident as the train paces through the countryside.
Finest fast running alongside footage I've ever seen. Magbloodynificent! Thank you.
Poetry in motion. Beautiful!
Is this not one of the BEST videos ever of a wonderful old machine doing exactly what it used to do, and STILL can do so many years after it was made? What a testament to the designer and engineers, and restorers. Thanks so much.
The true power of the GWR.... amazing.....
I have a serious soft spot for the GWR. I worked for them from 1959 when there were still plenty of steam trains all over the country. And all over the country I travelled free for many years enjoying myself as a young man.
Now I live in Thailand and it is just wonderful to see and hear these wonderful machines doing nothing different from those old days.
Thank you for the time, effort and skill you show in these videos that will give me pleasure into my old age!
There's something magical about an 80 ton 90 year old glorified kettle keeping up with motorway traffic. Magnificent.
It's a British thing that some outside the UK understand. It's very personal, we feel attached and responsible to these machines. There's a pride you don't often find.
I just keep coming back to this video. Such a treat and running locally to me.I love to see the motion working, great camera work too.
These vids are so good, they capture the very essence of steam locos. Old technology, very heavy kit flying here there and everywhere and it all comes together to defy the none believer.
There is nothing more beautiful than a steam locomotive at speed. The greatest contribution the Victorian era made to transport and it's both miraculous and glorious that some of these engineering masterpieces are still available for us to see in action and ride on as well. Knowing that most of these trains are restored, maintained and operated by volunteers supported by donations just makes it all the more special.
The last time I saw anything like this was back in 1960 when travelling down to Cornwall, approaching Taunton, 'Usk Castle' ran neck and neck with us at Cogload Junction. It was only for a minute or so, but these things stay with us forever, don't they?
Those were the days, down the old A38.
I used to stand on bridge in the 60s as they passed through, I still remember it like it was yesterday.such memories.👍 you can’t beat them. Also the deltic’s lovely sound.
Just fabulous. Thanks for sharing. My one and only train set, when I was a kid in the early sixties, was a Hornby Dublo 'Cardiff Castle' Castle Class engine with two or threes coaches, an oval of track, a de-coupling section of track and a very heavy cast metal transformer. I absolutely loved it. I was mesmerised watching the running gear moving. At the age of 62, I wish I still had it.
Year after year, still my favorite video on UA-cam.
Magnificent sight. And the camera person did a fantastic job of staying in frame. Magic.....
How on Earth does a video like this get thumbs down?
There are some very strange people out there in cyberspace.
+Morris van Mokum They are sour Gresley freaks
I can only guess because of the trees getting in the way.
Americans with dozens op pipes along their boilers
tman008 The majority does however :(
tman008 American locomotives aren't ugly, they're ruggedly handsome, they look like locomotives, not like they're made out of plastic, Still, nice to see any steam train at speed.
The Camera work is magnificent and the action on the footplate silhouetted against the sky is brilliant.
Bravo!!
I dont think I've ever seen a more exciting bit of video of a Castle in full flight. Fabulous bit of filming.
One of the best 3 minutes spent in my life is watching this video with "A walk in the Black Forest" by Horst Jankowski playing as background music. Just seems to match the sheer classiness of a GWR Castle and the way she effortlessly glides along the rails, practically waltzing.
I get the impression that she's not even trying. Magnificent loco - thanks for posting.
Well done to the car driver for keeping such a steady pace!!! Brilliant filming.
Churchward, Collett, Hawksworth, Castles - legends all, and British engineering at its best. I grew up with the Southern Railway, but would cycle over to Maidenhead frequently to watch Castles and Kings at speed. Awesome and unforgettable. Thanks Ben - great video, and how I envy the crew!
One of the finest bits of film ever seen.I live a few miles from this track and as youngsters we would race the trains as this piece of the M5 road was the Cullompton bypass.We used to meet by the old Little copse cafe and try and keep up to the roundabout below Charlie Goffs garage .I had no chance but my brother had and has a 500 Speed twin and he could.
Peter Saupe that’s pretty awesome 👍🏼
Brought back happy memories of my railway career I was a fireman at old oak common 81A back when the trains ran to time I have fired quite a few castles in my time if the driver set it up perfect you could have an easy time but if he decided to work against you it was hard work
Just how beautiful is that
My mum's grandad Maurice Vaughan drove the Cornish Riviera and wrote a small book about locomotive mechanicals.
Beautiful sight! Absolutely first class camera work! Thank you and thanks to all for hard work preserving this engine in running order!
Just love watching this video, congratulations on the way you caught this so beautifully
What a beautiful sight that is. Power and elegance perfectly combined. Great piece of film!
i must watch this once a week when i feel down or overworked it brings such joy and emotion watching a crew hard at work bring that loco to live. i think a big thank you to all that saved and restored this mighty loco for all to young to see this type of working on the main line wonderful simpily wonderful. wipes a tear from eye:)
Bloody brilliant!!! Could watch this over and over again!
To whoever the cameraperson well done indeed. You deserve a medal. What a beautiful sight!!.. Wonderful engine working flat out and going along magnificantly. Excellent work by the fireman, on the mark and not blowing off. You can keep your diesels and electrics long live the Swindon expertise. I left the railway as a firemen at Cardiff Canton/ East dock, we had "The Earl" with us. I can never recall it being this clean!. God Bless the GWR.
Superb loco and filming. Best I have ever seen.
The old GWR just got everything so right. Mechanically and visually !
Fantastic film... green with envy....passed this way last week and said what a view of the line
if only we could stop and film...you had the right idea...
This took me back to 1960, when I got the last stopping passenger train from Bristol to Swindon via Badminton as a 10 year old. 5068 Beverston Castle. This is a fantastic record of the day they tried to reach 100mph. Wish I had been in the UK for it.
Absolutely terrific piece of film. I shall watch it again and again. Well done!
Fascinating. I drive on the M5 frequently and I have never noticed the section where the railway is so close to the road. How lucky yo have captured this footage. Its awesome. Such a magnificent locomotive.
What a thrill it must have been to actually be present to get this footage. Well done. Thanks so much for posting. Have watched this dozens of times it's so good.
But how sad to have been driving with eyes on the road ahead
Great video, what a truly beautiful site, I remember these as a boy in Paddington station. They were always spotlessly clean. Thanks for posting
OMG....WHAT a sight.....I know that road so well......what timing....and so great you used your gumption to get this epic footage.... Kudos to you.....I'm almost in tears watching that...........!!!!
Look at her go! Such a marvel of mechanical engineering.
Reminds me of the double-page spread of 'Berry Pomeroy Castle' at speed in the Bradford Barton 'Great Western Steam in the Midlands' volume.
Best video ever of the most elegant of the GW engines. Shame about the double chimney, still...you can't have everything. Brilliant! Many thanks.
What a beautiful sight to see this lady doing her stuff - camera work first class
Truly poetry in motion.I must have travelled the main line behind GWR express locos but it maybe hard to believe but I am not old enough to remember. Many thanks for posting.
This was an every day sight in my childhood.My uncle lived in Cullompton and we often watched trains race up to Tiverton Junc tion station.They really sounded great as they climbed up to Willand. As a youth we used the Cullompton bypass as a race track which is now part of the M5 and tried to keep up with trains.
Wow!....that's a busy steam engine. Brilliant footage. Who couldn't enjoy watching that??
Gorgeous, the "Sewing Machine" ticking and throaty growl reminds me of the King's thundering along from Snow Hill to London Paddington, sight and sounds never forgotten, great parallel filming along the Exe valley (Cullompton), Magnificent machines unfairly scrapped before their time, with the fitting of double bast pipes and 5-row superheaters in the late fifties/early sixties gave these locomotives many more years life before their untimely replacement by dubious diesel hydraulics. Well done Ben Jervis!
What a marvellous bit of filming
To add to my previous posts,the really amazing thing is this used to happen several times a day in the days of steam.Even now in 2020 the times to London are not much shorter than when I used to go to Paddington from Taunton in the late 1950,s.Some trains stopped at Tiverton Junction a mile further on from were the filming stopped.I used to get the returning empty milk trains early in the morning to get home .
Great capture, poetry in motion
Magnificent i keep coming back to this
very good vid as a ex gwr man 46 yrs service that was good worked on all loco's from B;ham.
Fantastic video. Thanks for posting.
Fantastic footage, weather by planning or fluke, it's just brilliant 👏
That's why people put all that work into restoration. That's simply AWSOME.
That’s ace! The only time I’ve seen a steam hauled train on that section of line was when Braunton passed me heading towards Exeter a good few years ago. I was on the M5 heading north. And driving!
Incredible footage, absolutely flawless film work! Thank you!
My favorite british steam engine. Highballing. In english countryside. So beautiful.
It does my soul good to watch this. A wonderful sight and great camera work.
I was interested in the speed too. Assuming the footage is at normal speed. I timed 10 wheel revolutions and got about 2.2 seconds (with an actual timer on my phone)
A 2032mm wheel travels 6.38 meters every revolution.
Doing a little arithmetic you get about 105km/h (or about 65 mph for the Luddites).
Great to see..
poetry in motion!
We're all Luddites - that's why we're here. What are these "km" and "mm" you mention? All speeds, speed limits etc on the railways (and roads) are in mph, and distances, even on official track diagrams, are in miles and chains and the dimensions of locomotives are in feet and inches, tons (proper ones) and hundredweights (all right, 50 kg if you must). The point about units is that they must be familiar to their essential users. Not much point me telling you that on Oct 19 last year I had a huge party of like-minded old nutters to celebrate my 27,000 days on this planet. What age is that? Well.
Umm.. did you really want to try to do that calculation in feet and inches?
If we want following generations to carry on the interest/care for in beautiful Victorian engineering? WE old types should probably learn to describe it in terms they easily connect with ..or we can make it snobby and inaccessible..
When you said that the Castle's driving wheels were 2032 mm in diameter I had no idea if that was right or not but assumed it was. But if you'd said they were 6' 3" I'd have said immediately, "no, they're bigger than that". Millimetres and kilos etc are simply not the language of steam in the English-speaking world and very few steam enthusiasts think in metric. All the literature on steam is in Imperial units so going metric is a bit like speaking Hungarian, with all due respects to the Magyars.
Rosie6857 oh well, hopefully I'm wrong.
Absolutely fantastic piece of camera work,what a beautiful sight seeing the best of British Engineering still working all these years later,it just goes to show how this country has lost its way over the years,we were world leaders in trains and ship building as well as car and truck building and what have we got now??? Mac Donald’s and Kentucky Fried Chicken,it’s a sad country we now live in,it’s no wonder the country is Skint we have to buy everything from abroad because we don’t manufacture anything anymore, it’s sickening.
its no surprise, as the standards of living goes up the workers want higher wages and soon manufacturing starts to become un profitable because their is always another country willing to do the same for cheaper. im sure if people were still getting paid a few shillings a week we would still be making everything
Excellent, well done Ben, nothing encapsulates more the power and grace of the Castle loco..congratulations.
Evidence for the beauty and grace of a steam locomotive... 👏😍
brilliant video ,brings tears of joy every time i watch .
It's amazing all that reciprocating mass doesn't just fling itself apart at those speeds.
Nothing looks better than a GWR Castle or King at speed
Please don't ever delete this video...
Art and science combined to absolute perfection. There is a God!
brilliant video
Thought I'd commented on this one but it appears not - which is quite an oversight! Fabulous bit of film, I enjoyed it very much indeed, right up there with my all time favourite pacing sequences. Thankyou! Tim
and full marks for such steady filming at high speed!
That thing is hauling arse absolutely magnificent
Quite remarkable! Thank you.
I was looking for a John Huntley film of a GWR "Star" on the wheel lathe at Wolverampton (which is breathtaking).
Harry Lee (stalwart of the West Somerset) was very fond of that class and he would have really been impressed by this video! He was a real gem, and so is The Earl!
complimenti per questo meraviglioso video complimenti per il bellissimo convoglio un caro saluto dalla sicilia giuseppe
This is a lovely piece of controlled driving. The engine is running fast and smoothly. Now and then there is just a whiff of steam from the safety valve, showing full pressure is being maintained but without any wasteful blowing off. The real hero of this performance is the fireman. You can see him bending his back and packing it in without much time for rest breaks. Remember the big Great Western shovel can hold up to 20 pounds of coal. That's hard work!
Finest loco of them all a Castle more than a match for anything Crew Doncaster or Eastleigh built Swindon the home of the very best
Paul Casini the greatest engine of them all was MALLARD.
Hahahaha.... Southern Loony.
@@WashingtonSAFC Im not from the South !!!!
@@MrJimbaloid Not a match for a Castle ever !!!
V2. Could do anything ;-)
Amazing footage!!!!!
Have yet to get lucky enough to spot a steam loco on that stretch of the M5. One day!
A fantastic film. I'm amazed that the traffic on the M5 allowed you to keep such a steady pace. A wonderful pan-shot. Barry
Great video of the simple graceful lines of GWR loco powering along well done.
Great footage. Well done for capturing this.
Absolutely wonderful, the countryside adds atmosphere. Loved it and saved it!,
Wow! So steadily filmed, it's a remarkable achievement.
man this is heavenly!
It's great to open them up and see what they can do! I'd say that the fireman was parched afterwards! Great filming from the side! You could hear it, see it and the crew!
PAT COEN. They had a can of stewed tea. LUVERLY !
@@arthurrytis6010 I hear that when you've fired a steam loco, especially at full whack, when you get to the pub after the beer hardly touches your mouth when you drink it! Mesmerizing footage. My most favorite. I always loved Gods Wonderful Railway. At home in Ireland I live near what was The Midland & Great Western Railway to Sligo.
@@patcoen1113 I used to like a couple at the end of a turn.
Simply fantastic filming
Very nice video ... thumbs up.
Totally superb, I know this stretch of motorway very well and was driving on it on the 26th and 29th of December last year 1 1 15 today.
David. Who sometimes visits Cheltenham.
Absolutely cracking upload and thanks for taking the time to do this and share this superb recording with us all.