Safety in the 1950's HIT DIFFERENTLY... Literally. | Railroader Reacts

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  • Опубліковано 5 вер 2024
  • Railroad safety videos are usually a deluge of boring, obnoxious, corporate blegh. This one, from the D&RGW back in the day, is quite entertaining, and a "little extra", as it were.
    Cheers to Drew Sparkmon for uploading it. Unsurprisingly, there's a lot of dead space in the video, so I trimmed it pretty heavily for your enjoyment. The full videos are below:
    Part 1: • Rio Grande Railroad Sa...
    Past 2: • Rio Grande Railroad Sa...
    Merch: hyce.creator-s...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 495

  • @KarolOfGutovo
    @KarolOfGutovo Рік тому +396

    I didn't expect a 50's railroad safety to have such a deep hitting portrayal of the finality of death

    • @drakenred6908
      @drakenred6908 Рік тому +25

      To be fair its post WW 2, the audience then had newsreels during WW 2 and the warcrimes trials. A lot of what survived was edited (for television and later movies)from what was distributed.

    • @BudderCraft526
      @BudderCraft526 Рік тому +6

      Check out shake hands with danger for another good one haha

    • @Ice_Karma
      @Ice_Karma Рік тому +13

      Gotta shake people out of complacency somehow, especially back when, if I'm not mistaken, focus on safety was still kinda new. Like, early in the video, it sounds like steel-toed footwear wasn't mandatory. (But I'm not an expert on the history of industrial safety training.)

    • @fixman88
      @fixman88 Рік тому +1

      @@BudderCraft526 "Why don't they look?"

    • @amtrakp4242
      @amtrakp4242 Рік тому

      Right about that, it’s almost a Horror Movie!

  • @croom1278
    @croom1278 Рік тому +268

    I wish that safety videos were still done like this

    • @nfnworldpeace1992
      @nfnworldpeace1992 Рік тому +9

      failvideos now serve this purpose :P

    • @hueyiroquois3839
      @hueyiroquois3839 Рік тому +8

      Did you ever see the one about Klaus, the forklift operator?

    • @zenjon7892
      @zenjon7892 Рік тому +6

      Shake hands with danger

    • @AnimeSunglasses
      @AnimeSunglasses Рік тому +4

      @@zenjon7892 _dun du-duh-dun dunnnnnnnnn_

    • @Elcicikos
      @Elcicikos Рік тому +1

      @@zenjon7892 Three finger Joe is that you?

  • @starlightnixie
    @starlightnixie Рік тому +191

    "He got his name in the papers, but nobody reads his own obituary" is an absolute monster of a line.
    The "here's why you don't do this" type safety training presentations we had to watch when I was in automotive school did not use play acting and dummies to get their point across and some of those images are still seared into my mind fifteen years later in a way I very much wish they weren't, but I get why they do it that way. There's no room for subtlety in saying, hey, pay attention, we aren't messing around here, this will straight up maim or kill your ass.

    • @felixchaus
      @felixchaus Рік тому +17

      It don't haunt me, but I still remember what the outcome looks like when motorist tries to take on a semi, he was scattered in a few hundred feet along the highway and insides wrapped around dually trailer wheels.
      There was once a short period of a time where in england they showed real outcomes of motorcycle vs. car accidents.
      The sight in public television primetime where top half of a motorist went over a passenger car and lower half went through the car was somewhat too mutch for regular viewer, but there was a noticeable drop in accidents where cars drove in front of a motorcycle even that advertisement was in television for just a few commercial breaks.
      If it hits you hard enough you'll tend to remember it

    • @starlightnixie
      @starlightnixie Рік тому +14

      @@felixchaus For me it was, in particular, photographs of valve spring versus eyeball, and long hair versus helicopter main rotor mast.

    • @felixchaus
      @felixchaus Рік тому +6

      @@starlightnixie Sounds delightfully sickening.

    • @justaguycalledjosh
      @justaguycalledjosh Рік тому +6

      In my college chemistry class, the poster to drive home safe use of glassware was an actual picture of a previous student impaling their hand on a pipette

    • @RT-qd8yl
      @RT-qd8yl Рік тому +1

      I saw that sort of thing in middle school, and then I started looking up Chechen war crimes videos and eventually became a firefighter. I guess some people arer just built differently haha. I miss ogrish and liveleak.

  • @juphikie3559
    @juphikie3559 Рік тому +112

    As a man who is going into OSHA for a field, this was amazing and I loved it. Now I need to get a box full of fake eyes to scare some people into wearing PPE

    • @randymagnum143
      @randymagnum143 9 місяців тому +1

      Couldn't you find anything productive that you were capable of mastering?

    • @brianb8060
      @brianb8060 9 місяців тому

      THIS could happen to YOU!

    • @pilsplease7561
      @pilsplease7561 Місяць тому

      I had to watch a cheesy ass forklift video about people getting hurt with forklifts then osha had a guy who would give you a test then give you a card that you knew forklift safety. lol I also have a card that i was given to me by the state, im trained to use a respirator and to train others on the use of them as well.

  • @brillbusbootcamp2320
    @brillbusbootcamp2320 Рік тому +156

    Wow, the D&RGW really committed to that bit! And your commentary added a lot of good context, especially explaining the vital “the rules are written in blood” idea. This video may look old now, around 7 decades later, but imagine what these Rio Grande workers would have thought of the brutality of safety culture 7 decades before them, in the 1880s!

    • @Hyce777
      @Hyce777  Рік тому +26

      No kidding...

    • @Dumbrarere
      @Dumbrarere Рік тому +5

      It's very much the same in aviation. A lot of federal regulations came about because of fatal accidents, often when the fatalities numbered in the hundreds because of neglect (on the part of either the manufacturer, the maintenance or ground operations crews, or the pilot in command.)

    • @mightyocelot
      @mightyocelot 11 місяців тому

      @@Dumbrarere I was popping down here to say the same thing, lol (laughing at how you beat me to the punch by like 4 months, not the way the rules are written)

    • @quintrankid8045
      @quintrankid8045 Місяць тому

      Makes me wonder if there's some old actual film of brakemen walking on top of cars and setting the brakes for a moving train. Maybe in winter. In a snow storm. It would be fun/scary to watch.

  • @granthoppel2534
    @granthoppel2534 Рік тому +50

    At my train crew class, we watched a video from UP called "Getting Off On The Right Foot". Ironically, we didn't watch the video until AFTER we had practiced boarding and dismounting a moving train.

    • @halfgecko3202
      @halfgecko3202 Рік тому +7

      I remember watching that one. "It doesn't hurt, not if you have a wooden leg."

  • @TheSuperTrousers
    @TheSuperTrousers Рік тому +19

    “The rules are written in blood” is not just used on the rails, but in the skies too. I cannot tell how many times I have heard thst phrase in aviation.

    • @IndustrialParrot2816
      @IndustrialParrot2816 Рік тому +7

      It goes for everything including everything from laws to medical regulations

  • @trainmaster844
    @trainmaster844 Рік тому +89

    The tool check portion definitely gives me vibes of Santa Fe's own safety video in the 1970's called "Team Effort".
    The whole collection of Santa Fe training films are in the Pentrex video "Working on the Santa Fe"; some of them could be nice follow-ups to this D&RGW one.

    • @Hyce777
      @Hyce777  Рік тому +23

      Good to know :) if it's pentrex it may be harder for me to react to, but we'll see. Copyright shenanigans...

    • @mightyocelot
      @mightyocelot 11 місяців тому +1

      @@Hyce777 If you need to ask for the rights to watch it on your YT channel, you could possibly argue that it will help some future railroaders who might want to work on the Santa Fe by exposing them to the safety videos in advance, and it might inspire people to sign on to work on the Santa Fe line

  • @randompersonwhocomments3645
    @randompersonwhocomments3645 Рік тому +52

    Fun fact: Alfred E. Pearlman would go on to be in charge of multiple different railroads over his career, including a time with New York Central and PennCentral

    • @IndustrialParrot2816
      @IndustrialParrot2816 Рік тому +6

      Yep and a lot of foamers don't like em cause he hated steam locomotives

    • @LiftPizzas
      @LiftPizzas Рік тому

      "What, me worry?"

    • @KatyPacific382
      @KatyPacific382 Рік тому +3

      And also Alfred Perlman managed to save western pacific, and turn its bad situation around before union pacific purchase it

    • @samuels1123
      @samuels1123 Рік тому

      ​@@IndustrialParrot2816 Standing near a turbo coal fire and a loose pile of coal with a hot high pressure boiler while rolling across a bridge with 8 cars behind it filled does sound a bit unsafe, but I say steam locomotives are cooler than most other forms of train and that makes them better.

    • @TrainsAreReallyCool
      @TrainsAreReallyCool Рік тому +1

      @randompersonwhocomments3645 And that's why D&RGW 683 is the only surviving standard gauge steamer.

  • @niiinaa
    @niiinaa Рік тому +52

    I recently started working for a railroad and on day two we got to watch some so called "Ouch-videos" where some trainers got together and essentially made short, badly acted youtube videos recreating accidents that actually happened. No corporate animations, just some dudes with no acting training doing some acting. It was wonderful. Not as nostalgia inducing as this, but well done. They also did some interviews with the actual people who were in those accidents

  • @KidarWolf
    @KidarWolf Рік тому +52

    See now, here's me thinking this isn't one little bit extra. Unlike modern safety videos in most jobs, this got the point across, efficiently, and effectively. This is the sort of safety briefing I used to get, and give, when I did stunt performance. No bs, straight up "this is the hazard, it will kill you, like it did to X last year, don't do this" - that way, it's rare you need to expound the virtue of being safe about it more than just the once to each person involved in planning a stunt.

    • @Hyce777
      @Hyce777  Рік тому +13

      That's definitely fair.

  • @vito3533
    @vito3533 Рік тому +53

    We need Hyce’s face at 3:18 as a membership chat sticker

    • @Hyce777
      @Hyce777  Рік тому +18

      Someone tell Mickely to make it so :P

  • @slanderedstone
    @slanderedstone Рік тому +24

    Awesome, now I can protect my mind and limbs at the same time. Thanks hyce!

  • @ColtonRMagby
    @ColtonRMagby Рік тому +27

    I watched an old training video about train yard operations earlier this year, and one of the things the narrator said was "Don't be a dummy." There was a dummy in the shot at the same time, which made me laugh a little.

  • @calebrimer2870
    @calebrimer2870 Рік тому +17

    Football and railroading also have extremely dedicated fanbases

  • @alwaysbearded1
    @alwaysbearded1 Рік тому +26

    Shake Hands With Danger. These videos are historical. I currently work in Building Inspection. Most of the old timers were in the trades before joining. Some had short finders. They share enough horror stories to remind you to be safe. I had some people working on my house, one of them shot themselves with a nail gun. When I talked about it at work I got 4 stories of similar incidents from 3 people.

  • @andrewreynolds4949
    @andrewreynolds4949 Рік тому +25

    There really was in some places a “we die like men” mentality, or just a general sense of “I know better than they do up top, I’ll do things my way”. Something this harsh on reality might be needed to help cut through that.
    I’ve seen the results of why the rule “always set handbrakes on your equipment”, including a smashed up speeder!

  • @hannahranga
    @hannahranga Рік тому +27

    It's amazing how they survived without any HiVis clothing. Seeing that slide fence, one of the scarier moments of my career was being up a signal with a double stack freighter coming past at track speed.

    • @Poldovico
      @Poldovico Рік тому +2

      I wonder if the 50s narrator would have had something snarky for that :P

    • @randymagnum143
      @randymagnum143 9 місяців тому

      When I see men is reflective vests, chaps, or hard hats, face shields and earpro.....and they're standing around watching someone work...........

  • @BandanRRChannel
    @BandanRRChannel Рік тому +14

    In terms of showing the serious consequences, this feels like one of the better vintage safety videos. Would also be fun to see a reaction to UP's "Getting off on the Right Foot" sometime.

    • @Hyce777
      @Hyce777  Рік тому +4

      That's a classic.

  • @xenowreborn
    @xenowreborn Рік тому +21

    Wow...when the Title said "Hit Differently...Literally" I was NOT expecting the Eyeballs, and neither were the workers who lost them to Recklessness

  • @JuneNafziger
    @JuneNafziger Рік тому +12

    I genuinely think safety videos that show “this is what happens when you fuck up” are the most useful, other examples I can think of are the shake hands with danger CAT safety video and that claus forklift safety video

  • @justaguycalledjosh
    @justaguycalledjosh Рік тому +14

    Here in the UK we still have torpedos as part of the emergency kit on both trains and track-gangs.
    Although i don't know how often they get used as part of routine work, since, as you said, signals do most of the job now.
    Especially since most of the UK network is somewhat interconnected to allow bypass routes on closed tracks, so often routes are entirely closed to facilitate work.

    • @The_New_IKB
      @The_New_IKB Рік тому

      they still get used every day/night to protect possessions and as additional protection for line blocks

  • @daviscampbell9020
    @daviscampbell9020 Рік тому +3

    Normally I ignore safety vids but the built in humor demands attention.

  • @JeffS96
    @JeffS96 Рік тому +6

    I'm a truck driver. One of the lumber mills we go to makes you watch a security camera clip of a guy getting run over by a big forklift. I also pretended to be a safety officer for a year and I definitely learned that when you're being told to do something by safety, there's a reason. In part because operations gets to say no to anything we don't have an ironclad argument for.

    • @randymagnum143
      @randymagnum143 9 місяців тому

      So you drive around on the highway, the most dangerous place to work aside from the sea or a farm, and you wouldn't know to look out for forklifts?

  • @JonsGarage89
    @JonsGarage89 Рік тому +26

    This is good and your commentary is always appreciated.
    Have you ever seen the german forklift safety video with klaus? We need a Hyce-reacts to that one just for the funsies.

    • @Hyce777
      @Hyce777  Рік тому +16

      I *love* that video. One of my favorites.

  • @HerpicussCosplay2
    @HerpicussCosplay2 Рік тому +33

    Hyce just convinced me to watch a safety video voluntary. Great stuff tho!

  • @michgeeson278
    @michgeeson278 Рік тому +6

    90% of all my safety meetings could be summed up by 'Don't Stand Between The Weird Shiny Things!'
    btw in england it is still common place on the Absolute Block lines to protect work with Detonators ( or as apparently called in the US "torpedoes?")

  • @Ice_Karma
    @Ice_Karma Рік тому +5

    18:06 "Every safety rule grows out of tragedy and grim experience." Truer words have rarely been spoken.

  • @mattthedoormat
    @mattthedoormat Рік тому +8

    The part with the eye safety got me the most. I'm deeply paranoid that something bad might happen to my eyes. Heck, It probably means nothing bad but I scare myself enough that my eyes have sunken a little into my head. But at least I have both of my eyes. I hope I never take the safety of my eyes for granted.

  • @autisticgamer3961
    @autisticgamer3961 Рік тому +19

    It would be neat to see you make your own railroad safety video and talk about the proper way to handle the equipment.

  • @MrFen-ws3vr
    @MrFen-ws3vr Рік тому +17

    I kinda wish safety vids like these still got made (and if they are they got distributed better)
    The company I work with has a lot of safety training but they don't seem to work on some of our more...
    Stubborn individuals
    Having video of actual physical events might work better than the dry "read this and then answer these questions" we currently have

  • @coreybonsall
    @coreybonsall Рік тому +2

    S-2's, C-48's, and that L-105 at the end... On the note of destroying equipment, one of the mines I worked at up in the Powder River Basin actually had a live demonstration of what a 240 ton capacity haul truck would do to a crew van. The haul truck, the size of a two story house, didn't even flinch. The van ended the same thickness as the engine block.

  • @brianentwistle145
    @brianentwistle145 Рік тому +5

    As somebody that has to watch nearly 20 hours of videos a year to stay compliant for my job, I wish they were little more like this. If they were not so watered down it would make them a little more relatable and memorable.

  • @ebnertra0004
    @ebnertra0004 Рік тому +17

    I remember seeing a video like this from GN filmed in the 40s. More than a few practices were seen that would never be allowed today

  • @Nareimooncatt
    @Nareimooncatt Рік тому +2

    It's no Shake Hands with Danger, but that narrator was savage at 17:18 when he referred to accidents caused by inattention, negligence, etc. as suicides.

  • @AShadowboxsFSX
    @AShadowboxsFSX Рік тому +21

    In the helicopter world, they make us watch actual footage of an incident where someone wasn't paying attention and walked into a tail rotor. I think safety videos are just always grim. But you never forget them.

    • @pommeswerfer6973
      @pommeswerfer6973 Рік тому +9

      And lathe videos. Man the lathe really is the scariest tool in the shop

    • @Hyce777
      @Hyce777  Рік тому +6

      Oh yowza.

    • @Hyce777
      @Hyce777  Рік тому +6

      And yeah, lathes are terrifying.

  • @Acela2163
    @Acela2163 Рік тому +22

    The pyramid of piss cups in the back just complete the picture.

    • @erikunderbar4265
      @erikunderbar4265 Рік тому

      You made me stop breathing

    • @mateokuo7502
      @mateokuo7502 Рік тому

      Then add the ES&D boxcar and boom

    • @Hyce777
      @Hyce777  Рік тому +4

      Thanks go to Baconm13 who made the cups , sent them to me, and told me I should make the stack.

    • @dickJohnsonpeter
      @dickJohnsonpeter Рік тому +1

      ​@@Hyce777 That guy has a hell of a sense of humor. Same as you for doing it.

  • @BurnedBaconGaming
    @BurnedBaconGaming Рік тому +2

    This was by far the most effective safety video I have ever watched. Absolute gem.

  • @stevephares
    @stevephares Рік тому +4

    It would be amazing to find out this guy narrated a whole series of various industries' safety videos. I'd be here for them all.

  • @DAPchatt
    @DAPchatt Рік тому +12

    Always a good day when Mark uploads!

  • @deltacx1059
    @deltacx1059 Рік тому +1

    The old ones are the best, they are entertaining enough to keep you paying attention and they show you the actual consequences. The old videos for fixing semi trucks are the same way, they show a guy getting launched because they were inflating a tire with a incorrectly installed multi piece rim.

  • @barrymeyer2805
    @barrymeyer2805 Рік тому +1

    I work at a ir- g a. s. These videos are a lot funnier than the ones they show us at our job. Thank you for your video really enjoyed it

  • @pridover
    @pridover Рік тому +3

    we need a "Shake Hands With Danger" style railroad safety video

  • @jadebullet3884
    @jadebullet3884 Рік тому +1

    I remember a story I heard from a MOW worker for the Lehigh Valley railroad. They were doing track work and had the track jacked up on multiple track jacks when the crack fast freight "The Mercury" came into view. They scrambled out of the way and the train blew through, snapping the heads off of all of the jacks.

  • @thatlittlefox.
    @thatlittlefox. Рік тому +4

    16:50 Rio Grande apparantely had dual gauge track on some parts of The line.

    • @Hyce777
      @Hyce777  Рік тому +3

      They had many sections of dual gauge.

  • @crazyjack3357
    @crazyjack3357 Рік тому +3

    Surprised the narrator never said when you shake hands with danger

  • @0ptera
    @0ptera Рік тому +5

    That old safety video certainly hit differently.

  • @TheWeavingBagel
    @TheWeavingBagel Рік тому +2

    I just came back to your channel. I'm impressed to see that it has grown.

  • @wessparkmon2395
    @wessparkmon2395 Рік тому +1

    My brother is the one who uploaded the DRGW video from one of our dad's VHS's. This is kind of his intention of uploading it. He was a huge fan of MST3K and we always watched their famous UP Grade Crossing reaction to "Last Clear Chance" and always thought what they did in this was perfect for that same sort of set up. I have no idea why our dad had the Rio Grande safety video, given we lived and always lived in West Virginia, but glad you found it and put it to use.

  • @TheMetGuy
    @TheMetGuy Рік тому +7

    This is a very good video Hyce, I love your videos talking about trains

  • @stevenjoppich5012
    @stevenjoppich5012 Рік тому +1

    This is done in pilot training too. In the more formal programs, a lot of time is spent on reviewing actual incidents where people were injured or killed as lessons of how even the most attentive pilot can be killed by a single mistake and then failing to recognize and fix the mistake timely.

  • @user-cu8tw9wp8q
    @user-cu8tw9wp8q Місяць тому

    I'm 65. I watched SO MANY films in school with the voice of the narrator of that training video!

  • @barrettwbenton
    @barrettwbenton Рік тому +1

    Damn...the crack I made about Buster Keaton in the teaser you put up yesterday was more spot-on than I realized. Tell me I'm wrong to say the folks who produced this used *The General* as a template. (Just a bit more brutal for getting the point across.) Great stuff, and cool commentary, Hyce!

  • @MegaZsolti
    @MegaZsolti Рік тому +1

    I like watching videos of old crossing safety movies, you get a glimpse of the state of crossing protection at that time. There's this one UP movie from the 40s where there's a crossing equipped with yellow flashers with STOP lights, that's cool. Then there's the one from 1959 with a crossing with crossbucks that look incorrectly installed.

  • @QuintonMurdock
    @QuintonMurdock Рік тому +1

    Helped our MOW crew (father and son) with some ballast replacement last week. A backhoe helps but it’s still pretty physical

  • @TwistedMinds69
    @TwistedMinds69 Рік тому +2

    dont get run over by the speeder or whatever you called it. love these videos, its interesting, also like watching military old safety vids

  • @TheAtlantaRailfan
    @TheAtlantaRailfan Рік тому +1

    Interestingly enough the A.E Pearlman mentioned in the video is Alfred E Pearlman, he went on to become CEO of New York Central and he was responsible for the scrapping for most of the NYC steamers

  • @2dogsmowing
    @2dogsmowing Рік тому +1

    The old school voice over guy, I think did every voice over from the 1940s to 1960s.

  • @TheBeeMan1994
    @TheBeeMan1994 Рік тому +1

    This video 100% applies to shortlines still lol, I watched the UP version in orientation. My boss was like “yeah we don’t use speeders anymore so just pretend it’s a hi-rail truck, but everything else we still use”

  • @mightyocelot
    @mightyocelot 11 місяців тому

    ~20:35 "When you put the board on (scaffolding), use plenty of nails. They're cheaper than accidents" 😂Gotta love sassy narrator

  • @ShadowDragon8685
    @ShadowDragon8685 Рік тому +3

    "Why didn't they save one of those?"
    Because Alfred E. Perlman was in charge of that road, and he:
    Wants!
    That!
    _STEAM ENGINE!_
    _chainsaw rev_

  • @Real_Moon-Moon
    @Real_Moon-Moon Рік тому +1

    Maybe that tally is from the day before? Like, every morning without incident he goes and updates it. You never know when you're gonna get a call that an employee of yours accidentally threw out his back.

  • @SeaKing61
    @SeaKing61 Рік тому +2

    You want to watch some the British Rail safety videos from the 70s like 'The finishing line'. They were absolutely brutal... and designed for children to watch.

  • @OfficialDenverRioGrandeWestern

    Hey The Rio Grande here thanks you all for watching this masterpiece of a video we put together

  • @emilpersson8250
    @emilpersson8250 Рік тому +2

    There are an old educational film from the 1940s in Sweden were they show how a modern(for the time) hump yard was operated. Let’s just say that safety was not the highest priority on the state owned railroad at the time. The video also have English text available if your interested in watching.

  • @adammullarkey4996
    @adammullarkey4996 7 місяців тому

    The football analogy was also used in a World War 2 "Know your Ally" series, in the first episode, about Britain. Same sort of message about teamwork. "We're in a different sort of game now. Only, this one isn't for fun; it's for keeps."

  • @OverKillPlusOne
    @OverKillPlusOne Рік тому

    Cat’s “Shake Hands With Danger” is great too.

  • @mattthelombax
    @mattthelombax Рік тому +1

    "How would you like to go through this operation 3 or 4 times a day for the rest of your life?"
    Well... I wasn't prepared for that shot....

  • @bobsmith2637
    @bobsmith2637 Рік тому

    When I hired on with CN in the 2000s we watched Union Pacific's "Getting Off On The Right Foot" on the first day of rules class. Great Northern's "Why Risk Your Life?" is another classic, especially with its bit about how to 'safely' ride on top of a boxcar.....

  • @nathanmullins836
    @nathanmullins836 7 місяців тому +1

    The value of an eye is out of sight, that’s on a old safety poster at the railroad I work at.

  • @57thorns
    @57thorns Рік тому +1

    13:30 And this is why you have to borrow those stinky steel toed boots whenever you visit a factory floor or construction site or anywhere else people work with heavy equipment.

  • @andrewframe8046
    @andrewframe8046 Рік тому +1

    I recently saw the 1947 one from Great Northern, and it's amazing how much of those safety practices still shape up today (for the stuff that's still legal, anyway)

  • @garysprandel1817
    @garysprandel1817 Рік тому +1

    Hyce there's some WWII training videos on UA-cam that i don't recall the exact search terms on but one or two covered sabotage of enemy rail assets. Fun part is watching all the WWII movie tropes get demolished by real world physics.

  • @Dannyedelman4231
    @Dannyedelman4231 Рік тому +1

    The hi rail trucks still have to check the train lineup so they can get on and off the track

  • @martehoudesheldt5885
    @martehoudesheldt5885 Рік тому +4

    i love the bluntness of this . i have seen destruction and death in person it is no joke. the more realistic it is the better. and no pc

  • @brandonpurple165
    @brandonpurple165 Рік тому +2

    This Safety Video reminds me of the one me and my friends did for P.E In High School of the Do's and Not to Do's in the P.E Gym. The Teacher told us to use Our Imagination but make it look good. The Amount of Chaos that Ensue'd

  • @fairywolf7515
    @fairywolf7515 Рік тому

    old saftey videos are by far one of the most entertaining types of videos on yt

  • @khtrains
    @khtrains Рік тому +3

    Have you ever seen the PRR safety film, 'Escape from Limbo'? It's pretty much a Twilight Zone episode!

  • @SirNigelGresley4498
    @SirNigelGresley4498 9 місяців тому

    There was a safety campaign on Network Rail that had a coiled up poisonous snake next to the Third Rail, and the text "The Third Rail bites and doesn't let go". I found it really quite effective.

  • @patricksheary2219
    @patricksheary2219 Рік тому +1

    Hi Mark, Fabulous period safety film. Totally corny dialogue but certainly a product of its time. The eyeball sequence made me look away OMG 🤣. Seriously though, it is well put and as you say still has many relevant things to tell us today. Cool to see all those period choo choos as well as the tools and workwear. Safety boots and glasses gotta have ‘em! Thanks again Professor for sharing this and as usual love your giggle reactions and educational commentary. Cheers!

  • @MichaelRBaron
    @MichaelRBaron Рік тому +1

    My grandfather was in ww2, then a millwright until he retired. One day we were doing something and I didn't have my safety glasses on. I was like 10 years old.
    He said "You ever see a man with 1 eye?"
    I said "no. I haven't."
    "Well if you lose an eye you'll only see half as many! Put your glasses on!"

  • @stuartcarr3023
    @stuartcarr3023 Рік тому

    I recommend watching the 1950s training video on how to couple stock correctly is another video laying down absolute power in narrating

  • @billtheunjust
    @billtheunjust Рік тому

    I don't recall seeing those cups stacked in the background on previous videos/livestreams... Nice touch for this topic.

  • @T3ki1a_
    @T3ki1a_ Рік тому +2

    I have no idea if we still use them but I can assure you every modern train at the Belgian National Railways is equipped with those little bombs

  • @princetbug
    @princetbug Рік тому

    that's got to be the first time I've heard "twisting Lizzie's tail"-- as in turning the crank on an old automobile. it's a fun expression, though, I like it

  • @afastree9756
    @afastree9756 Рік тому +1

    Best safety video I’ve ever seen. (Also the only safety video I’ve ever seen.)

  • @Idaho-Cowboy
    @Idaho-Cowboy Рік тому +2

    Also, how about some ES&D Merch that Says "Safety First" on one the front and "We die like men" on the back.

    • @Hyce777
      @Hyce777  Рік тому +2

      That's a hilarious idea.

  • @b.a.d.2086
    @b.a.d.2086 9 місяців тому

    Wow! This was great to watch despite the blood, guts and feathers. What hard hats? This whole safety film was done in Utah in the Utah County area and a bit in Weber canyon and I know these areas well as I've lived here for 80 years. I live up in the foothills of the Wasatch mountains and could look down in the Salt Lake valley where the big steam locomotives traveled up down and the valley at all times of the day and night. My family and I traveled by rail quite a bit in the 50's but most passenger trains were pulled by diesels by then. The steam locomotives were used as helper engines to get trains through the mountain passes and it was fun to watch. I loved the haunting whistles of the steam engines. I've watched the flagmen at work and even saw some of the old kerosene lanterns still in real use. My great grandfather was a detective for Union Pacific. I was the only girl I ever knew who had a Lionel train with a steam engines. Dolls? What dolls? My kids think I'm nuts as I have train memorabilia still kicking around my condo.

  • @theannoyingbanana8730
    @theannoyingbanana8730 Рік тому

    I like how the truck at the beginning is still running threw out the video

  • @katieneubaum4284
    @katieneubaum4284 5 місяців тому

    Man I GOTTA know what that song was at the end. I love love love the way that old instrumental country sounds. So much soul and feeling put into it. It sounds like America 🇺🇸

  • @jessecarozza8134
    @jessecarozza8134 Рік тому +1

    I teach chemistry in college - I can confirm that telling people to put on their eye protection is never going to be fun. XD

  • @VintageRenewed
    @VintageRenewed Рік тому +1

    One thing that slightly hurts though
    Having a 1922 fairmont and spending a lot of time researching fairmonts, the ones that they wrecked looked to be early fairmont speeders.
    There are not very many many early fairmonts left so seeing them wreck early ones is kind of sad

    • @Hyce777
      @Hyce777  Рік тому +1

      They didn't know that then, it is sad looking back.

    • @VintageRenewed
      @VintageRenewed Рік тому

      @@Hyce777
      Yep
      At that time it was a way to get rid of the worn out old equipment. Much like when railroads took their old engines for running into each other as a tourist thing

  • @40below1000
    @40below1000 Рік тому

    9:30 "He was riding his luck but Death was riding the head end." That's gonna look great on my tombstone

  • @bernardtaylor7768
    @bernardtaylor7768 Рік тому

    I have been working for a railway company for over 40 years and I remember films like this shown during every refresher or up skilling class that I had to do. Despite the way the narrator sounds it got the message across. Believe it or not most of what you see in this film is still applicable today. They sounded over the top but it was that aspect that helped you to remember it's content. Every day I came home safe and sound was in no small part to these films.

  • @joeyoungblood6578
    @joeyoungblood6578 7 місяців тому

    It's always interesting to see how safety films were made back in the day. Where they showed the right way and the wrong way. And consequences if done the wrong way.

  • @dylanbrookes9501
    @dylanbrookes9501 Рік тому +1

    i love the tower of pee cups you have in the background lol

  • @anthonymcdonald2378
    @anthonymcdonald2378 Рік тому +1

    I love these kind of videos. I work in scrap, and our old safety guy used to play those "the color of danger" and all those other kinds of videos. Now our new safety person just shows the cheesiest, and most boring videos ever!!
    Btw... What is the outro song you play on your videos? I absolutely love it!

  • @John-se5vc
    @John-se5vc Рік тому +1

    Hyce, you think the narrator is responsible for the comments and the quality thereof? It's not him. The script was written for him, and it was up to him to "sell" it. I was in high school in the 1960's, and every kid who approached driving age had to take two days off classes to watch the "scary" driver safety movies. The worst was "Signal 30", which apparently was a code sent out by the highway patrol if there was a bad accident. The girls left that movie in tears. It happened every time. There was lots of blood, death, and mayhem in Signal 30, but I'll tell you, that movie rattled around in my head for a long time. The filming didn't stop at the moment of impact. You saw the blood and guts while it was being cleaned up. (This safety movie is pristine compared to Signal 30). In my first years of driving, I saw some actual street scenes with blood, guts, unconscious people coming to, and even citizens getting out their garden hoses to clean up the aftermath. So....sound like a gen z kid if you want. Those movies accomplished their intended purpose.

  • @Orangeshirt_Railfan
    @Orangeshirt_Railfan Рік тому +1

    as someone with a speeder this is quite accurate

  • @solarflare623
    @solarflare623 Рік тому +2

    Wait.
    A.E Perlman
    ALFRED IS THAT YOU!