How a railway made their trains remote controlled (kinda) - GWR ATC

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  • Опубліковано 8 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 137

  • @LesPaulDavis
    @LesPaulDavis Рік тому +110

    I was waiting for the “…but many people died” bit but it didn’t come.
    What a remarkable innovation decades ahead of its time and the concept of functional safety.

    • @spencers5898
      @spencers5898 Рік тому +12

      GWR had a very strong safety record across its century-long history, especially for a railway of its size. Innovations like this (and a genuine willingness to think about the long term and invest in such innovations) were a big part of the reason why.

    • @greycatturtle7132
      @greycatturtle7132 Рік тому +4

      True

  • @ImperatorZor
    @ImperatorZor Рік тому +196

    The UK is unique in that it's initial rail infrastructure was developed entirely by private capital. Largely because in the aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars British financiers needed a place to invest their money and the railways provided just such a place to dump their money. Everywhere else, from France to Germany to Japan and even in the US, large sections of their rail networks were developed with at least government funding.

    • @233kosta
      @233kosta Рік тому +20

      Then they got nationalised. And now they're a cartel...
      Yikes!

    • @G0Lg0Th4N
      @G0Lg0Th4N Рік тому +14

      ​@@233kostaoh do behave, the reason for the poor state of the railways currently is privatisation and lack of investment by those private companies but yeah let's call things we don't like a cartel.

    • @scootergrant8683
      @scootergrant8683 Рік тому

      However, that's not an inherent trait of it being privatised either@@G0Lg0Th4N

    • @233kosta
      @233kosta Рік тому +5

      @@G0Lg0Th4N They split it up into regions and sold off the rights to each region to one PLC each (sometimes multiple regions per PLC). What do you call that?

    • @trainrover
      @trainrover Рік тому +2

      no matter how decrepid GB's train tracks network might've become, its aversion to grade crossings tellingly happens to make it the world's poshest 🍸💋

  • @michaelwright2986
    @michaelwright2986 Рік тому +39

    It's notable that the ATC shows very clear failsafe thinking; and that management tried to use it as a money saver (no more need for old fashioned signals); and it's heartening that necessary redundancy (oxymoron?) triumphed.

  • @garryferrington811
    @garryferrington811 Рік тому +15

    An amazing piece of railway history, little discussed. I'm astounded the GWR began this project as early as 1905.

  • @PuzzlingHousing56
    @PuzzlingHousing56 Рік тому +49

    Good Old Great Western Railway with life sized rc locomotives,slip coaches and auto tanks.

    • @InventorZahran
      @InventorZahran Рік тому +12

      That's the Great Western Way!

    • @asteroidrules
      @asteroidrules Рік тому +8

      I always found the slip coach hilarious just because the rest of British (and western European in general) railways were so slow to adopt automatic couplers, to the point where they're still uncommon to this day, but Great Western were doing it as far back as the 1860s.

  • @WeenyBeanyHere
    @WeenyBeanyHere Рік тому +59

    Nice to see something experimental on this channel that actually ended up working, and working well!

  • @tutus3dall-starsmultiversa646
    @tutus3dall-starsmultiversa646 Рік тому +79

    Honestly, the GWR's ATC would probably be considered an ATP (Automatic train protection) system today

    • @protorandom9097
      @protorandom9097 Рік тому +9

      Yea, this is pretty much electro-mechanical atp, which is really cool!

    • @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis
      @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis Рік тому +3

      It’s rather similar to the Intermittent Inductive Automatic Train Stop used in North America (and elsewhere in some cases). It also bears some similarities to the Chicago and North Western Cab Signaling.

  • @asteroidrules
    @asteroidrules Рік тому +8

    A very clever design. This really seems like an earlier version of the concepts we see in modern track monitoring and control. The overwhelming majority of modern day trains and tracks have computerized systems that accomplish similar functions.

  • @realrockethub
    @realrockethub 8 місяців тому +3

    And now we know why Duck said that there was the great western way, or the wrong way. 😂

  • @Monothefox
    @Monothefox Рік тому +30

    The Swedish state railway museum fitted one of their steam locomotives with Ebicab 700 a couple of years ago.

  • @terrier_productions
    @terrier_productions Рік тому +17

    By remote control, I thought you were going to say that the GWR invented Radio Control like what we have with drones and RC Cars.. I didn’t think you were going to tell us about ATC..
    You learn something new everyday

    • @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis
      @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis Рік тому

      Well, they did have auto coaches with remote throttle controls, which was not unique to them either! There were even pneumatic remote throttle control systems used with cab coaches in continental Europe (definitely in Germany, and I’m confident they were present in many neighboring countries) in the 1930s before WWII.

    • @Combes_
      @Combes_ 7 місяців тому

      ​@@JohnGeorgeBauerBuis wonder why they never tought of using it for MU control for goods trains.....

  • @spottotea
    @spottotea 9 місяців тому +3

    I love how just every steam locomotive is one big "Fuck You!" to science.

  • @christianshields4164
    @christianshields4164 Рік тому +1

    It’s strange to see that for once, one of these crazy ideas actually worked, and not only did it work the crazy idea was in use for decades before finally being phased out

  • @Captain_Timezone
    @Captain_Timezone Рік тому +5

    2:30 reminds me of the tomy plarail and trackmaster train stopper tracks

  • @joshuaW5621
    @joshuaW5621 Рік тому +3

    Looks like the Great Western really had a way with their trains.

  • @bowlinerailfan
    @bowlinerailfan Рік тому +27

    No doubt, this system being installed so early help to save many lives from disaster. Another good reason for the folks at Swindon to be proud of "the Great Western way."

    • @johnkeepin7527
      @johnkeepin7527 Рік тому +2

      Sort of, except that the Signalling department, and it’s associated factory, was based in Reading, not Swindon. The works were north of the station, east of Caversham Road, and still there into the 1980s. The land has been rebuilt on a couple of times since then. A lot of it’s offices were in a building on Station hill, just south of the station, which has also been demolished. I worked in that for several years in the 1980s!

  • @horsepowermultimedia
    @horsepowermultimedia Рік тому +3

    Worker: I've been replaced by a fucking robot!
    Old man: You've been replaced by some new technology? Tell me about it.

  • @jerrysgardentractorsengine2243

    Wild to think that a British railway implemented ATC nearly 20 years before one of the first centralized traffic control (CTC) systems in America was installed on the Pere Marquette Railway between Mt. Morris and Bridgeport, MI in 1928

    • @1685Violin
      @1685Violin Рік тому

      Don't you mean "Pere Marquette *Railroad* "?

    • @jerrysgardentractorsengine2243
      @jerrysgardentractorsengine2243 Рік тому

      @@1685Violin pretty sure I meant to say “railway”, although you’re not completely wrong to call it a railroad, either. The Pere Marquette was originally INCORPORATED as a railroad in 1899, but was subsequently reincorporated as a railway in 1917 and operated as such until 1947 when they were acquired by the Chesapeake & Ohio

    • @1685Violin
      @1685Violin Рік тому

      @@jerrysgardentractorsengine2243 I thought the two terms mean the same thing. Just that since Pere Marquette is an American railroad, it would be proper in to call it a "railroad" since that's the usual term in the American rail transport industry. I didn't know it renamed itself as a "railway".

    • @jerrysgardentractorsengine2243
      @jerrysgardentractorsengine2243 Рік тому

      @@1685Violin the terms are defined the same, just with the difference between them boiling down to what region you’re talking about
      United States- railroad
      Canada & Britain- railway
      (This is according to the Canadian Oxford Dictionary, btw)

  • @tonytins
    @tonytins Рік тому +16

    Gotta hand it to railways. They sure know how to innovate.

  • @OfficialTrainzGod
    @OfficialTrainzGod Рік тому +22

    this is a very interesting device that I had no idea about
    thanks for the info man!

  • @neilharbott8394
    @neilharbott8394 Рік тому +4

    Another reason why it was invented, was that fogmen also didn't fail-safe, if he didn't show up on time a driver had no idea if the line ahead was at danger. This was a fail-safe system, assume danger, unless the bell sounds. Also the ramps were installed a few hundred yards short of the signal, so that the locomotive had time to stop before it passed the signal, they proved this on the first test run, when the locomotive approached the last signal in the test run, the signal was set to danger and the driver was ordered hands off all controls. The train stopped safely and well short of the signal at danger.
    Incidentally, I was amused to note that similar audible warnings made their way into BR usage. Riding behind the driver in a Class 101 DMU in the late '70s, I was interested to note that there was a bell warning when the light was green, and a buzzer when it was red (I guess a buzzer is easier than a horn when you don't have an ample supply of steam!!).

  • @Nowheres_Channel
    @Nowheres_Channel Рік тому +4

    Man, the GWR certainly loved giving their trains really weird controls. (I still have to credit them for this, absolutely decades ahead of it's time.)

  • @spencers5898
    @spencers5898 Рік тому +2

    I knew about ATC but I didn't realize it had been implemented so early. GWR really was just built different.

  • @TetanusSnowfall
    @TetanusSnowfall Рік тому +9

    It's wild how similar on a surface level this is to modern ATC.

    • @mozeskertesz6398
      @mozeskertesz6398 Рік тому +5

      it shares the basic principles, but it uses a mechanical connection instead of the modern systems which use electricity difference between the two rails.

  • @420sakura1
    @420sakura1 Рік тому +2

    As the Fat Controler said, " There are two ways of doing things. Great Westen Way and the wrong way."

  • @railroadactive
    @railroadactive Рік тому +11

    Over in Canada, The Toronto Hamilton & Buffalo Railway, jointly owned by the New York Central and Canadian Pacific, also used a similar system also called ATC in the late 20s and was a first in all of North America.

    • @jerrysgardentractorsengine2243
      @jerrysgardentractorsengine2243 Рік тому +1

      Actually, the TH&B was the first North American railroad to install absolute permissive block (APB) signaling in 1911. I can’t seem to find anything regarding the use of ATC anywhere on the THB

  • @fourtyfivefudd
    @fourtyfivefudd Рік тому +2

    It’s the first case of Cab Signals! And in the event the train went through a danger and did not stop, or acknowledge, then in a way, it’s also the first Crew/Cab Alerter.

  • @lukechristmas3951
    @lukechristmas3951 Рік тому +2

    Another GWR W

  • @knapfordman1984
    @knapfordman1984 Рік тому +5

    According to all known laws of railways, there is no way a steam train should be able to be remote controlled. The GWR, of course, remote controls their engines anyway, because the GWR doesn't care what humans think is impossible.

  • @kenattwood8060
    @kenattwood8060 Рік тому +2

    Because of the infulence of Derby upon British Railways, the LMS AWS system was adopted despite it being far less effective than ATC.

  • @Tom-Lahaye
    @Tom-Lahaye Рік тому +3

    I learned something today, Automatic warning and control devices were use earlier than I thought, I always thought they were invented in the late 20s or early 30s.
    In countries which did use electric lighting fed by turbo generators like the US and Germany the implementation of such a system was a bit more forward as it did not rely solely on batteries.
    Batteries were there as a back up would the turbo generator fail, the train had to stop in a safe location anyway in such case when no back up lighting in the form of parafine lamps was on board.

  • @b43xoit
    @b43xoit Рік тому +2

    Tending the fire in a solid-fueled steam loco from remote would be quite an engineering challenge, at best.

    • @stevecummins324
      @stevecummins324 Рік тому

      Similar to how coal power plants do it? Much finer coal, and blow it to grates via pipes. Also being smaller there's likely to be less lag between adding the fuel and more heat being raised.

  • @Shadowtiger2564
    @Shadowtiger2564 Рік тому +1

    Fun fact, Japan also used and still does use ATC on there trains.
    Implemented after a really nasty accident involving a freight train not fully pulled in to a siding and 2 different passenger trains running red signals in the 50s.
    It was also Implemented on steam locomotives which they used in diminishing capacity untill 1974.
    Im not 100% sure how it worked for SLs but there where coils on the ground that wipers would go over. It would signal the cab and had to be acknowledged or it would apply breaks. And it also provides over run protection automatically stopping trains if going past a red signal

  • @multifan75
    @multifan75 Рік тому

    The GWR really created something that was very ingenious and way ahead of its time.

  • @kingofthepod5169
    @kingofthepod5169 Рік тому +2

    If I recall Southampton docks had a cab to telephone system that worked basically the same way. The USA S100, Austerities and of course the Thomas E2's had these.

  • @thatonesigmer_guy
    @thatonesigmer_guy Рік тому +1

    In the future, trains can be controlled by wii controllers

  • @thomasgray4188
    @thomasgray4188 Рік тому +1

    This is one of the main reasons the gwr is my my favourite of the big four.

  • @Paulftate
    @Paulftate Рік тому +2

    don't mess with my toot-toot

  • @protorandom9097
    @protorandom9097 Рік тому +1

    I didnt realize atcs was invented this early! I had throught it was something first from the 1970's or so!

  • @railwayjade
    @railwayjade Рік тому

    This is fantastic, I would not even know that steam engines were equipped with this, I was under the impression this started in the diesel/electric era

  • @dashapple
    @dashapple Рік тому +14

    The first rsl

    • @dashapple
      @dashapple Рік тому

      @kingkaza remote steam locomotive

    • @thestati0nmaster579
      @thestati0nmaster579 Рік тому +1

      Well it's not really a remote steam locomotive, more a first aws.

  • @FunAngelo2005
    @FunAngelo2005 Рік тому +6

    You need to make a compilation of the GWR bieng ahead of their time

  • @DocSmokeyJoe
    @DocSmokeyJoe Рік тому +1

    the Pennsylvania Railroad did a similar thing on the north east corridor on its steam engines as well as its gg1s

  • @Slakpranker
    @Slakpranker Рік тому +6

    love your vidios man, keep up the good work but don`t burn yourself out

  • @bawdydog176
    @bawdydog176 Рік тому +2

    Very cool. Never heard of this before.

  • @sonicfan117dash2
    @sonicfan117dash2 Рік тому

    “Ordnance Storage” from Banjo-Tooie. Classic!

  • @darksars3622
    @darksars3622 Рік тому +1

    Basically an early aws system

  • @srajfnly2
    @srajfnly2 Рік тому +3

    As a certain GREAT WESTERN Pannier would say “Now that’s the Great Western way”

  • @thesudriana016
    @thesudriana016 Рік тому +1

    I never even knew that steam trains used an ATC or that they were also once remote controlled when having to stop at signals.

  • @drmsig.r1000
    @drmsig.r1000 Рік тому

    ATC is utterly genius

  • @crabby7668
    @crabby7668 Рік тому

    Interesting that it survived to the 80s. I saw an automatic train control type system in a gwr hst power car years ago that also had some sort of cab signalling iirc. I don't know if it was this system or not, but I was told it was unique to the western region.

  • @sgt.gunslinger1532
    @sgt.gunslinger1532 Рік тому +1

    So its an early day dead mans switch

  • @zyancuerdo1615
    @zyancuerdo1615 Рік тому +1

    So essentially the gwr was a giant size model railway

  • @TorridPrime217
    @TorridPrime217 Рік тому +2

    I wonder what Duck thinks of this...

  • @TankEngineMedia
    @TankEngineMedia Рік тому +1

    I didn’t know that even was a thing
    Glad that I know now

  • @SaltyVan
    @SaltyVan Рік тому +1

    physics: *exist*
    GWR: no u

  • @Heavy_weapons07
    @Heavy_weapons07 Рік тому

    Gwr and crazy railway ideas go together like honey and ham

  • @theromanorder
    @theromanorder Рік тому +2

    please do a video on
    the porters steam loco
    the Japanese class d5,
    the Chinese QJ 2,10,2
    or just exsamples of asian trains
    how do gear trains work
    something on saddle bolier and side tanks (like the big water boxes) tank engines
    double ended diesel trains (and electric)
    eletric trains
    American and European switches other then the British class 07-09
    what to do if the train stalls
    one talking about the different types of steam funnles and there uses,
    a video on steam locomotive combination breaks (steam and vacuum brakes)
    a short video on how a Armstrong turn table works
    what did train flagman do
    what did trains (mostly steam) do when going in tunnels, ive heard of gas masks or just useing a wet cloth, or did they bring in other engines like later on they used electric trains, or were there no bigv tunnels.
    evaluation of electric trains
    why are some trains wagion tops (the stream lining thing to boilers)
    railway terms abd slang
    one on the meaning of flag and lantern colors like green on rear engine means theres another one coming soon,
    the different types of cut offs/reversers/Johnson bar
    some are a big lever, some are a big valve wheel, and ive also seen some that are like rods, one exsample is train sim world 3 and im not sure where to find the other reverser
    and how much water do steam trains take usually, and how much would the crew drink

  • @voltsiano116
    @voltsiano116 Рік тому

    The Great Western's at it again, setting the bar and revolutionizing rail travel.

  • @LegendRails
    @LegendRails Рік тому

    Wow, I didn't know you can operate a steam locomotive with a remote control.

  • @alphatangovideo5308
    @alphatangovideo5308 Рік тому

    Is the background music at the end from Sid Meyer's Colonization?

  • @rolandharmer6402
    @rolandharmer6402 Рік тому

    Well done the GWR!

  • @carltonleboss
    @carltonleboss Рік тому

    Really cool stuff.

  • @katho8472
    @katho8472 Рік тому

    And there are still train lines to this day where trains would not be stopped automatically by running over a signal saying "danger" or "halt"... That's just mind boggling.

  • @andresdeleon5160
    @andresdeleon5160 Рік тому

    This is interesting and incredible

  • @chrisguzman386
    @chrisguzman386 Рік тому

    Who would have thought that we'd had an advance electrical engineering made in 1905

  • @superted6960
    @superted6960 Рік тому +1

    Didn't atc work in conjunction only with the distant signals?

  • @matthewkirby6080
    @matthewkirby6080 7 місяців тому

    I have an idea for a new video, I would like to think about the bizarre speed features fitted on one GWR King class and one GWR Castle class locomotives of Swindon Works? 👑🏰 They become to look like “Knights!” and was unsuccessful.

  • @brenlc1412
    @brenlc1412 Рік тому +1

    So, it’s basically the stop track for TOMY Trains but in real life?

  • @420sakura1
    @420sakura1 2 місяці тому

    This is more like dead man's switch than "automatic".

  • @anotherlegendarysaiyan4171
    @anotherlegendarysaiyan4171 Рік тому +3

    thats the great western way

  • @TheStickCollector
    @TheStickCollector Рік тому

    It would be something to try to recreate

  • @NicholasSSR1
    @NicholasSSR1 Рік тому

    Hey this is a video request can u list all the engine that are good for shunting in the yard cause I really wanted to know because I’m making a oc of sodor

  • @Leonardo-cw1dd
    @Leonardo-cw1dd Рік тому

    damn that’s quite interesting

  • @Lucius_Chiaraviglio
    @Lucius_Chiaraviglio Рік тому

    The Great Western did this on its own, and in the US it has been like pulling teeth to get the railroads to do it.

  • @tagverseofficial
    @tagverseofficial Рік тому

    I guess TATMR is canon, Engines can drive themselves

  • @Wreckedftfoxy
    @Wreckedftfoxy Рік тому

    i think the UK did something smart for once, and i am all for this if they remade it for the diesels or electrics, prob more advanced though
    edit: it was to add a bit more to the comment

  • @barakmiller2890
    @barakmiller2890 Рік тому

    are there any steam locomotives that are still equipped with ATC

  • @Thebigfour1923
    @Thebigfour1923 Рік тому

    The western region was so smart

  • @ethanbarnett1788
    @ethanbarnett1788 Рік тому

    I’m pretty sure Walt Disney World does something similar with their locomotives

  • @ethmister
    @ethmister Рік тому

    Just another reason the great western railway was the best

  • @The8224sm
    @The8224sm Рік тому

    God's Wonderful Railway.

  • @FoxBoi69
    @FoxBoi69 Рік тому

    this pzb type protection system is not really remote controlling a locomotive. something like a push pull train or having multiple locomotives in tandem is proper remote controlling, where the locomotive helps pull (or push) but nobody is on it.

  • @vornamenachname727
    @vornamenachname727 Рік тому

    This is very, VERY similar to the german Indusi/PZB.

  • @harrisonallen651
    @harrisonallen651 Рік тому

    The GWR treating their trains as toys is absolutely embarrassing

  • @mortified776
    @mortified776 Рік тому

    Nothing motivates like having a reputation to uphold. When you are God's Wonderful Railway it just won't do to have the public gazing on a heap of mangled iron begging 'how could God let this happen?'

  • @PowerPuppet
    @PowerPuppet Рік тому +4

    Yo

  • @dragonblaster-vu8wz
    @dragonblaster-vu8wz Рік тому

    Leave it to the Great Western Railway to innovate because they can, and make things better for all

  • @endergamerxp
    @endergamerxp Рік тому

    it is more automatic system, (robot) than he remote control system (drone) even if i see the kinda in the title

  • @mattheuston9363
    @mattheuston9363 Рік тому

    Lol if only they followed the NWR who did this much earlier.

  • @VestedUTuber
    @VestedUTuber Рік тому

    "Remotely operating a steam locomotive is something that's very difficult to do"
    Really? I've never had problems with my LGB/Aster Frank S. :P

  • @trainrover
    @trainrover Рік тому +1

    no matter how decrepid GB's train tracks network might've become, its aversion to grade crossings tellingly happens to make it the world's poshest 🍸💋

  • @richardjayroe8922
    @richardjayroe8922 Рік тому +1

    So ptc

  • @lorenrasmussen338
    @lorenrasmussen338 Рік тому +1

    I wonder about the reliability of a switch under a filthy locomotive where the failure mode is blowing a siren under normal over-the-road conditions or choosing to not work when on a ramp due to varying contact resistance especially with only 4 volt battery of questionable condition. Wouldn’t a simple green light in the cab verification when on the ramp be more trustworthy? It still depends on the engineer to make decision. This is NOT remote control. I guess Rube Goldberg has always been around.

    • @telhudson863
      @telhudson863 Рік тому

      The siren is sounded and the brakes applied in a clean environment if the dirty contact plate failed. Because of the ramp's position, the driver could check the aspect before reaching the signal.

  • @Thattrainguy4334
    @Thattrainguy4334 Рік тому

    Gwr choo choos

  • @jimmypetrock
    @jimmypetrock Рік тому

    Scrumpy

  • @cyrstalpringle872
    @cyrstalpringle872 Рік тому

    E

  • @RobloxMiner26
    @RobloxMiner26 Рік тому

    first