Here in western Canada, it's quite common to see Union Pacific locomotives working on Canadian Pacific trains. I've even seen BNSF and Norfolk and Southern locomotives in the Lethbridge, Alberta yard.
I'm in East Texas and see quite a few CN locos passing by usually with a KCS or UP in the lead. In fact, I've been seeing quite a few of the 100 year celebration paint schemes on CN units lately. Was that scheme only done for a year or are they repainting any loco in that scheme now?
Foreign Power seems like a rare sight for us railfans because we always see the same power that runs the tracks so is always nice to see others railroads on the train
The only 2 railroads (freight ones at least there's still Amtrak and the local RTD) Union Pacific and BNSF only have those two trains everywhere in Denver. But it's really nice seeing foreign power. I've seen NS and KCS around Denver and I've caught a brief glimpse of a Canadian Pacific loco on the Moffat Line somewhere between Granby and Glenwood Springs. Foreign power is interesting and fun to spot when you see them.
It all depends on where one is. I'm a stone's toss from CN mainline and I get to see CP, KCS, UP, (love it when a rare patched SP runs by), CSX, NS, on a weekly basis, and about once a month a loco for some nearby mining outfit, the NSMX.
I live beside a CSX line, and it’s getting kinda rare to see an EMD anymore, except maybe on a J train. Almost all you see are GE engines. Maybe an SD70 once in a while(almost never in the lead). You do see UP, CN, CP engine on some of the K trains, though.
I'm from Columbus, OH. and now that I'm older I can appreciate the trains I grew up seeing trains going through neighborhoods from lumber yards and fertilizer plants, and the OLD Rockwell plant that made the B-1 bomber and across from the Defense Supply Center Columbus.
I live next to the Genesee and Wyoming's Portland and Western Railroad (PNWR) line near Portland, Oregon. Since 2018, some BNSF units have ocasionally been used as run through power, light power moves, or dead-in-tow (dead-in-tow behind regular PNWR power), namely using GP38-2's, SD40-2's, ES44AC's, and ES44DC's. This explains why PNWR has been using BNSF power on some of it's trains in the last 3 years or so.
There is no better railfan site on the internet than Distant Signal. Each episode has been marvelous. Please keep them coming, Danny Harmon. And, thank you. R.Henry, M.D.
Glad to see a good video explaining this. When I was in central Mexico CP, NS and BNSF units were a common sight on both Ferromex and KCSM trains. Railcars and units tend to take a lot more abuse down there with vandalism and rocks thrown through windows being a common occurrence. BNSF got so fed up with receiving units back from interchange with broken windows that they started installing yellow mesh protective screens around the cabs of their units going across the border at El Paso and Eagle Pass.
Thanks! I can imagine had bad it is for rolling stock and locomotives down there. That's wild that BNSF had to put screens on their windows. I'm a big fan of your videos.
There's a video out there showing the wire mesh around the windows of the locomotives. The video shows a bunch of people around the tracks and stuff and trying to stop the train because the local Mexicans were fed up with their local government.
13:11 Polyols are also called sugar alcohols or bulk sweeteners. They are a type of carbohydrate found naturally in certain fruits and vegetables. They can also be manufactured to be used as food additives.
Thanks for explaining this US railroad practice - as a "foreign" railfan (from the UK) I wondered why and how US RRs did this and how they kept track of locos and payments for the use of 'foreign' power between the RRs involved. Not being able to visit the USA at the moment videos on UA-cam like yours have become a substitute for the seeing the "real thing". Have been railfanning in CA, TX, DC, VA, MD & AZ. Thanks for your well made videos too; I like the interludes into those roadside diners!!
Awesome. Here in Reno/Sparks it is UP country with the occasional BNSF trackage rights train. It’s nice to see the occasional CSX, NS, or more rarely CP or CN locomotives on our trains. Thanks for the video!
As long as I watch Danny's videos, I find more places to eat! Stopped by that hot dog place in Ocala, it was great! I honestly never thought that the Baldwin Diamond would EVER be removed, but...eh. CSX being CSX. Nice take on the Foreign Power! I really love the ways you explain and how you sneak in some random facts or railfanning trips while you're on it! Whatever you do next, don't change anything! Edit: 34 Likes?! Thank you all! Edit 2: Oh god 2 weeks I get 40 Likes!? Seriously, I can't thank you enough!
@@DOTD-Ko7382 Yes it closed down. I used to eat breakfast there sometimes. Now in Wildwood, Coney Island Hot dog restaurant has taken over the old Coffee House restaurant right across from the Railroad Station on 301.
Another in the long and getting longer all of the time, excellently shot, scripted, produced and presented videos! Danny your videos are so much better than almost all videos of every category on all of UA-cam! Actually your videos should be on a cable service! Thank you again for all of your hard work and sharing these videos with us! If ever a channel deserved a million viewers, it is your channel.
How did i not know about this channel?? Loving the high quality content sprinkled with generous ammounts of informations! -Sebastien, passenger trains driver for the belgian railways
I live in Texas. My city has a Union Pacific line going through the middle of town. For a few days, I have seen a few Norfolk Southern locomotives passing through. It is an interesting sight and I always enjoy seeing them
I’m from LA and I love watching NS and CSX passing through here. Also like the foreign foreign catches such as the Canadian Pacific, the KCS Mexico and Ferrorex engines when they come to LA
Hey Danny. I just want to thank you for uploading because whenever you upload I always get excited and your videos calm me down and make me less stressed.
Having grown up near where there were freight trains and as a kid getting to see inside a locomotive, I have always been a railroad buff. Your videos reveal even more detail and interesting facts, which have rekindled my interest in the field. Many thanks, Danny!
It's always fun to see something new. My family has farm land near Hoopeston, Illinois that is framed by two companies from days gone by. The Old Milwaukee Road ran North - South right next to the farm house while the old Nickel Plate crossed East - West at the back of a field behind the house. I spent a lot of time as a kid (50+ years ago) laying across the bed in an upstairs bedroom. I used to love to see how many different lines would be represented in the trains that went by. About 20 years ago while I was up there I got caught by a train where the old Illinois Central crosses Illinois State Route 9 and spotted a friend hanging out of the cab of a CSX engine. Imagine the odds of two guys from Florida meeting up at a train crossing in Illinois.
Your videos are absolutely amazing. They are also important to Run8. We have the A-Line and Waycross. Your videos make me long for the S-Line, but still your commentary teaches railfans a lot about railroad operations. This is one of the best UA-cam channel for railfanning. Hope more people discover it.
Thank you Danny for this video! VERY informative! I enjoyed learning more specifically about why trains have foreign power, but also about a "bad order" car. I knew nothing about why individual cars were left like that.
Great production, Danny! Foreign power was one of the greatest sights I saw growing up by the tracks. I lived by a Norfolk Southern mainline for six years. During my childhood, Union Pacific & BNSF power was very common on most NS trains and I can always remember telling my family how excited I was to see the different power… no matter how confusing it was to them. 15 years later, I still find it exciting to get a foreign power locomotive on a train when I’m out trackside. Oh, the joys of railfanning… what a great hobby it is!
If that old school Florida sign goes missing, we all know who took it lol 😂 Great video DH! We’ve seen some foreign power tapped onto Q453 a few time and heads back out on Q452. Q251/Q250, the Palm Center train had some as well before it was abolished. The Diamond removal at Baldwin hit us all differently, something none of us expected and thanks for the food 🥘 spots!!
With this video you touched on something that I think about a lot, as I'm sure lots of older railfans do. The reality of worlds that don't exist anymore, (in the railroad world). The old station at Lawtey, towers gone and the diamond being eliminated, but when you can find the old relics it makes railfanning that much better. Thanks for the video
Danny, your videos just get better and better. The production is top-notch and this one was especially educational. Just one thing: CP and CN are from a foreign country. ;) Greg in TN :)
You bring back so many memories. I grew up in Jacksonville in the 60s and 70s and we used to go to Starke, Baldwin, Lawtey (the Strawberry Capital of FL) but that was before I got interested in watching trains. I remember always being amazed at all the RR Tracks visible from I-10, it was the landmark telling us it was time to get off on US-301. Never knew what it was called but I now assume that is Baldwin Yard.
Always enjoy your videos, I'm on the west coast so we have BNSF and Union as primary engines, but I have occasionally seen a "foreign" CSX engine, Thanks
Great good made,mr Harmon. As raillover from the Netherlands i thank you for these information about the railroad working in the U.S.A.. you hear over the radio where the trains are. In Europe are the railroadcompanys on a other way organized and work on a other way. All railroadcompanys work wij scheduled timepaths, when a train is not loaded OR unloaded the locomotives gonna do a other job and pics up a other train. Thanks for this information on this video and wish a great time for Christmas and a nice changing of the year. Greet from Zandvoort the Netherlands.
I caught a KCS way out here earlier this year in CA on a BNSF train going through Riverbank in the Central Valley of CA. I grew up in Titusville FL watching FEC going through town.
I'm from the Salina, KS area and really find it neat you open with a train originating from there. What's interesting is BNSF had to get that load off UP owned rail then take it 20 miles east to get on their own and head your way. I know I hear coal trains that pass through here are heading to FL but I figured our grain trains were bound for the Houston area. Really enjoy your channel even if in a different part of the country.
At 8:50 - A flange-bearing diamond would have ultimately saved on maintenance, but with a large up-front cost. I guess re-routing the few trains that would have used the secondary line is quicker and easier.
It’s always nice to see foreign power on the main railroads, a lot of the other reasons is due to power shortages which has caused that to come around alot.
I will watch this video again and again. My husband said let's get a cup of coffee and watch it again together. I got him loving train watching. We love going to Folkston to see trains. Thank you Railfan Danny it was an interesting video.
Hi Danny! I did a little research and found out what the tank car holding Polyol was. Polyols are a specific group of sugar alcohols that are formed via the catalytic hydrogenation of carbohydrates. They are found naturally in certain fruits, vegetables, and mushrooms; however, they are also commonly used as sugar-free sweeteners in products such as chewing gum, candies, and beverages. So there you go. A tank car full of sweets. 🍩🍪🎂🍦When it comes to your videos I am a foamer. I always wait in anticipation for the next one. I hope you have a wonderful holiday season. 🚂🚃🚃🚃
You, sir, are a Breath of Fresh Air (BoFA) on the railfan video scene. Knowledgeable? Check! Articulate? Check! Great videographer? Check! Concise, as opposed to spending the first 20 minutes of every video gossiping about your pickup truck's failed transmission or your neighbor's dog's positive heartworm test, you are all-trains, all the time. Bravo, Danny. I wish there were YT Oscars we could vote on.
Companies lending each other locomotives and working together has always felt like an analogy for what a train is. A train is like a sports team, where all the parts and positions are different but each one part of the whole. I think trains have always been my favorite thing because they remind me of what the world could be if we all worked together, like a train we a have different appearances, designations, jobs, body styles, origins and goals but together we reach the intended destination.
Danny Harmon’s videos are consistently superb. The subject matter is presented with plain-spoken explanations for what we are seeing. The technical quality is top-notch. And there are even dining suggestions! Would I buy a used car sight-unseen from Danny? Yes I would!
Danny. You have answered the biggest question i had. I enjoy watching other channels and seeing CSX in other parts of the country. Hey I even found a CSX train in Canada. Now that's REAL foreign power. You Rock!
I'm glad you explained about "foreign" power because I was recently railfanning near Palm Springs, CA. I had watched several BNSF trains, then along came one with two CSX engines as distributed power. Thanks, Jim C.
Another awesome documentary Danny! I’ve been seeing a lot of foreign power recently on the Greenville District (Atlanta, GA to Greenville, SC) Also, glad you got to meet Ryan! We’ve known each other for a little while and he is a really nice guy. Keep up the great work! Thanks! - Carter
Mr. Harman - Nicely done sir! Always enjoy your video, and your commentary. Keep up the great work! Blessings to you and your family from a retired Lutheran pastor in Davenport, Iowa.
Danny, as always another fantastic and informative video. I lived in Marion,Ohio for a number of years. This was back when AC tower was still in service. Foreign power was almost a constant thing back then. With 3 railroads through town you were sure to see something from any of the western roads. My favorite for foreign power was the occasional Amtrak hospital train coming through on its way to Beech Grove shops. Once again, great video.
Thanks Danny for explaining all this foreign power stuff. Norfolk Southern is the local main line around here with a big yard in Elkhart IN. I've seen UP and CSX power in the area and wondered about them being here.
I’m up in eastern Ontario, CN & CP mainlines run through town, I’ve been lucky enough to see an Illinois Central loco a few months ago on the CN! Very rare in this part of Canada!
Probably my favorite train I caught on camera was a BNSF Z-train (stack train) out of Portland in 2018. Somehow, it ended up on the old GN line through Steven's Pass, and I found it leaving Wenatchee with a fresh crew. There were four engines on the head end, a BNSF C44-9W, an NS AC44C6M (Rebuilt from a Top-Hat Dash-9), a CSX ET44, and another BNSF Dash-9. I don't catch foreign power al that often, so that was a treat. Great video, Danny!
Thank you, Danny! I have lived near the tracks, watched trains, and even caught a long cab ride in Umatilla, Boynton Beach, Madison, Chattahoochee, and now back home in Tallahassee. (My father's people were all Central of Georgia, but as a boy I fell in love with the Seaboard Airline.) And I always learn something new from your posts! Again, thank you. And, a joyous Christmas to you and yours!
I love the videos. I grew up south of Vicksburg MS at a place called Allen MS. There was a north South spur from Vicksburg to Port Gibson close to the farm. I had family that worked for Illinois Central Gulf that engineered allow that spur in the 60s. My Great-Grandfather was an Engineer for the ICG in the 50s and 60s. I rode the last passenger train service from Vicksburg, MS going west from Vicksburg, MS as a kid, probably 4 or 5, Great Grandfather as Engineer. My Grandmother was with me and Mom picked us up at Monroe LA. I don't remember a lot of the trip, but certainly crossing the MS River Bridge.
Ways you can tell Danny started out in broadcast TV: he inserts leads into his videos for the ad breaks. Beautifully done - a lot of videos just get jarringly interrupted by surprising, out-of-context ads but that was clean and smooth.
Agreed - excellent narration, clear and thoughtful. It is pleasant to absorb the knowledge and enthusiasm for the history of the railroads. It is so easy to listen to that well-paced voice and diction. Reminds me of a voice from the Farm Report. My aging ears do not catch the rapid-fire mumble that is being taught in the schools of video journalism today (I assume that's where the lads and lassies pick it up - never a pause, can't separate the phrases.)
Polyol…something organic yet versatile for many uses…. Always love to see the standards like Q452 humming at track speed when you catch them… And you can’t beat a December Florida pre sunrise as the ones you caught earlier in the segment. As always thanks so much Dan and like we’ve said before - keep em coming!
6:59 Glad to know I'm not the only one. I'm always fascinated by the stories behind the designs. I like knowing WHY someone chose a particular idea they chose.
Seeing foreign is my most favorite part of railfanning because of the variety of color and fallen flags such as Santa Fe, BN, SP, and BCRail. I also enjoyed seeing the different leaser locomotives that ran on NS and CSX years earlier.
I live in Minnesota, i once saw a Northfolk Southern locomotive trailing behind a Canadian Pacific freight train. Pretty rare since i usually see CN, CP, and BNSF.
@@Daytonohrailfan I drive trucks over the bridges that cross the yard pretty often, there's some great views. Western Hills viaduct in particular gets a good angle of the yard, and you can see the loco shop.
Since I live in SE Michigan, I normally see CSX, NS, CN, _and_ CP Rail. So whenever I see the odd BNSF or UP power, it makes for a great day in my book! That and any locomotives still wearing the GT livery makes me smile (there's still quite a few that run between Detroit and Flint.)
@@EmpireStateExpress01 I'm a trucker and used to run dedicated freight up I75 past the power plant everyday for a couple years. I only had the pleasure of seeing a BNSF "pumpkin" on two separate occasions, never saw a UP engine.
Interesting channel. I appreciate your enthusiasm and dedication. I'm in northeast Ohio, so we have CSX and Norfolk Southern. Every so often I will see BNSF, Union Pacific and even a 'stray' CN locomotive. On our local transit 'light rail ', which is electrified, we have trainsets from Japan and Italy. They are a good 30 years old.
Love your videos very informative I live in Utah but work in Los Angeles so I see a lot of freight moving up and down the line. I go by the Dagger yard and the Veron yards 4 times a week. I'm amazed at the weight's they move. Keep up the good work.
You have the best videos on UA-cam! Your narration is second to none!! I’m currently battling Covid and I’m binge watching your videos. Very entertaining and educational!
I so enjoy the history and information you share with your viewers Danny. I've been subscribed now for more than a year and have never missed a new upload. I have been a rail fan since my grandmother gave me an old Lionel train set (which I promptly tore up as a kid) I still smart from that knowledge and not knowing the value of something like that at my age now (62). But I've started an HO scale set for my grandson who has not seen it yet (He's just a bit too precocious) but I cannot wait to introduce him to rail fanning. Keep 'em coming sir and blessings to you and your lovely bride.
My dad tells me that he can remember lots of foreign power running through on the Erie Lackawanna when he was growing up, and that would've been in the mid 60's and 70's. I want to say that foreign power run throughs may have started earlier than that, but I am sure that you have done more research than I have. Another fantastic and informational video, Danny.
Cool these drone pictures. How great it is that they allow you to fly your drone above an active yard. Here in the Netherlands, and probably many other countries you would have police standing next to you!. Tnx!
Danny your videos are so good, I wish we had you in our area of CSX (and NS) ops in the northeast! A few years back I drove across country and saw a lot of UP and BNSF activity. Up in Montana near Glacier National Park I saw a very busy BNSF double track line with big trains operating at fairly high altitude on steep grades, and back east in Maryland and Virginia I see CSX running huge freight trains at high speeds. All very cool, but we need guys like you to properly document this stuff! Wishing you all the best in this holiday season.
Always love your videos, and the information that comes in them. I've known about foreign powers, but, always better hearing, in detail, from you! Stay safe, Danny
When I used to travel to Maine, in the days of the MEC (Maine Central), enjoyed seeing "foreign Power there", namely CN (Canadian National) and occasionally GT (Grand Trunk). As usual, your video's are entertaining and extremely informative. Now that the hot Florida summer is winding down, hope to see you out there filming more. (hope that's not too much of a strong hint?) :)
Great info. Fortunately, I do my railfanning in and around the St Louis area where we regularly see power from all the class 1's as well as frequent visits by Ferromex.
I love how informative Danny’s videos are. I’m pretty new to all of this and honestly I learn the most and get the answers to nearly all of my questions about railroading from his videos.
I grew up in Old Port Tampa City Fl And miss the old SCL RR trains... but we still get the Train horns Almost every night... in the winter with the house windows open... Takes us PORT TAMPA CITY "KIDS" Back in time ! Thank you for your hard work on these Vlogs
As someone who takes trains into Chicago on a daily basis, I'm very used to having Foreign Power. Heck the train I brought in today always has 2 CP engines. For us, it's not really a big deal since probably half of our trains always has Foreign Power. I had a K433 train the other day out of Chicago that's destined for Tampa, FL which had 2 UP's and a BNSF on it. A Canadian Pacific crew brought it down to me. Sometimes we don't know which railroad the train interchanges with because the power is so colorful! lol
Thanks very much for the Foreign Power explanation. I had never understood the simple reality that it's only the locomotive that's foreign, not the crew; that makes a lot of things much more clear.
Thanks for answering this question for me. Incidentally you have a great voice which makes it very easy to watch your videos and listen to your commentary. I recently did a side job very close to three main lines. Two for CSX and one for NS. The amount of foreign power was staggering.
As always excellent camera work and narration. I’ve learnt more about American railroads from this channel than any of the others on UA-cam. Please keep up the good work Danny.
Danny Harmon..."Out" This reminds me of my old railroad days. I like how you narrate the video with "voice-over" the existing railroad sounds, and instead of just a boring video of watching car after car going by, you're telling all kinds of interesting information about it, and some background information, history, etc. and it makes your videos SO MUCH BETTER than any other rail videos! and occasionally we can see the shadow of your drone, where you get those really good close-up shots. It looks like you're RIGHT THERE, but not in trouble for getting on railroad property !!! I DO ENJOY-JOY watching your videos, and listening to your natural announcer's voice. Good and clear. Your type voice is the type a person delights in hearing !!! You'd be great in TV and Radio. Sports announcer, etc. What DID you do for a living? Were you a craft on a railroad or a hobbyist rail-fan wishing you worked for them? (If it weren't for a rail-fan trespassing on railroad property, I probably would have been killed ! (A crew had gotten into a Blue-Flagged service track and picked up my engine, with me underneath it, changing a brush-holder on a traction motor, and I had to jump off my ladder and onto the traction motor leads and ride, half on top of the traction motor and my feet & shins on the loops of the power leads. It was the "Middle TM" so I couldn't get free. I had to just hold on for dear life...literally ! I Did some High Level PRAYING !!! There was a Rail-fan on railroad property, up next to our yard, I was able to yell at and get him to tell the engineer I was trapped under his consist. He was able to get the engineers attention and get him to come to me. The engineer hollered at me, "what the "H" are you doing under my consist !? I said that I WAS changing a traction motor brush-holder when someone came into my flagged track and grabbed my engine and took off with it and jerked out the drop-light from the reel and made me crap my pants and have to ride on top of that traction motor for over a mile, wondering if I was going to be squished to death or what. Also, if & when the power would go up, whether or not the brush-holder that had been gouging into the armature commutator all along during my trip, would flash over and fry me to death. All kinds of scenarios ran thru my head. I didn't know if my unit had even been cranked or not. It's not something you are going to EVER forget !!! He got me to a Car-Knocker's pit so I could crawl down out of there and go and literally clean my drawers out !!! After it was all reported, it was all "quietly hidden" Nothing more was said ! I don't know if the company DID anything to the crew that jerked me out of my track, or the supervisor that possibly ok'd the derail to be taken down, or what. It became hush-hush !
As a 23 year csx veteran, this is fairly accurate. I can guarantee you they never ever pay a dime to a foreign railroad. It's just shared time, on a rotating basis.
being in London Ontario Canada i see random UP units running on CP trains quite often, either as the leading locomotive or trailing, so thats some foreign power that i have gotten so used to it does feel foreign to me anymore, however i did catch a BNSF unit trailing on a CN mixed freight just a couple days ago, was a nice change of colours to see that one. and also this is yet another well done video, i enjoyed this one as i do with each new video i catch. take care out there.
Just stumbled across your page. I enjoy history of many different kinds. Not too familiar with railroads but really enjoyed your video. With that said, all the ghost town travels I do in my homes state, railroads are/were very critical to the survival of the the town. Very educational and I learned a lot! Keep up the good work!
My brother sent me this after I saw a CN/CPKC train, I gotta say, seeing foreign power is really cool
We saw a Norfolk southern train on csx tracks in Sanford Florida
Here in western Canada, it's quite common to see Union Pacific locomotives working on Canadian Pacific trains. I've even seen BNSF and Norfolk and Southern locomotives in the Lethbridge, Alberta yard.
Still looking to catch a csx painted locomotive?
@@rushylvanianorthern Haven't seen one yet.
I'm in East Texas and see quite a few CN locos passing by usually with a KCS or UP in the lead. In fact, I've been seeing quite a few of the 100 year celebration paint schemes on CN units lately. Was that scheme only done for a year or are they repainting any loco in that scheme now?
@@jukeboxdude CN Rail bought out the Illinois Central years ago. that could be why.
I've seen bnsf at a border crossing, entering BC. I never thought about it in this context.
Foreign Power seems like a rare sight for us railfans because we always see the same power that runs the tracks so is always nice to see others railroads on the train
The only 2 railroads (freight ones at least there's still Amtrak and the local RTD) Union Pacific and BNSF only have those two trains everywhere in Denver. But it's really nice seeing foreign power. I've seen NS and KCS around Denver and I've caught a brief glimpse of a Canadian Pacific loco on the Moffat Line somewhere between Granby and Glenwood Springs. Foreign power is interesting and fun to spot when you see them.
It all depends on where one is.
I'm a stone's toss from CN mainline and I get to see CP, KCS, UP, (love it when a rare patched SP runs by), CSX, NS, on a weekly basis, and about once a month a loco for some nearby mining outfit, the NSMX.
I live beside a CSX line, and it’s getting kinda rare to see an EMD anymore, except maybe on a J train. Almost all you see are GE engines. Maybe an SD70 once in a while(almost never in the lead). You do see UP, CN, CP engine on some of the K trains, though.
not in north central Ohio on the CSX mail east west line! we see CP and BNSF all the time!
You're speaking for yourself, it just depends where you are. I see everything in Illinois
I'm from Columbus, OH. and now that I'm older I can appreciate the trains I grew up seeing trains going through neighborhoods from lumber yards and fertilizer plants, and the OLD Rockwell plant that made the B-1 bomber and across from the Defense Supply Center Columbus.
Danny i one time saw a csx engine here in California it was a first time for me to see a csx engine on Bnsf tracks
I live next to the Genesee and Wyoming's Portland and Western Railroad (PNWR) line near Portland, Oregon. Since 2018, some BNSF units have ocasionally been used as run through power, light power moves, or dead-in-tow (dead-in-tow behind regular PNWR power), namely using GP38-2's, SD40-2's, ES44AC's, and ES44DC's. This explains why PNWR has been using BNSF power on some of it's trains in the last 3 years or so.
There is no better railfan site on the internet than Distant Signal. Each episode has been marvelous. Please keep them coming, Danny Harmon. And, thank you.
R.Henry, M.D.
Glad to see a good video explaining this. When I was in central Mexico CP, NS and BNSF units were a common sight on both Ferromex and KCSM trains. Railcars and units tend to take a lot more abuse down there with vandalism and rocks thrown through windows being a common occurrence. BNSF got so fed up with receiving units back from interchange with broken windows that they started installing yellow mesh protective screens around the cabs of their units going across the border at El Paso and Eagle Pass.
Thanks! I can imagine had bad it is for rolling stock and locomotives down there. That's wild that BNSF had to put screens on their windows. I'm a big fan of your videos.
There's a video out there showing the wire mesh around the windows of the locomotives.
The video shows a bunch of people around the tracks and stuff and trying to stop the train because the local Mexicans were fed up with their local government.
nerd
@@AutonomousPlayground
Limey
I remember seeing that on the ferromex engines
13:11
Polyols are also called sugar alcohols or bulk sweeteners. They are a type of carbohydrate found naturally in certain fruits and vegetables. They can also be manufactured to be used as food additives.
Thanks for explaining that.
Polyols are also reacted with an isocyanate to make polyurethane foam or rubber or plastic.
Thanks for explaining this US railroad practice - as a "foreign" railfan (from the UK) I wondered why and how US RRs did this and how they kept track of locos and payments for the use of 'foreign' power between the RRs involved.
Not being able to visit the USA at the moment videos on UA-cam like yours have become a substitute for the seeing the "real thing". Have been railfanning in CA, TX, DC, VA, MD & AZ. Thanks for your well made videos too; I like the interludes into those roadside diners!!
It’s always a good day when Danny uploads
Awesome. Here in Reno/Sparks it is UP country with the occasional BNSF trackage rights train. It’s nice to see the occasional CSX, NS, or more rarely CP or CN locomotives on our trains. Thanks for the video!
As long as I watch Danny's videos, I find more places to eat! Stopped by that hot dog place in Ocala, it was great!
I honestly never thought that the Baldwin Diamond would EVER be removed, but...eh. CSX being CSX.
Nice take on the Foreign Power! I really love the ways you explain and how you sneak in some random facts or railfanning trips while you're on it! Whatever you do next, don't change anything!
Edit: 34 Likes?! Thank you all!
Edit 2: Oh god 2 weeks I get 40 Likes!? Seriously, I can't thank you enough!
WHAT hot dog place in Ocala?????
@@shariys1 It was called Dee Dee's Diner. Apparently they closed after I ate there...
@@DOTD-Ko7382 Yes it closed down. I used to eat breakfast there sometimes. Now in Wildwood, Coney Island Hot dog restaurant has taken over the old Coffee House restaurant right across from the Railroad Station on 301.
@@russellp4160 aw man. That sucks.
DOTD, wasn't that diamond replaced just a few years ago? I thought DH did a video on it?
Fantastic Danny! Love the drone views!
Danny thanks for the newest upload! Wish we could get these weekly!! Always informative and incredibly entertaining!
Another in the long and getting longer all of the time, excellently shot, scripted, produced and presented videos! Danny your videos are so much better than almost all videos of every category on all of UA-cam! Actually your videos should be on a cable service! Thank you again for all of your hard work and sharing these videos with us! If ever a channel deserved a million viewers, it is your channel.
Thanks so much, Rick. You are too kind.
@@distantsignal Just speaking the truth.
How did i not know about this channel?? Loving the high quality content sprinkled with generous ammounts of informations! -Sebastien, passenger trains driver for the belgian railways
I live in Texas. My city has a Union Pacific line going through the middle of town. For a few days, I have seen a few Norfolk Southern locomotives passing through. It is an interesting sight and I always enjoy seeing them
I’m from LA and I love watching NS and CSX passing through here. Also like the foreign foreign catches such as the Canadian Pacific, the KCS Mexico and Ferrorex engines when they come to LA
Hey Danny. I just want to thank you for uploading because whenever you upload I always get excited and your videos calm me down and make me less stressed.
Having grown up near where there were freight trains and as a kid getting to see inside a locomotive, I have always been a railroad buff. Your videos reveal even more detail and interesting facts, which have rekindled my interest in the field. Many thanks, Danny!
i always say this, but your style of hardcore videography and of vlogging put together is magical.
It's always fun to see something new. My family has farm land near Hoopeston, Illinois that is framed by two companies from days gone by. The Old Milwaukee Road ran North - South right next to the farm house while the old Nickel Plate crossed East - West at the back of a field behind the house. I spent a lot of time as a kid (50+ years ago) laying across the bed in an upstairs bedroom. I used to love to see how many different lines would be represented in the trains that went by.
About 20 years ago while I was up there I got caught by a train where the old Illinois Central crosses Illinois State Route 9 and spotted a friend hanging out of the cab of a CSX engine. Imagine the odds of two guys from Florida meeting up at a train crossing in Illinois.
Your videos are absolutely amazing. They are also important to Run8. We have the A-Line and Waycross. Your videos make me long for the S-Line, but still your commentary teaches railfans a lot about railroad operations.
This is one of the best UA-cam channel for railfanning. Hope more people discover it.
Thanks Larry. Those are kind compliments.
Thank you Danny for this video! VERY informative! I enjoyed learning more specifically about why trains have foreign power, but also about a "bad order" car. I knew nothing about why individual cars were left like that.
4:04 DUDE! This is THE most BEAUTIFUL footage I have ever seen in a UA-cam video!!! It's so perfectly executed. So simple, but so perfect! I LOVE it!
Great production, Danny! Foreign power was one of the greatest sights I saw growing up by the tracks. I lived by a Norfolk Southern mainline for six years. During my childhood, Union Pacific & BNSF power was very common on most NS trains and I can always remember telling my family how excited I was to see the different power… no matter how confusing it was to them. 15 years later, I still find it exciting to get a foreign power locomotive on a train when I’m out trackside. Oh, the joys of railfanning… what a great hobby it is!
Danny, your videos always make me smile. Your productions are ALWAYS top notch and you just don’t see that very often. Thank you.
Thanks very much, Sam
If that old school Florida sign goes missing, we all know who took it lol 😂
Great video DH! We’ve seen some foreign power tapped onto Q453 a few time and heads back out on Q452. Q251/Q250, the Palm Center train had some as well before it was abolished.
The Diamond removal at Baldwin hit us all differently, something none of us expected and thanks for the food 🥘 spots!!
Lol 🤣🤣
6:36 - old road sign , C-200A
Lol
THE PALM CENTER TRAIN WAS ABOLISHED!?
With this video you touched on something that I think about a lot, as I'm sure lots of older railfans do. The reality of worlds that don't exist anymore, (in the railroad world). The old station at Lawtey, towers gone and the diamond being eliminated, but when you can find the old relics it makes railfanning that much better. Thanks for the video
Danny, your videos just get better and better. The production is top-notch and this one was especially educational. Just one thing: CP and CN are from a foreign country. ;) Greg in TN :)
Great video, Danny! The feeling I get with the notification that you uploaded is unmatched!
You bring back so many memories. I grew up in Jacksonville in the 60s and 70s and we used to go to Starke, Baldwin, Lawtey (the Strawberry Capital of FL) but that was before I got interested in watching trains. I remember always being amazed at all the RR Tracks visible from I-10, it was the landmark telling us it was time to get off on US-301. Never knew what it was called but I now assume that is Baldwin Yard.
As a retired CN Rail Locomotive Maintenance person, this gives nice insight of what goes on out there on the tracks.
Always enjoy your videos, I'm on the west coast so we have BNSF and Union as primary engines, but I have occasionally seen a "foreign" CSX engine, Thanks
One of the best....if not 'the' best' commentory on US Railroading....very informative in soothe tones.
Great good made,mr Harmon.
As raillover from the Netherlands i thank you for these information about the railroad working in the U.S.A.. you hear over the radio where the trains are. In Europe are the railroadcompanys on a other way organized and work on a other way. All railroadcompanys work wij scheduled timepaths, when a train is not loaded OR unloaded the locomotives gonna do a other job and pics up a other train.
Thanks for this information on this video and wish a great time for Christmas and a nice changing of the year.
Greet from Zandvoort the Netherlands.
I caught a KCS way out here earlier this year in CA on a BNSF train going through Riverbank in the Central Valley of CA. I grew up in Titusville FL watching FEC going through town.
I'm from the Salina, KS area and really find it neat you open with a train originating from there. What's interesting is BNSF had to get that load off UP owned rail then take it 20 miles east to get on their own and head your way. I know I hear coal trains that pass through here are heading to FL but I figured our grain trains were bound for the Houston area. Really enjoy your channel even if in a different part of the country.
At 8:50 - A flange-bearing diamond would have ultimately saved on maintenance, but with a large up-front cost. I guess re-routing the few trains that would have used the secondary line is quicker and easier.
It’s always nice to see foreign power on the main railroads, a lot of the other reasons is due to power shortages which has caused that to come around alot.
I will watch this video again and again. My husband said let's get a cup of coffee and watch it again together. I got him loving train watching. We love going to Folkston to see trains. Thank you Railfan Danny it was an interesting video.
Many thanks, Beulah.
Hi Danny! I did a little research and found out what the tank car holding Polyol was. Polyols are a specific group of sugar alcohols that are formed via the catalytic hydrogenation of carbohydrates. They are found naturally in certain fruits, vegetables, and mushrooms; however, they are also commonly used as sugar-free sweeteners in products such as chewing gum, candies, and beverages. So there you go. A tank car full of sweets. 🍩🍪🎂🍦When it comes to your videos I am a foamer. I always wait in anticipation for the next one.
I hope you have a wonderful holiday season. 🚂🚃🚃🚃
Wow! That's great info, Leo. Sweetners. Makes sense that the tank car was not HazMat placarded. Thanks!
You, sir, are a Breath of Fresh Air (BoFA) on the railfan video scene. Knowledgeable? Check! Articulate? Check! Great videographer? Check! Concise, as opposed to spending the first 20 minutes of every video gossiping about your pickup truck's failed transmission or your neighbor's dog's positive heartworm test, you are all-trains, all the time.
Bravo, Danny. I wish there were YT Oscars we could vote on.
Companies lending each other locomotives and working together has always felt like an analogy for what a train is. A train is like a sports team, where all the parts and positions are different but each one part of the whole. I think trains have always been my favorite thing because they remind me of what the world could be if we all worked together, like a train we a have different appearances, designations, jobs, body styles, origins and goals but together we reach the intended destination.
its too bad the people in this country now no longer agree on the destination
@@xisotopex well... if anything they all agree china is a threat...
@@PrograError no, they definitely dont all agree about that.
You nailed it. All the big railroads do what they have to do to make sure the system works as efficiently as makes sense in the moment.
@@PrograError china is the biggest threat to itself rather than the us. so is the us government the biggest threat to the us rather than china.
Danny Harmon’s videos are consistently superb. The subject matter is presented with plain-spoken explanations for what we are seeing. The technical quality is top-notch. And there are even dining suggestions!
Would I buy a used car sight-unseen from Danny? Yes I would!
Danny. You have answered the biggest question i had. I enjoy watching other channels and seeing CSX in other parts of the country. Hey I even found a CSX train in Canada. Now that's REAL foreign power. You Rock!
I'm glad you explained about "foreign" power because I was recently railfanning near Palm Springs, CA. I had watched several BNSF trains, then along came one with two CSX engines as distributed power. Thanks, Jim C.
Another awesome documentary Danny! I’ve been seeing a lot of foreign power recently on the Greenville District (Atlanta, GA to Greenville, SC)
Also, glad you got to meet Ryan! We’ve known each other for a little while and he is a really nice guy.
Keep up the great work!
Thanks! - Carter
I’m in Greenville! Hey do you know where I can find a diagram of the rail lines in the upstate from around 1960?
Mr. Harman - Nicely done sir! Always enjoy your video, and your commentary. Keep up the great work! Blessings to you and your family from a retired Lutheran pastor in Davenport, Iowa.
You've got to be the only non-Kansan I've ever seen who pronounces Salina correctly. Well done!
How personable and well spoken can somebody get? What a great channel. My dad was a switch engineer at a paper mill, he had the same demeanor.
Thanks James. Your dad sounds like a great guy.
Danny, as always another fantastic and informative video. I lived in Marion,Ohio for a number of years. This was back when AC tower was still in service. Foreign power was almost a constant thing back then. With 3 railroads through town you were sure to see something from any of the western roads. My favorite for foreign power was the occasional Amtrak hospital train coming through on its way to Beech Grove shops. Once again, great video.
“Hospital train”-is that similar to a “funeral train”(?), a train taking damaged equipment back for repairs or dismantling?
@@2themoon863 A hospital train is taking equipment back to the shop for repairs. A funeral train is taking equipment scrap.
Thanks Danny for explaining all this foreign power stuff. Norfolk Southern is the local main line around here with a big yard in Elkhart IN. I've seen UP and CSX power in the area and wondered about them being here.
This "Legendary Cheering Railfan" always enjoys your content, videos and insight Danny! Great video as always man! :)
I’m up in eastern Ontario, CN & CP mainlines run through town, I’ve been lucky enough to see an Illinois Central loco a few months ago on the CN! Very rare in this part of Canada!
Probably my favorite train I caught on camera was a BNSF Z-train (stack train) out of Portland in 2018. Somehow, it ended up on the old GN line through Steven's Pass, and I found it leaving Wenatchee with a fresh crew. There were four engines on the head end, a BNSF C44-9W, an NS AC44C6M (Rebuilt from a Top-Hat Dash-9), a CSX ET44, and another BNSF Dash-9. I don't catch foreign power al that often, so that was a treat.
Great video, Danny!
You are a Professional and your Videos are Top Notch and Chock Full of Great Details. Thanks!👍
Thank you, Danny! I have lived near the tracks, watched trains, and even caught a long cab ride in Umatilla, Boynton Beach, Madison, Chattahoochee, and now back home in Tallahassee. (My father's people were all Central of Georgia, but as a boy I fell in love with the Seaboard Airline.) And I always learn something new from your posts! Again, thank you. And, a joyous Christmas to you and yours!
Thanks for doing these. You're one of the best narrators on youtube for train content. :)
Was always interested in the use of foreign power. Your video clears up a lot of my questions. Thanks Danny
At 2:35 to 2:55 you did show a CPR locomotive. That's foreign by any definition.
Great video!!
I love the videos. I grew up south of Vicksburg MS at a place called Allen MS. There was a north South spur from Vicksburg to Port Gibson close to the farm. I had family that worked for Illinois Central Gulf that engineered allow that spur in the 60s. My Great-Grandfather was an Engineer for the ICG in the 50s and 60s. I rode the last passenger train service from Vicksburg, MS going west from Vicksburg, MS as a kid, probably 4 or 5, Great Grandfather as Engineer. My Grandmother was with me and Mom picked us up at Monroe LA. I don't remember a lot of the trip, but certainly crossing the MS River Bridge.
Ways you can tell Danny started out in broadcast TV: he inserts leads into his videos for the ad breaks. Beautifully done - a lot of videos just get jarringly interrupted by surprising, out-of-context ads but that was clean and smooth.
Agreed - excellent narration, clear and thoughtful. It is pleasant to absorb the knowledge and enthusiasm for the history of the railroads. It is so easy to listen to that well-paced voice and diction. Reminds me of a voice from the Farm Report. My aging ears do not catch the rapid-fire mumble that is being taught in the schools of video journalism today (I assume that's where the lads and lassies pick it up - never a pause, can't separate the phrases.)
Thanks. I'm with you there, John. I guess I'm too slow on the uptake for this new generation of reporters. Too much information, too fast.
Polyol…something organic yet versatile for many uses….
Always love to see the standards like Q452 humming at track speed when you catch them…
And you can’t beat a December Florida pre sunrise as the ones you caught earlier in the segment.
As always thanks so much Dan and like we’ve said before - keep em coming!
6:59 Glad to know I'm not the only one. I'm always fascinated by the stories behind the designs. I like knowing WHY someone chose a particular idea they chose.
Seeing foreign is my most favorite part of railfanning because of the variety of color and fallen flags such as Santa Fe, BN, SP, and BCRail. I also enjoyed seeing the different leaser locomotives that ran on NS and CSX years earlier.
I live in Minnesota, i once saw a Northfolk Southern locomotive trailing behind a Canadian Pacific freight train. Pretty rare since i usually see CN, CP, and BNSF.
I needed this one after seeing a train in Troy, Ohio with four Union Pacific locomotives. I've also seen BNSF in Queensgate Yard recently.
I have been there it's a good place for railfanning
@@Daytonohrailfan I drive trucks over the bridges that cross the yard pretty often, there's some great views. Western Hills viaduct in particular gets a good angle of the yard, and you can see the loco shop.
I often see NS & CSX out in Ogden, Utah
One time I saw a Seaboard Coast Line/L&N boxcar too (in my journeys of bus driving)
Since I live in SE Michigan, I normally see CSX, NS, CN, _and_ CP Rail. So whenever I see the odd BNSF or UP power, it makes for a great day in my book! That and any locomotives still wearing the GT livery makes me smile (there's still quite a few that run between Detroit and Flint.)
If you go near Monroe, MI, you will often see BNSF or UP on coal trains heading up to power plant in Monroe or River Rouge.
@@EmpireStateExpress01 I'm a trucker and used to run dedicated freight up I75 past the power plant everyday for a couple years. I only had the pleasure of seeing a BNSF "pumpkin" on two separate occasions, never saw a UP engine.
Interesting channel. I appreciate your enthusiasm and dedication. I'm in northeast Ohio, so we have CSX and Norfolk Southern. Every so often I will see BNSF, Union Pacific and even a 'stray' CN locomotive. On our local transit 'light rail ', which is electrified, we have trainsets from Japan and Italy. They are a good 30 years old.
Love your videos very informative I live in Utah but work in Los Angeles so I see a lot of freight moving up and down the line. I go by the Dagger yard and the Veron yards 4 times a week. I'm amazed at the weight's they move. Keep up the good work.
You have the best videos on UA-cam! Your narration is second to none!! I’m currently battling Covid and I’m binge watching your videos. Very entertaining and educational!
Sorry you've got the virus, but glad you're watching my channel! Welcome aboard! And a speedy recovery.
I so enjoy the history and information you share with your viewers Danny. I've been subscribed now for more than a year and have never missed a new upload. I have been a rail fan since my grandmother gave me an old Lionel train set (which I promptly tore up as a kid) I still smart from that knowledge and not knowing the value of something like that at my age now (62). But I've started an HO scale set for my grandson who has not seen it yet (He's just a bit too precocious) but I cannot wait to introduce him to rail fanning. Keep 'em coming sir and blessings to you and your lovely bride.
Great video again Danny! I see lots of foreign power in my part Illinois being close to a BNSF yard, always interesting to see what you may find.
My dad tells me that he can remember lots of foreign power running through on the Erie Lackawanna when he was growing up, and that would've been in the mid 60's and 70's. I want to say that foreign power run throughs may have started earlier than that, but I am sure that you have done more research than I have. Another fantastic and informational video, Danny.
Cool these drone pictures. How great it is that they allow you to fly your drone above an active yard. Here in the Netherlands, and probably many other countries you would have police standing next to you!. Tnx!
Danny your videos are so good, I wish we had you in our area of CSX (and NS) ops in the northeast! A few years back I drove across country and saw a lot of UP and BNSF activity. Up in Montana near Glacier National Park I saw a very busy BNSF double track line with big trains operating at fairly high altitude on steep grades, and back east in Maryland and Virginia I see CSX running huge freight trains at high speeds. All very cool, but we need guys like you to properly document this stuff! Wishing you all the best in this holiday season.
Why I get so excited to see new DS content I can't explain but always excited when I see it. Great video as always
Always love your videos, and the information that comes in them. I've known about foreign powers, but, always better hearing, in detail, from you! Stay safe, Danny
Always appreciate your careful explanations of railroad operations and terminology.
Thank you, Roy
When I used to travel to Maine, in the days of the MEC (Maine Central), enjoyed seeing "foreign Power there", namely CN (Canadian National) and occasionally GT (Grand Trunk). As usual, your video's are entertaining and extremely informative. Now that the hot Florida summer is winding down, hope to see you out there filming more. (hope that's not too much of a strong hint?) :)
Thank you so much for making these videos, they are better than anything shown on network tv!
That's an awfully nice compliment. Thanks!
Great info. Fortunately, I do my railfanning in and around the St Louis area where we regularly see power from all the class 1's as well as frequent visits by Ferromex.
Always so impressed with the quality and professionalism of these videos!
I love how informative Danny’s videos are. I’m pretty new to all of this and honestly I learn the most and get the answers to nearly all of my questions about railroading from his videos.
I grew up in Old Port Tampa City Fl
And miss the old SCL RR trains... but we still get the Train horns Almost every night... in the winter with the house windows open... Takes us PORT TAMPA CITY "KIDS" Back in time ! Thank you for your hard work on these Vlogs
As someone who takes trains into Chicago on a daily basis, I'm very used to having Foreign Power. Heck the train I brought in today always has 2 CP engines. For us, it's not really a big deal since probably half of our trains always has Foreign Power.
I had a K433 train the other day out of Chicago that's destined for Tampa, FL which had 2 UP's and a BNSF on it. A Canadian Pacific crew brought it down to me. Sometimes we don't know which railroad the train interchanges with because the power is so colorful! lol
As a former CSX trainman, i really enjoyed Canadian power. They had hotplates and teapots and working heaters!
@@KutWrite newer CN’s are even better with a nice microwave behind the conductor
Thanks very much for the Foreign Power explanation. I had never understood the simple reality that it's only the locomotive that's foreign, not the crew; that makes a lot of things much more clear.
Always love new videos from you Danny! Great video again! Hope your Thanksgiving was good. Can’t wait to see the next one!
Thanks for answering this question for me. Incidentally you have a great voice which makes it very easy to watch your videos and listen to your commentary. I recently did a side job very close to three main lines. Two for CSX and one for NS. The amount of foreign power was staggering.
As always excellent camera work and narration. I’ve learnt more about American railroads from this channel than any of the others on UA-cam. Please keep up the good work Danny.
there is a Norfolk Southern yard right behind where i work so i frequently see UP, BNSF, CSX and CN power. Still pretty cool when i spot them though
This is amazing I catch lots of foreign power thanks for giving us info on trains and happy holiday!
Happy holidays!
Danny Harmon..."Out" This reminds me of my old railroad days. I like how you narrate the video with "voice-over" the existing railroad sounds, and instead of just a boring video of watching car after car going by, you're telling all kinds of interesting information about it, and some background information, history, etc. and it makes your videos SO MUCH BETTER than any other rail videos! and occasionally we can see the shadow of your drone, where you get those really good close-up shots. It looks like you're RIGHT THERE, but not in trouble for getting on railroad property !!!
I DO ENJOY-JOY watching your videos, and listening to your natural announcer's voice. Good and clear. Your type voice is the type a person delights in hearing !!! You'd be great in TV and Radio. Sports announcer, etc. What DID you do for a living? Were you a craft on a railroad or a hobbyist rail-fan wishing you worked for them?
(If it weren't for a rail-fan trespassing on railroad property, I probably would have been killed ! (A crew had gotten into a Blue-Flagged service track and picked up my engine, with me underneath it, changing a brush-holder on a traction motor, and I had to jump off my ladder and onto the traction motor leads and ride, half on top of the traction motor and my feet & shins on the loops of the power leads. It was the "Middle TM" so I couldn't get free. I had to just hold on for dear life...literally ! I Did some High Level PRAYING !!! There was a Rail-fan on railroad property, up next to our yard, I was able to yell at and get him to tell the engineer I was trapped under his consist. He was able to get the engineers attention and get him to come to me. The engineer hollered at me, "what the "H" are you doing under my consist !? I said that I WAS changing a traction motor brush-holder when someone came into my flagged track and grabbed my engine and took off with it and jerked out the drop-light from the reel and made me crap my pants and have to ride on top of that traction motor for over a mile, wondering if I was going to be squished to death or what. Also, if & when the power would go up, whether or not the brush-holder that had been gouging into the armature commutator all along during my trip, would flash over and fry me to death. All kinds of scenarios ran thru my head. I didn't know if my unit had even been cranked or not. It's not something you are going to EVER forget !!! He got me to a Car-Knocker's pit so I could crawl down out of there and go and literally clean my drawers out !!! After it was all reported, it was all "quietly hidden" Nothing more was said ! I don't know if the company DID anything to the crew that jerked me out of my track, or the supervisor that possibly ok'd the derail to be taken down, or what. It became hush-hush !
As a 23 year csx veteran, this is fairly accurate. I can guarantee you they never ever pay a dime to a foreign railroad. It's just shared time, on a rotating basis.
Danny, I have a dream of spending a day railfanning with you. Seems like such a pleasant way to spend a day.
When that comes to fruition it's a day you shall not ever forget! Danny's a real nice fella and great conversationalist about the hobby.
being in London Ontario Canada i see random UP units running on CP trains quite often, either as the leading locomotive or trailing, so thats some foreign power that i have gotten so used to it does feel foreign to me anymore, however i did catch a BNSF unit trailing on a CN mixed freight just a couple days ago, was a nice change of colours to see that one.
and also this is yet another well done video, i enjoyed this one as i do with each new video i catch. take care out there.
Just stumbled across your page. I enjoy history of many different kinds. Not too familiar with railroads but really enjoyed your video. With that said, all the ghost town travels I do in my homes state, railroads are/were very critical to the survival of the the town. Very educational and I learned a lot! Keep up the good work!