Inside The Insane 1960s Nuclear Overland Vehicle - LeTourneau TC-497

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,1 тис.

  • @CalumRaasay
    @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +126

    Thanks again to my friends at Warthunder! playwt.link/Calum
    You can Mark's book here! 👇
    US- amzn.to/3mBIPsI
    UK - amzn.to/3L54CD2

    • @eurotrash5610
      @eurotrash5610 Рік тому +2

      DAMN HARKONNENS!

    • @eurotrash5610
      @eurotrash5610 Рік тому +3

      PS. please excuse my manners, I just noticed: all the best to you and your wife!

    • @aserta
      @aserta Рік тому +1

      Congratulations on getting married! :)

    • @hayleyxyz
      @hayleyxyz Рік тому +3

      Congrats on getting married x wish the best for both of you
      I’ve loved your enthusiasm for esoteric topics ever since I watched your video nerding out over the Jerry Can

    • @Archangelm127
      @Archangelm127 Рік тому +4

      See if they're willing to model this beautiful monster into Warthunder. :D

  • @MrDDiRusso
    @MrDDiRusso Рік тому +1871

    I'm surprised Hollywood never showed anything like this. This would have made an epic sci-fi movie prop.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +267

      I know right? Maybe the mothership for the armoured personnel carrier in Aliens haha

    • @tomcardale5596
      @tomcardale5596 Рік тому +108

      There are things like this in the Thunderbirds series.
      Slough rather than Hollywood but near enough I suppose?

    • @Janzcu
      @Janzcu Рік тому +48

      When I was young '85 i saw a movie of a land train, they had a race race, land train lost because it was made of pure smuggled gold..

    • @ErikOrdway1984
      @ErikOrdway1984 Рік тому +28

      The sort of did with the movie 'The Big Bus.'

    • @aserta
      @aserta Рік тому +22

      I think there's at least two black and white movies from back in the day that have if not the same concept, then exploration by large vehicles. I wish i could remember the name of the big vehicle one - movie.
      In modern stuff, there's the spice gatherers of Dune, but they're only snippets.
      That said, they do exist in games. The Homeworld saga. They had lots of big land stuff.

  • @charliestevenson3500
    @charliestevenson3500 Рік тому +395

    I grew up in Yuma and remember seeing the control unit in the surplus dealer’s yard for the first time in 1967 when I was a child. It was very large and imposing. I’m glad it got restored and is no longer forgotten. Great job and I’m glad that you enjoyed your trip to my hometown . Congratulations to Mrs. Calum and you on your wedding.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +47

      Yeah I have a cool article from the 1970s when it was being moved. how cool that you saw it when it was almost new!

    • @Mis73rRand0m
      @Mis73rRand0m Рік тому +9

      Awesome to see someone flying out to my home town for this! AZ is an amazing boneyard for these types of hulks; very little corrosion, worst you'll get is some dust.

    • @ghomerhust
      @ghomerhust Рік тому +8

      @@Mis73rRand0m my brother was stationed at Davis Monthon up the road from Yuma, playing with aircraft. he said it was really incredible how well the climate there preserves all those old airframes simply because of how dry it is.

    • @johnserrano9689
      @johnserrano9689 Рік тому

      He is definitely a secret spy, a foreign agent. He is definitely spying for Greenland....

  • @TesserId
    @TesserId Рік тому +429

    I love that this wasn't destroyed. Too many important creations in history where allowed to slip into the void, leaving us wonder what such things were really about. Getting to see the inside of this beast was a big thrill, having thought from other videos that this was destroyed. Thank you so much for this video.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +33

      Right? I guess it many ways it was just SO big that it was difficult to move or scrap! The crazy size of it probably helped save it, in many ways.

    • @tomfxstc4833
      @tomfxstc4833 Рік тому

      Thanks to my Brother

    • @smugly6793
      @smugly6793 Рік тому +4

      Absolutely true. So many amazing machines and vehicles were scrapped the second they became obsolete with nothing being preserved for the future to learn from. It’s incredibly sad to see

    • @jlo13800
      @jlo13800 Рік тому

      Its got a nuclear 2 stroke engine.

    • @Tigershark_3082
      @Tigershark_3082 Рік тому

      Makes me think of a lot of the forgotten aircraft.
      Stuff like the Martin P6M SeaMaster, or XF10F Jaguar

  • @Harv72b
    @Harv72b Рік тому +182

    Where did you go on your honeymoons?
    Couple 1: We spent a lovely two weeks in the Bahamas, soaking up the sun.
    Couple 2: We spent an exquisite week in Paris, soaking up the culture.
    Couple 3: We went on a romantic Mediterranean cruise, soaking up everything the region had to offer.
    Calum: We went to the Arizona desert so I could crawl around inside a decommissioned overland train from the 1960s.
    😂😂😂
    (The odometer was reading 889.4 miles. You've probably been told that four dozen times already but I didn't see those comments.)

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +33

      Hahaha I’ll take our honeymoon anyday!

    • @Melody_Raventress
      @Melody_Raventress Рік тому +4

      Not to mention tracking all those arrows across the barren American southwest. It's an amazingly beautiful area, but not for everyone. Because fantastic desolation.

    • @jugo1944
      @jugo1944 Рік тому +2

      ​@@CalumRaasaythe galley is actually gorgeous, I wouldn't mind at all

    • @bwilliams463
      @bwilliams463 5 місяців тому +1

      How about five days crashing around the American Desert in THAT?

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem 5 місяців тому

      We ?

  • @icoopify
    @icoopify Рік тому +158

    As a graduate of LeTourneau University and a former employee of LeTourneau Inc (now part of Komatsu), it's always really cool to see the legacy of R.G. LeTourneau in the wild.

    • @bensendthompson2296
      @bensendthompson2296 Рік тому +6

      Yeah, as an alumni, it is always fun coming across these videos

    • @natewiebe7815
      @natewiebe7815 Рік тому +2

      Another alum, same here!

    • @michaelgmyers
      @michaelgmyers Рік тому +1

      Grew up in Longview
      Back in the 80s there was an old machine shop. In the yard we're these very large metal wheels. I was told there were part of a machine use help build interstate 20.

    • @bigglilwayne7050
      @bigglilwayne7050 Рік тому +2

      His concrete houses were awesome as the whole thing(floors, walls, and roof) was done in one continuous pour

    • @bigglilwayne7050
      @bigglilwayne7050 Рік тому

      ​@@michaelgmyers
      The Sabine River bottoms was the most difficult part of construction for the entire project and he did it for free to test his equipment

  • @DavidBGleason
    @DavidBGleason Рік тому +491

    For us old-timers who remember mechanical odometers, the mileage at 25:26 is 889.4 miles, not 8,894. The white number wheel represents tenths of a mile.

    • @C0ttageChees
      @C0ttageChees Рік тому +9

      I learned something. Thank you, sincerely :)

    • @GlutenEruption
      @GlutenEruption Рік тому +19

      Was looking for this comment. Lol. Also noticed that gauge says the outside scale = RPM and the inside scale is MPH. We can see all of the labels above but someone used a label maker to print out “? miles = REV. X 1.?” So I’m guessing those are tire revolutions per minute. So that definitely seems like a Speedo/odometer so I’m guessing that’s 889.4 miles total

    • @ThePaulv12
      @ThePaulv12 Рік тому +11

      I thought it was an hour meter.

    • @DavidBGleason
      @DavidBGleason Рік тому +17

      @@ThePaulv12 It might be. But because it's integrated into the speedo, I'd assume miles. I'd expect to see an hour meter separate from a speedo.

    • @bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24
      @bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24 Рік тому +21

      My first and second cars had mechanical odometers. I'm 34. Its crazy there's people now who don't know how to read such "old" technology.

  • @roypennock8046
    @roypennock8046 Рік тому +159

    You might be interested to know that after changing hands many times over the years, LeTourneau is now part of Komatsu Corp. and produce hybrid diesel-electric drive surface and underground mining equipment including the L2350, which is the largest rubber-tired front-end loader in the world. It still has in-wheel traction motors with forced air cooling, dynamic braking and enormous Firestone tires (but "only" 4...) just like the overland train.

    • @josephpadula2283
      @josephpadula2283 Рік тому +7

      Thank you! Good the know the corporate memory was not dumped like many old projects!
      Perhaps you can ask an Old engineer if they kept the prints when the company was bought out?
      If so ask them to donate to a museum or library if they are ever to discard And scan them first .,..

    • @To-mos
      @To-mos Рік тому +2

      Komatsu makes some massively massive huge equipment next to Liebherr, love watching both companies contraptions crawl around.

    • @Porkpickle
      @Porkpickle 3 місяці тому +2

      Everytime it's rains our Letourneau loaders die because they suck in weather same as the trucks, water and Letourneau's don't mix

  • @CalumRaasay
    @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +234

    Visiting this crazy machine was the absolute honour of a lifetime and it's you guys, my viewers, that have helped make it possible! Thank you again. I'll be doing a giveaway this month on my patreon for a couple copies of Mark's book for anyone interested - patreon.com/calumraasay
    Discord: discord.gg/BPahz6vHJd

    • @keab42
      @keab42 Рік тому +3

      I'm so glad you actually got to visit it! I loved your documentary on it.

    • @nefariousyawn
      @nefariousyawn Рік тому +10

      And you did it on your honeymoon? Let's call it the second absolute honor of your lifetime, for the sake of your marriage 😉

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +6

      @@nefariousyawn haha good point, nice save 😂

    • @bigbossimmotal
      @bigbossimmotal Рік тому +1

      @@CalumRaasay Hey honey, where do you want to go for our anniversary? ALASKA!

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +1

      @@bigbossimmotal Haha luckily I have an understanding wife!

  • @daniellebcooper7160
    @daniellebcooper7160 Рік тому +28

    @2:12 Youre new wife looks absolutely thrilled to bits. I'm glad you found someone that obviously shares your enthusiasm for looking over old machinery on their honeymoon.
    In all seriousness, good luck to the both of you.

  • @chadhughes8151
    @chadhughes8151 Рік тому +47

    When I was a kid the first 10’ tire overland train was abandoned in a junkyard near FT WW. We use to sneak into it to play on all the old military equipment include the control car. We’d climb up into the cab and pretend we were driving it. After about 20 years or more of sitting there, the ground in the junkyard was found to be highest toxic due to its owner purchasing and burying old transformers full of PCB’s. That’s when the overland equipment was moved to a museum.

    • @Bread1_YT
      @Bread1_YT 3 місяці тому

      Thats so cool!

  • @MccoppingSalvage
    @MccoppingSalvage Рік тому +260

    Please travel to Alaska and visit the other two pieces of this history. It would be amazing to see the rest of story that still exists.
    Very interesting and entertaining video.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +65

      That's the plan! Haha I’ll start booking flights 😂

    • @oswurth8774
      @oswurth8774 Рік тому +11

      @@CalumRaasay Expanding the Calumverse

    • @berryreading4809
      @berryreading4809 Рік тому +4

      I hope so too! Although Nome Alaska is certainly not the world's best tourist attraction 😄 Or very easy to even get to... However with the abandoned snow train atleast the surrounding areas would be enjoyable during the trip up 😉👍

    • @herzogsbuick
      @herzogsbuick Рік тому +8

      @@CalumRaasay I have some friends from Nome that I'm sure could act as fixers. I live in Anchorage -- about a 7 1/2 hour drive south of the sno-freighter in Fairbanks. It would then be a 13-odd hour drive from Fairbanks to Whitehorse, plus however long the border takes (I unfortunately missed the Yukon Transportation Museum last time I passed through, not again!)
      Just throwing myself in the ring here in case you want to do this, I've been watching your videos around 3 years now, stop what I'm doing every time I see a new one come out. Cheers!

    • @canonicaltom
      @canonicaltom Рік тому +1

      @@CalumRaasay I used to live in Fairbanks, definitely recommend going in the summer :D

  • @jason0870
    @jason0870 Рік тому +61

    It's cool to see how when vandalism is kept at bay and im sure minimal maintenance, the machine stays in relatively stock condition. I enjoyed your original video and this video very much. Thank you

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +6

      Thanks Jason! Yeah even BEFORE the restoration she was in amazing condition, I can't believe how much was left behind.

    • @davidkaufman1
      @davidkaufman1 Рік тому +3

      I saw a video on the Russian Buran space shuttles on military bases that were vandalized. When all ladders were removed vandals brought ropes

    • @JoshuaTootell
      @JoshuaTootell 10 місяців тому +2

      What's funny is when you hear people talk about people being disrespectful these days, but the Battleship Texas had to close up sections of the ship because of vandalism...in the 1950's.

  • @bugman72
    @bugman72 Рік тому +23

    Don't know if anyone has mentioned this yet, but the tires on Bob Chandler's Bigfoot #5 are off of one of these. Not sure if they originated from the TC-497, but they are the same wheel/tire combo. In fact, at some point, Bigfoot #5 ran 8 of these tires at once.

    • @bwilliams463
      @bwilliams463 5 місяців тому +2

      If I remember right, he found a Sno-Train in a Washington (state) scrap yard.

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem 5 місяців тому

      From the Alaska Roadtrain.

    • @michaelamo7593
      @michaelamo7593 3 місяці тому +2

      Very cool! I thought they looked sort of familiar. It's 2024 and I'm just discovering this unit today, but the iconic Bigfoot grabbed my attention as a kid decades ago.

  • @warrentobey5237
    @warrentobey5237 Рік тому +2

    I worked on letourneau log unloaders in the Pacific Northwest. Letourneau also made tanks in ww2. The drive motors on all 4 wheels were DC motors. The lifting, steering, log clamps were AC motors. The turning was controlled by a left/right toggle switch and the drive motors were controlled by a rheostat. They had a 2 part generator driven by a diesel engine. The engine ran at 2000 rpm which made the ac generator run at 73 hz at 500 vac. The dc generator also produces 500 vdc. Nice video😊

  • @rocketman374
    @rocketman374 Рік тому +8

    RG LeTourneau built a lot of really cool machinery, this is just one of many! Also, love the Elder Scrolls map marker. Lol. First time seeing your channel, just subscribed!

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +3

      LeTourneau's list of inventions is just mental isn't it haha. Thanks for watching!

  • @jp-um2fr
    @jp-um2fr Рік тому +39

    Congratulations Calum and wife - what have you let yourself into young lady. All the best for the future and thanks again for yet another excellent video.

  • @gafrers
    @gafrers Рік тому +12

    I bought the book in November because of your first video. Read it all in a weekend and was amazing.
    This video feels like the culmination of this fantastic topic but not the end.
    Thanks Calum and Miss

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +3

      So glad to hear you got the book! Mark's work is fantastic.

  • @rustythrombosis5417
    @rustythrombosis5417 Рік тому +36

    My favorite part was how at the 8:06 mark you had to hold up a photo of the TC497 next to the real TC497 to make sure you had the right TC497.
    Of course all of that was said in jest and I love your videos. Thanks for the time and effort to make great and interesting content.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +6

      Haha reminded me of when a detective is trying to match a photo to a face!

  • @beb38138
    @beb38138 Рік тому +3

    @25:44 It looks like each train car has the ability to steer individualy and follow the footsteps of the control car. That is amazing right there, and the fact that they did it in the '50s and '60s even more mesmerizing. 👏

  • @hvonwolfenstein2638
    @hvonwolfenstein2638 Рік тому +13

    We have an LCC-1 Sno-Train by LaTourneau Inc. at the transportation museum up here in Whitehorse, Yukon. It's super cool and really fun to go see! My favourite part is the bubble dome on the top which allows for navigation by stars! Very cool.👍

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +4

      The bubble dome is so cool! Similar to the Soviet Kharkovchanka actually!

  • @pendantblade6361
    @pendantblade6361 Рік тому +5

    Aaaaah, another day another video of Calum filming a Jawa sandcrawler. Thanks to all the Marks that helped with the restoration and research of this wonderful machine.

  • @SVanHutten
    @SVanHutten Рік тому +8

    Not even in his wildest dreams could Mr LeTourneau have imagined that his innovative vehicles would be given such deserved attention that many years into the future. Great video and a big thank you for taking your time to get there and sharing your unique experience with us. From a long time admirer of these contraptions.

  • @ivanekprochazka
    @ivanekprochazka Рік тому +53

    I love the educational value of your videos and their unceasingly improving production quality. I'm glad you've been able to turn your passion into your career. I always had crossed fingers for you. Greetings from Prague!

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +10

      Thank you Ivánek, that means a lot. They take a while to make, but I love being able to go into such detail and have such a receptive audience!

  • @billyhess5263
    @billyhess5263 Рік тому +14

    I’m not even 10 minutes in so I’m not sure if you mentioned it but, back when I was 7 years old (1986) a new Bigfoot monster truck was revealed, it would be the tallest monster truck ever made (I think even still today), Bigfoot 5. Bigfoot 5 used those very tires from that very vehicle (well, from one of its trailers anyway). That truck made an entire generation aware of the Alaskan land train. Such cool history!

    • @1978garfield
      @1978garfield Рік тому +3

      Yup that truck (Bigfoot 5) is on display in Pacific MO.

    • @kevineckelkamp
      @kevineckelkamp Рік тому +2

      @1978garfield pacific has an earlier Bigfoot, the taller one is also right off the interstate, but much closer to st louis

    • @JMRCDesigns
      @JMRCDesigns Рік тому +2

      I was gonna say if no one had already posted, about looking into Bob Chandler's BIGFOOT 5. I'm not sure if it's ever mentioned which land train they got the tires from, but Bob stated that he found them at an army surplus store. Two very cool pieces of history in both this video and the history of BIGFOOT 5. 👍

    • @kevineckelkamp
      @kevineckelkamp Рік тому +1

      @1978garfield u were right, they moved it to pacific

  • @BarbarianGod
    @BarbarianGod Рік тому +1

    16:00 oven next to the fridge/freezer seems like a bold choice!

  • @SM-rn3xy
    @SM-rn3xy Рік тому +31

    Thanks for another great video! 25:29 Fairly sure that is 889.4 not 8 thousand. The note 'Total Miles Rev x 1.2' might indicate its something similar to a Hobbs meter which would be close to hours plus a bit and would make sense for a turbine engine that would have to be serviced according to hours.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +10

      Yeah someone pointed out that the counter looks lifted from a cummins setup, which makes sense as thats what most letourneau products used. So maybe they adapted the cummins counter then added that note to account for the turbine?

  • @paulgoz7281
    @paulgoz7281 Рік тому +17

    It's so much like a real life prop from an episode of Jerry Anderson's Thunderbirds. Especially with the possibility of being nuclear powered. Many thanks to your bride for allowing you to take a sizeable detour on your honeymoon and make this fantastic follow-up video on an imagination stirring topic.

    • @YellowRambler
      @YellowRambler Рік тому

      Probably a Thorium Molten Salt Reactor? It would have been a less heavier.

  • @TriGogglin
    @TriGogglin Рік тому +16

    Calum, I remember seeing some of the old footage you shown in this video as a kid, and always thought this had to be extremely awesome to see. You were the right person for this video. Thank you for the time, effort and knowledge you put into this.. it was worth it.. excellent presentation. thank you, best regards, Pappy

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +3

      Thank you pappy! Apologies I seemed to miss your message, but your support really means a lot!

    • @TriGogglin
      @TriGogglin Рік тому +1

      @@CalumRaasay no worries, i totally understand, it's hard to keep up sometimes. Be safe out there on your travels

  • @dougtaylor8735
    @dougtaylor8735 Рік тому +10

    My son went to LeTourneau University in Longview, Texas. While visiting him one time, we went to the R.G. LeTourneau museum on campus. It is fascinating and I highly recommend checking it out. He was an amazing designer and built many different large pieces of one off equipment. He also built the first off shore oil drilling platform.

  • @grantlee5393
    @grantlee5393 Рік тому +1

    Graduated from the Engineering Program at Letourneau Uni last year and now work as a design engineer at Peterbilt. Great video and so cool learning about this history

  • @bartfoster1311
    @bartfoster1311 Рік тому +11

    Amazing to see it still stocked inside like it is!

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +1

      Same here! I couldn't believe it!

    • @TheOtherBill
      @TheOtherBill Рік тому +2

      It seems we have those volunteer restorers to thank for that. If I didn't live 3,000 miles away I'd love to volunteer for a week.

    • @dersaegefisch
      @dersaegefisch Рік тому +1

      Right? The thing looks like it's in better shape than some of the older tractors on my uncles farm. ...And those still run. I mean it is obviously missing th motor, but still. You can really imagine how the crew must have felt when they first saw this monster. And what their reaction probably was when they did:
      "I CALL DIPS ON THE MIDDLE BUNK BED!!" (everybody screaming at once)

  • @olliedean3454
    @olliedean3454 Рік тому +12

    I remember watching your original video on this last year. Amazing that you've been able to now see this in person! what a brilliant piece of engineering and a great video! Well done man :)

  • @willpowerfpv3246
    @willpowerfpv3246 Рік тому +30

    Very cool! I worked at the largest coal strip mine in Canada, and we had a massive La Tourneau front end loader. It's ridiculously large, and was broken down most of time, as parts were difficult to source. 😕

  • @mikemace9644
    @mikemace9644 Рік тому +1

    16:17
    Robert shaw is the name of a company who makes controls for heating instruments. They've been around for almost 100 years & they still make heating and air conditioning controls today.

  • @benmcreynolds8581
    @benmcreynolds8581 Рік тому

    Ever since watching your first video covering this company and these vehicles.. I have been facinated with them. I really think we need to bring this BACK! They are so well made! It's amazing. Seriously.

  • @Never_heart
    @Never_heart Рік тому +5

    Every time I see these vehicles my imagine runs wild. They are so evocative in their scale and design

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +3

      Right? It takes me to some crazy post-apocalypse, mad max story!

    • @Never_heart
      @Never_heart Рік тому +1

      @@CalumRaasay Yes so much that natural evolution of the Mad Max world and aesthetic. But also I can't help but ask myself where is point of intersection between these land trains and extreme artic exploration vehicles? And then that snowballs into imagining running various essential supplies between disparate deep cold based across a near frozen planet.

    • @VLGCombat
      @VLGCombat Рік тому

      ​@@CalumRaasay I like to imagine an alternate timeline where these things came to fruition... it reeks of 1950s futurism, especially with the plans for an nuclear reactor car. Would fit so well in something like the Fallout universe.

  • @BatCaveOz
    @BatCaveOz Рік тому +7

    Just when I thought that Calum had already taught me all there is to know about land trains, he releases yet another amazing video.
    Thank you for continuing to publish such engaging and high quality content.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому

      Wow, thanks! Really appreciate that

  • @haidenthomas6002
    @haidenthomas6002 Рік тому +5

    8 of the wheels from an Alaskan land train ended up on the Bigfoot 5 monster truck

  • @oldladycrenshaw
    @oldladycrenshaw Рік тому +1

    If im not mistaken, 4 of those tires/wheels from the scrapped units ended up on the monster truck "BigFoot #5". Story is that he bought the tires from a scrap yard after getting the price reduced significantly.

  • @mjmcomputers
    @mjmcomputers Рік тому +1

    There is a Bigfoot Monster truck with wheels/tires from one of the scrapped tc-497 cars.

  • @bigratkiller1
    @bigratkiller1 Рік тому +15

    Dude, on your Honeymoon!!! Congratulations to you both and that's a super understanding wife you got there 😁

  • @TheUncleRuckus
    @TheUncleRuckus Рік тому +8

    Calum, I just wanted to say thank you for making yet another great video and for continually making some of the best content on UA-cam!! Each video on your channel shows all the time, effort and passion you pour into them and we truly appreciate it my friend! Keep up the good work. 👍👍
    Idk about anyone else but I would definitely be interested in a video on the other land trains in the future.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +1

      Thank you so much! Really appreciate such a lovely comment, it's so great being able to have an audience to share these adventures and niche pieces of history with!

  • @Thinginator
    @Thinginator Рік тому +7

    I'd definitely love to see a video on that gold dredger in Alaska! I had no idea any of the Overland Train cars had survived in a functional state, let alone being actively used in recent years.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +3

      I know right? Shows how durable they really were!

    • @FFmike790
      @FFmike790 Рік тому

      @@CalumRaasay Any chance you could give us a link to where you got the video of it that you show the few seconds of it here in yours? Thanks.

  • @AZ762SHOOTER
    @AZ762SHOOTER Рік тому +1

    The cab of this thing used to be right next to the 8 freeway on araby when i got stationed here. This was around 98. At the time i just figured it was just farming equipment until a gunny in my unit told me what it was. It sat there for a couple years before it moved to yuma proving ground.

  • @JackpineGandy
    @JackpineGandy Рік тому +1

    traveling all the way from Old Blighty to Yuma Arizona to see this incredible relic...amazing! and a tip of the hat to your dear wife, for going along on this trip!

  • @mr.squarebody5554
    @mr.squarebody5554 Рік тому +17

    Sometimes I worry calum left his channel then he comes back swinging

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +8

      Haha just a Wedding, Christmas & Honeymoon break!

    • @Edward-pw6zz
      @Edward-pw6zz Рік тому

      @@CalumRaasay well deserved!

  • @1224chrisng
    @1224chrisng Рік тому +7

    Great work Mark, Mark, Mark, and --Mark-- Callum. You never miss the Mark. It's amazing to see this machine, and even more amazing that this is only Mark-1. Imagine if this was further developed, this would really leave its Mark on history. Shame it was sold to the scrap Mark-et instead.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +1

      I know right? This was certainly the most advanced of all the overland trains but the entire development only happened over the course of a decade of so. Who knows what could have happened if this had been allowed to develop further!

  • @Ayeskint
    @Ayeskint Рік тому +34

    Honeymoon? Congratulations to you both! May health and happiness be your companions in life.🤘

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +5

      Thank you! It's been a great start to the year and our life together!

    • @Ayeskint
      @Ayeskint Рік тому +1

      @@CalumRaasay Start as you mean to go on! Have fun, guys.

  • @markdc1145
    @markdc1145 Рік тому +1

    Thanks to Calum and all the Marks!👏

  • @Sinister_Scotty
    @Sinister_Scotty Рік тому +2

    A guy named Bob Chandler came across one of those trailers in a scrap yard and bought the wheels and tires off of it and fitted it to one of his F-150s, this truck is extremely well known in America as "Big Foot 5"

    • @obsoleteoptics
      @obsoleteoptics Рік тому +1

      Came here to say this

    • @Sinister_Scotty
      @Sinister_Scotty Рік тому +1

      @@obsoleteoptics my interest in this overland vehicle is solely derived from noticing that the tires were later used on Bigfoot 5

    • @obsoleteoptics
      @obsoleteoptics Рік тому

      @@Sinister_Scotty same

  • @KonjonoAwesome
    @KonjonoAwesome Рік тому +7

    An earlier version of the overland train concept was the Lombard Log Hauler. These were steam-powered track and ski "locomotives" that pulled sleds loaded with logs across snow and ice in Maine and other northern US states. Patented in 1901, the Lombard Log Hauler was the first successful commercial application of a continuous track for vehicle propulsion.

  • @patchthesinclair5896
    @patchthesinclair5896 Рік тому +10

    A camper to die for except it's a bit big for the roads of the NC 500! Thanks for another great upload.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +4

      Haha I'd love to see this trying to do the turn at Helmsdale!

  • @StephenGillie
    @StephenGillie Рік тому +15

    This thing looks oddly like the Antarctic Cruiser we made in the 1940s, and abandoned in Antarctica to fight WW2.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +6

      Funnily enough I made a video on the Antarctic Cruiser!

    • @silontninja6947
      @silontninja6947 11 місяців тому

      Yes it does remind me of that and it seems to have the same objective as well

    • @dru4670
      @dru4670 Місяць тому

      I just watched the Antarctica cruiser video and now am on a Rabbit hole

  • @paper_pinscher8889
    @paper_pinscher8889 Рік тому +2

    Absolutely incredible! I love experimental technology like this from the 40's to the 80's. The cargo car used for dredging in Alaska reminds me of Captain Rex's AT-TE because of all the piping and support structures slapped on.

  • @kurtwomack6473
    @kurtwomack6473 3 місяці тому +1

    I've known several Marks, two I worked for. LOL I live in Arizona, now I want to check that out!

  • @zimtt1276
    @zimtt1276 Рік тому +4

    Thank you! You have such an amazing talent/skill of presentation. The floor plan insert was brilliant! You have grabbed me and drawn me into a subject matter I had no idea of my interest. I was riveted to for 35 minutes.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +1

      Wow, thank you! Really appreciate that.

  • @nigozeroichi2501
    @nigozeroichi2501 Рік тому +18

    That is really cool, it's a shame they basically wasted all those tax dollars and never really used it for its intended purpose, it's really nice volunteers cleaned it up and made it look like it was just parked with all the stuff in the cupboards which at first I thought there's no way it would look like the crew just stepped out and be right back, thanks to you and all that allowed you make this very interesting look at a nearly forgotten bit of history.

    • @PeterTman
      @PeterTman Рік тому +13

      Many people do look at the tax money put into this and other projects that don't end up in regular operation as "wasted," but the technologies that are developed through them end up impacting so many things outside of the project itself. Our nation would be nowhere near as technologically advanced as it is if not for tax money that is "wasted" on trying new approaches to old (and new) problems.

    • @georgeliakaris53
      @georgeliakaris53 Рік тому

      Maybe radiation levels were not safe?

  • @russelljohnson6243
    @russelljohnson6243 Рік тому +1

    I am so glad your extraordinary efforts paid-off! The word for the brand of the cook stove is chef, as in a cook, no big deal, just mentioning it.

  • @ThinkFreely2012
    @ThinkFreely2012 Рік тому +1

    Those are also the same tires that were used on the Bigfoor 4x4 monster truck in the 1980s.

  • @krissfemmpaws1029
    @krissfemmpaws1029 Рік тому +6

    Dad being an Alaskan bush pilot saw the Snow Freighter in use at the time. He flew the Dew Line before there was a Dew Line...
    Back in the 60s till the mid 90s parts of the Snow Freighter were in a Seattle scrap yard on East Marginal Way in South Seattle. This is the place Bob Chandler of Bigfoot monster truck fame found the tires that went onto one of the Bigfoot trucks.
    Another overland machine you may was to look at is the Rollagon, I think I have the spelling right.

    • @TheOtherBill
      @TheOtherBill Рік тому +4

      Kriss, you made me look it up! I couldn't resist. Interesting little article at amusingplanet for anyone else interested. It would make a great video for Calum on his future trip to Alaska since there's supposed to be some still (as of 2018) operating near Prudhoe Bay. BTW, it's spelled Rollligon but either spelling will find it.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +4

      Wow, that's amazing! Those bush pilots were some pioneering guys, and it was their scouting and survey work that really what made the Alaska Freight Lines convoys viable.
      Yeah the story from Bigfoot IIRC is that the wheels were found from the earlier slo-train, though I think looking closely they are from the TC497 (something to do with the wheel lugs). Mark Moore knows more about it I believe.

  • @whyjnot420
    @whyjnot420 Рік тому +7

    The kitchen in this vehicle really isn't all that much smaller than the kitchen in my house. In relative terms it is about half the size, but in absolute terms it really isn't a whole lot smaller. The kitchen in my 120 year old house is clearly a small addition to the original structure. It is big enough for a full sized fridge, range & sink, along with a little room for preparation. No room for a table or anything like that. It might be small, but it really is more than adequate for my needs.
    addendum: Congratulations on getting married.

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +5

      I know right? You'd pay top dollar for an apartment that size in most cities!

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 Рік тому +2

      I'm sure I've seen kitchens with poorer fittings in brick and mortar houses, and I'm not counting the bedsits I've lived in.

    • @KevinSmith-ys3mh
      @KevinSmith-ys3mh Рік тому +2

      It reminds me of the accomodations on some older submarines Iv'e visited, such as USS Bluefin?, now tied up in the Columbia river outside the Science Museum in Portland Oregon. I think it was the first modern teardrop hull sub in the US Navy, but still Diesel-Electric drive.

  • @austinduvall2422
    @austinduvall2422 Рік тому +8

    If you like stuff like this you should look up The Gem of Egypt and The Big Muskie they were huge coal shovels used to strip mine most of south eastern Ohio and parts of P.A. they were utterly massive machines I got to see the Gem of Egypt when I was a little kid just before they tore it down and the thing was honestly mesmerizing it seriously looked like a huge mechanical dinosaur eating away at the earth.

  • @dougslittlediesel
    @dougslittlediesel Рік тому +1

    Big Foot in St Louis used the tires and wheels from one of trailers. Back in the early days of Monster Trucks.

  • @clxudzYT
    @clxudzYT Рік тому +1

    The interior is just frozen in time from the day it was left there… Crazy! I love this kind of stuff!!!

  • @charmio
    @charmio Рік тому +4

    0:17 That's not quite true. The longest road train record is held by an Australian built Mack truck with 112 semi-trailers, measuring 1,474.3 meters (4,836.3 feet) long.

    • @Smrf4997
      @Smrf4997 Місяць тому

      Yes but this was made to be a single unit so it is the longest vehicle just not a road train as it isn’t a road train

    • @charmio
      @charmio Місяць тому

      @Smrf4997 I honestly don't see the difference. Both were a single prime mover with trailers attached.

  • @SJNFAB
    @SJNFAB Рік тому +27

    VEHICLES AND SUBMARINES GET NUCLEAR GENERATORS BUT MY HOUSE CAN'T. 🤬

    • @rodcrandall1589
      @rodcrandall1589 5 місяців тому +5

      No kidding and even if I built my own they would lock me up

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem 5 місяців тому

      You need a house in Putin land !

    • @byeluvby
      @byeluvby 4 місяці тому +3

      Just live in a vehicle or submarine then

    • @connorkluth6012
      @connorkluth6012 4 місяці тому +1

      To many safety concerns to justify private nuclear generators

    • @COSMIC_SECRET
      @COSMIC_SECRET 3 місяці тому

      FYI nuclear generators are bigger than a 4 story mansion

  • @michigandon
    @michigandon Рік тому +6

    Most of us Yanks have never gotten to see this in person! Kudos to you for pulling all the strings necessary to get on post, and sharing the experience with us.

    • @tomfxstc4833
      @tomfxstc4833 Рік тому +1

      I Was in it thanks to my Bro Mark The bald guy in the Pics and video

  • @cypher8855
    @cypher8855 Рік тому +1

    The wheels from the other cars were used for Bigfoot 5, the monster truck. And the wheels are still used today, they've had to get new tires made since they acquired the wheels. But the wheels on Bigfoot 5 are some of the original wheels from the cars from this thing

  • @toserveman9265
    @toserveman9265 Рік тому

    I live in Ventura county, California.
    Good for you on your field trip.
    Diesel electric locomotives, the units used in trains here in USA, run the same way, diesel engines provide power for electric powered wheels, one has steel wheels, the other has tires.

  • @Crazyboutpeace
    @Crazyboutpeace Рік тому +4

    I wonder if this and the previous video made anyone in the military look into a modern version of the concept, with all the miniaturization tech has had over the decades, would probably be way more efficient today, and still be useful. Great video!

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +4

      Mark does mention in his book that there were some rumours of a new trackless train concept, though it never came to much!

    • @chain3519
      @chain3519 Рік тому +1

      This thing using induction motors could actually be quite interesting

  • @CybershamanX
    @CybershamanX Рік тому +4

    Ok... This is just BEGGING to be in a Mad Max film. Imagine an overland train armed to the teeth fending off raiders as they tried to get their precious cargo across the desolate mutant-filled plains to the tribes on the other side. 😉

    • @CalumRaasay
      @CalumRaasay  Рік тому +3

      I know right?! There is actually a Mad Max style book that features them - check out AMTRAK wars!
      I'd like to see them in a Fallout game one day!

    • @CybershamanX
      @CybershamanX Рік тому +1

      @@CalumRaasay Thanks for the tip! 😎👍

  • @RussellNelson
    @RussellNelson Рік тому +4

    I have a wife who doesn't just put up with my railroad explores, she leads me on them! Looks like you have married well as well.

  • @tragikk03
    @tragikk03 Рік тому +1

    I think these exact same tires are what they put on the Bigfoot #4 and 5 monster trucks back around the mid-80's

  • @bobmiller7502
    @bobmiller7502 9 місяців тому

    Its good to see someone follow there passion,how you talked the wife into incorparating it into your honeymoon,thats a skill of its own,thanks for giving us the chance to share in this amazing machines lifetime,keep on keeping on my brother, love and contentment from Liverpool UK,xx

  • @scootpegune609
    @scootpegune609 Рік тому +17

    So why does the title say it's "Nuclear"? Clearly it used gas turbines. I watched your video for way too long, curious how in the '60s they fit a nuclear reactor on it...apparently they didn't.

    • @dimidimi5537
      @dimidimi5537 11 місяців тому +6

      Same here ,I then did some research they meant to fit a nuclear reactor but they gave the whole project up before they could test the nuclear motor.

    • @mick0846
      @mick0846 4 місяці тому +1

      " click bate"

  • @brettphillips8650
    @brettphillips8650 3 місяці тому

    Well done! I have flown over Dolly Sods many times and admired its beauty. You have convinced me that I need to spend more time there on the ground. I’m now looking forward to an overnight in October!

  • @rafaelvalle8989
    @rafaelvalle8989 Рік тому +1

    There’s another classic on the background, a Cessna 337 Skymaster dubbed Push&Pull

  • @adammillwardart7831
    @adammillwardart7831 Рік тому +1

    Your videos about these old crazy arctic vehicles are super interesting and well done. Thoroughly enjoy them. Thanks for putting them together.

  • @anthonysmalawipredators8794
    @anthonysmalawipredators8794 Рік тому +1

    I can't get enough of these amazing old machines so please keep moving forward with your passion =) The interior is what blew me away the most, I would have expected much more rugged living conditions but that cab looks like a 5 star hotel room! I couldn't even imagine what life aboard would have been like. I hope your trip to America was everything you were hoping for and that you make many more great American road trips in the future !

  • @laserbeam1620
    @laserbeam1620 Рік тому +1

    The Bigfoot team bought several sets of these wheels and tires to build Bigfoot #5. A very cool monster truck!

  • @linksbro1
    @linksbro1 Рік тому +1

    The choice of Clair De Lune for when you first saw it in person speaks volumes to how important that moment was to you.

  • @kelvinwilsonpoet3200
    @kelvinwilsonpoet3200 Рік тому +1

    The life of R. G. Le Tourneau it is interesting to read of his journey and how he came up with the concept of electric drive wheels. It is found in his book. “Mover of men and mountains”

  • @rockymountainlifeprospecti4423

    Very well done! Glad you actually got to visit what you had put so much work into researching, how cool!

  • @justinmilam6899
    @justinmilam6899 Рік тому

    I live in Carthage Texas, right down the road from Longview. LeTourneau University has made some pretty amazing things that we all
    Take for granted. Probably the best engineering school in the US, tucked the way in a small town.

  • @nismo2070
    @nismo2070 3 місяці тому +1

    The inside of that vehicle looks like time was frozen! Wow!

  • @aaronmcconnell7358
    @aaronmcconnell7358 Рік тому +1

    Bigfoot 5 rides on tires that came from this land train when they were sold as surplus. The truck was built in 1986 and weighs a incredible 28,000lbs the truck has occasionally ran dual wheels front and rear and I think even once drove across a lake . Later in the 90's a second truck Bigfoot 7 was built using the second set of tires and wheels.

  • @trishrobinson5828
    @trishrobinson5828 Рік тому

    Blessings to you and your wife on your marriage. We grandma's love young people settling down. This video is amazing in so many ways. I am thrilled you have delved into American machines. I appreciate your work very much. Be safe.

  • @facebag666
    @facebag666 Рік тому +1

    The tires and wheels from theese were used for a version of the Bigfoot monster truck.

  • @gouryg4774
    @gouryg4774 Рік тому

    The restoration teams who have the passion a means to restore these amazing vehicles are the true unsung heroes of exhibits like this.

  • @redlight722
    @redlight722 Рік тому +1

    About the same time this thing was being experimented with. Convair in Fort Worth Texas, “Air Force Plant number 4”. They were placing a reactor inside a B36 aircraft to power it. Find a book about it called Magnesium Overcast.

    • @KevinSmith-ys3mh
      @KevinSmith-ys3mh Рік тому +2

      I remember some news coverage ~ 3 to 5 years ago about a Russian flight test in the Arctic of a nuclear air-breathing engine for cruise missles or bombers, didnt go well and killed a few engineers and contaminated their Arctic ocean coastal waters. So, just another OOOpsie day in the proud history of Soviet/Russian weapons development. I think the only thing in their history that anyone ever wanted to buy (that wasnt mined, harvested or murderous) was Tetris!

  • @apollomoon1
    @apollomoon1 Рік тому +1

    Thanks for your tireless work on these marvelous machines. I remember the first time I saw them in Popular Science as a young boy. I’ve been interested since then but they were so obscure, it was nearly impossible to find information about them. When I stumbled across your channel I was astounded to find so much information about them. Fantastic effort and thank you.

  • @shades360
    @shades360 Рік тому

    Congratulations on your honeymoon and thanks for the effort of filming your once in a lifetime experience

  • @theadmiralchallenger6265
    @theadmiralchallenger6265 9 місяців тому +1

    That looks to be an hour meter on that tachometer, and given that its a tachometer that would make much more sense than it counting miles

  • @clayp6415
    @clayp6415 Рік тому +1

    Fun fact, RobertShaw is still in business making thermostats and controls for HVAC and other equipment

  • @kwdoug
    @kwdoug Рік тому

    Outstanding job, and it’s even better with a Scottish accent. Very thankful you want to all your trouble to do this, it was well worth it

  • @PaulDebaecker
    @PaulDebaecker Рік тому +1

    Reminds me, aesthetically, of the Antarctic Snow Cruiser
    Great video, very interesting !

  • @dcalab
    @dcalab Рік тому

    I live on Yuma Proving Ground and see this vehicle every day. Never been inside. A lot of great information in the video.

  • @danwest3825
    @danwest3825 Рік тому +1

    Excellent video and research. Thank you for bringing this unique vehicle to life

  • @mrgcav
    @mrgcav Рік тому

    I am American. I was amazed I had never heard of this before, as I am very knoledgable about sspecial vehicles. Another bit of forgotten history. Thank you and your friend for preserving it.
    What A also find wild is a Scotsman being interested in this obscure bit of American history.