RoadRailer Close Up and Fast Acceleration
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 10 ก.พ. 2025
- Video from July 2015
This in Fostoria, Ohio at the Iron Triangle where the NS tracks cut across a CSX junction at an angle, forming a triangle.
The train in this video is called a RoadRailer. A truck (a set of train wheels) is put under the rear end of each trailer and the trailers are connected together with a metal bar.
The train was waiting down the track for a while because the junction was busy. You can see it start up and head across one of the three diamonds that make up the corners of the Iron Triangle. The two other corners of the triangle are shown at 3:14 and 5:01.
This just shows you how important trains are. Imagine how many trucks it would’ve taken to transport the same amount of containers
One truck for each trailer, perhaps?
@@oubrioko1 para 2 o incluso 3 maximo
@@Lucho-mf3fx 1 for 4 if you're not particularly worried about what the last one is getting up to.
Joints crossing is like a heartbeat for me, so soothing and my love for trains are so pure
I've never seen this kind of train before and same goes for the railroad setup too
In the '80's when they first started building these trailers we had a good look and they are built heavier. both ends are reinforced to carry the loads and the bottom rail running the entire length on both sides are much stronger than a standard trailer. When they first dreamed this idea up they had 1 pair of wheels permanently attached to the tail end of each trailer which had to be carried around between the rail yard and the delivery and pickup point. This configuration only lasted a couple of years as the rail wheels added over 3000lbs to the weight of each trailer reducing the amount of freight each trailer could carry. We didnt see them for a couple of years figuring it was a dead idea but toward the end of the 80's we started seeing the current configuration with a much reduced weight penalty and special yards set up to build the "trains" and separate them after they arrive.
I love that sound when that freight train speed up over that diamond crossing .😍😍
I just love that sound wheels passing over tracks .❤️
This puts new meaning to what we Aussies call a "Road Train".
What?
That was a good-sized Triple Crown train - with duel power. I remember seeing it in 1988/89, pulled by a single GP50, long hood forward.
Wow. This goes against everything I thought I knew about Roadrailers. Back in the 1980's, we has 10 of these in New Zealand. They always ran in groups of 2 or 3 at the rear of the train. They got rid of them after about a decade because we were told they were too restrictive to operate. They could only take about 600 ton behind them due to their "light construction". They were too light for rail use and very heavy for road use. I guess no one told these guys that. Very impressive.
Ours seem to have had the same problem as yours did. Too light for rail and too heavy for road. Various railroads since the 1960's or 70's have tried to use roadrailers but always ended up going back to "piggybacking" the trailers after a while (carrying them on flatbeds). Norfolk Southern had the most success, with their roadrailer program lasting almost 30 years before their service ended just a couple of years ago. I think they were the last railroad to have it, and when I went back the next year it was no longer running. The train in this video had 75 trailers, but they got clearance for 150 per train before the service stopped.
@@Tolono The NS Triple Crown service is still happening. Some trains have been spotted as recently as 2020 and 2022
What really amazed me was the existence of a double railroad crossroad. Never seen that before.
HForceClan in the netherlands there pretty common somtimes they are even triple
pretty common in the USA. They don't have that much traffic (outside of a few metropolitan areas almost no passenger service exists), and even around those metro areas they exist. Search for "diamond crossing" and you'll find too many videos to watch...
There's quite a few in Australia
Yeah I never seen such in Russia. As 2 way crossing 2 way seems like a horrible idea, when you can build over/under tracks to avoid any delays on mainline.. Same with trailer train on carts... jeez what the heck is this! LOL!!! Couldn't afford flatbeds?
@@digimaks Building over- or underpasses is expensive, and the railways systems in the US are mostly operated by private companies. They also always had cost issues and thus tried to build as cheaply as possible (since the distances were quite high and the margins low). Gouvernment operated rails may have diffferent priorities. And yes, I know, the Transsib is longer, yet it was mostly built under public reign and not by private operators...
Why I haven't seen such a setup as that in all my days! excellent video.
Never seen anything like this. Thank you for bringing this to us!!!
This is my first time seeing this kind of lashup. It does make good sense, because of the hundreds of tons of extra weight the engines didn't have to pull, thereby saving a great deal of money for fuel costs.
These things must really make the anal graffiti jerks angry, too, as these trailers don't stay in one spot long enough for them to get to and screw up like they do conventional trains. There are even more savings on the drop off end as the semi's don't have top waste extra fuel pulling a carrier frame around like they do for conventional container boxes.
With the trailers being so close, the aerodynamics are a lot better, saving extra fuel.
Quite right.
Kevin S on top of that. Pull up with trucks and take too their destination without labor of unloading and loading.
Being cheap isnt allways the best option from traditional operations. Dont they derail all the time?
The wheels clanking over the diamond, relaxation noises!
Yep! The heritage B&O, not the heritage C&O, has the right of way as the NKP line has to wait. As soon as they were clear though....wow! This may be the best train acceleration I've seen. Great catch, in my favorite city in Ohio for railfanning.
I have never seen this style of transporting truck trailers. Amazing. I do not understand how the connection manages the stress, though. Thanks for posting.
I'm surprised the trailers can structurally handle the stress, got to be something inside them some extra supports
I was thinking the same thing especially the first trailer connected to the engine because it is taking the all stress of pulling the remaining trailers. i don't like the set up and it looks dangerous. I'll bet they are not allowed to pull dangerous loads like tankers loaded with fuel like gasoline but I may be wrong.
Yeah better to just use those trailer flatbeds like normally done.
lone wolf: actualy they cant., blows my mind they are doing this
All of those trailers are renforced
Was going to comment the same, how can these trailer boxes handle the stress of pulling dozens of other trailers ??
It just hit I paused the video to look at sumthang an when I trun back around I realized there no undercarriage just dollys set's that's pretty cool Iv just never seen it before.. great video 👍👍👍👍👍
When i was a kid my dad switched trailers here in staten island nyc for visy paper. Every trailer was a triple crown and i was interested how they looked and worked on a railtrack. This is a cool video!!!
Damn, I've never seen such unusual cars for trains to haul! You definitely need to watch your speed with these kind of train cars 😬
Without a doubt, these powerful machines have been and will continue to be one of the most beautiful and great inventions of mankind! I love them and every time I see one they bring me many memories of my childhood!👍👍
I love these. I just bought 13 roadrailers from Swift, BNSF Ice Cold Express, and Triple Crown (and one unpainted one)
Mercy sakes alive we got ourselves a CONVOY!
That's a big 10.04!
ROGER THAT 10.4
I REPEAT 10.4
@Randall Slaughter
Rubber Duck this here's Pigpen
@Randall Slaughter
You mean what's your 20? 😉
Je connaissais pas ce genre de transport de semi remorque sans wagons plateaux. Merci.
I remember back when the original RoadRailers first came out. The trailers had an attached single-axle rail truck behind the highway wheels. They weren't favored too much, mostly because the rail truck would be easily damaged when backed to hard against a trailer dock door.
That was one issue. The other one is that these cars / trailers needed a special design and the extra weight of the gear meant decreased payload. And even with that, the loading capacity allowed on highways and on such lightweight frames means they can't be loaded at full railroad capacity.
This second design solves this issue: almost ordinary cars, albeit with a frame, and a bogie that remains with the rail company. Nowadays, most transportation is either done by loading the trailer on a wagon or by loading a container on a wagon. Indeed, most intermodal stuff is done using containers. They are put on a carrying frame for the road or on a wagon for train movements. An additional advantage of containers on trains: on most main lines, they can be double-stacked.
yeah these weren't really profitable so I think they abandoned this way of doing intermodal trains and just load cars with cranes now.
These things, the ROAD-RAILER,are on their way out, for whatever reason. They were pretty damn neat to see!
I always thought this seemed like a bad idea. Now that I've seen it in action, I still think its a bad idea. LOL.
dont worry, Tesla will put a end to this, maybe even end railways...
@Randall Slaughter its not the point....peterbilt NOT OUT OF CALY....is testing the same tech....why would you use fossil fuels to move freight....its not just california....other countries are basically 80% if not more off fossil fuels, then again their railways run under wire....
@@roscoepcoltrane5499 Yes run under wire powered by electricity, by far mostly still generated by burning fossil fuel. By the way, the air and water is MUCH cleaner now than when I was growing up in the 60's & 70's. That's a measurable fact.
@@markurbanosky3301 you need to visit Brasil and see the MRS under wire or even Europe....its done by hydro.....america needs to get their head out of their A%&!!!!
@@roscoepcoltrane5499 72 percent of Europe's electricity in 2018 was coal, petroleum, or gas. Hydro was 10%. And that's straight from the EU ec.europa.eu/eurostat/cache/infographs/energy/bloc-2a.html
I was working for NS when the first NS roadrailers came through Spartanburg, SC. The train consisted of about 10 trailers. It was the hottest train on the rails at that time.
I remember seeing them in Georgia and heard they were hot. At that time a single GP unit handled the entire train.
There are two CSX Subdivisions and one Norfolk Southern running through town. The CSX Willard runs east-west, the CSX Columbus Subdivision running north=south. They cross on the south side of the Iron Triangle Park. The Norfolk Southern Fostoria District Subdivision runs east-east to the north of the park. The video was shot with a westbound train running on the Fostoria District Subdivision as it was crossing the diamond with the CSX Columbus Subdivision on Columbus Avenue. The train will cross the NS Fostoria west of the park near Hale Drive.
CSX has two yards, one on the Willard Sub east of town, it is the CSX B&O Yard, the CSX C&O Yard south of East Lyle Street. Norfolk Southern has the Blair Yard on the Fostoria Sub east of town, and the Wilson Yard, west of town. CSX has their depot near Hale and Main Streets on the Willard Sub. According to Wikipedia, Fostoria has over 100 trains per day running through town.
Not. Now-- less trains,but still busy
I pulled bunches of these out of Norfolk Southern in Charlotte NC. The only difference is the roadrailer has shorter axles and therefore could tip over easier than a standard trailer. You had to watch your speed in cornering.You couldn't see your rear wheels as well as the wider road trailer because the axles were set in more so you needed to check your tires more often. They always seemed heavier to me. I am always amazed at the power of locomotives. Semi trucks are no slouch either. Get in the proper gear for the load and they will pull a load up the side of a mountain.
Wow, I have never seen this type of intermodal before. This freight train does not have any flatbeds. I guess they figured out that eliminating the flatbed would lose million pounds of weight. Thus, a lighter freight train would increase fuel economy, acceleration, and improve braking. Norfolk Southern is definitely reducing fuel costs here. Noticed how the train suddenly started accelerating? Cool video here!!!👍
No? They are getting rid of these
Feels like a Penn & Teller show. First the jogger is inside the fence, then the train provides some distraction, and suddenly he's outside the fence. Magic teleportation!
I'm not gonna lie: That's dope! Great catch and keep them coming!
Ive heard of these, but this is the first video I've ever seen with them in it.
When this was first developed in the mid/late 80's the rail wheels were mounted on the trailers between the axles on the trailer. That's about when they started putting spread axles on trailer,by the way. General Motors developed the concept. The spread axles and the retractable rail wheels added way to much weight to the trailer,so they redesigned it to the configuration.
As far as I've ever seen,these are always a unit train. Nothing else but these. They don't really use but one actual coupler, at the loco end,the rest are drawbars.
tom cline I think the trailers are articulated
@@josephnadler5521 I'm not sure what you mean. They were/are solid frame trailers,with a drawbar linking them together. Of course there is lateral movement between the trailers,is that what you're talking about?
tom cline I guess so?
rip road railer, these one of a kind trains will always be remembered
truckdrivers: trains cant handle our loads
train industry; hold my beer
Because they can’t.
phillyslasher Trucks don’t need to. They can get places trains can’t.
@Keith Willis on the docks sure, but on the stores no. They go to hubs. And smaller vans and trucks take it from there.
Tesla will put a end to this, if not railways in a whole! lets see, the next 10 years will be interesting for the railways....with Tesla and BYD im pretty sure railways are starting to sweat....
@phillyslasher research Tesla and see what their plans are, i shouldnt have to DO TELL....i work in logistics, im a ex railway man....i dont want to face it, but it will happen.
I like the up close view of the cross tracks,
and the way the truck trailers hang on the RR cars.
It's weird how those trailers just sit on those wheels would love to see that contraption up close
This is amazing ... container trucks on the tracks. very unique. very good video
This is a first for me ,,iv never seen truck trailers being pulled this way ,,good idea
I've been there, back in the mid-2000s before the park. We saw a WB roadrailer being held at the signals by CSX for a time. When they got the Green, they train took off and got to road speed within a minute. We were standing pretty much where the guy in black was, but closer to the side of the road closest to the warehouse. It was pretty impressive start-up.
The sounds of the track is satisfying who agrees?
That's the old Triple crown train, which I used to pass by the terminal in Atlanta while at home. These tracks are close to the Petro truckstop in Fostoria I believe.
Thanks for posting-
Don't see many of these. Intermodals won that round 🚂
akro
n61972 drove for Roadway for 18 yrs in SLC,UT. Local, rail shuttle
akron61972 it's cancelled
wow. now there's something you don't see everyday. a real road train. nice vid.
There is 82 trailers and 2 locomotives so that is the total of 84
Too much free time, eh
Yeah but how many axles is that
hmm
the roadrailers have in total 160 axles and the locomotives Dash 9-40cw #9137 and trailing was Dash 9-44cw #9267 each have 6 axles and the total is 12 axles so that’s a total of 172 axles
there are definitely way more than that but ok
Gee sus wow ! America certainly knows how to do trains eh ! I can't believe that acceleration wow again ! Great video, thankyou 😁👍
I hated too see the triple crown's phased out. They eventually got to where the airbrake was terrible on most of them. Grab 1st service and "pow" your were in emergency in most cases. Other than that, they ran like a sports car as long as you had good power. Glad I got to experience them.
Nice one, really rare seeing something like this...and the diamond crossing was also sweet...👍👍
Because why hire lot of trailer drivers when you can only hire one train driver?
Like a boss!
rail is best suited to heavy,high density freight...........double stack containers and heavy bulk hoppers. This is just a waste of track. Due to the stress put through each semi trailer, there is a very real limit to how many can be coupled AND they cant be coupled to heavy rolling stock. Economic fail and waste of rail resources.
wazza33racer, dude is a joke :v
Mew Two
You're wrong. At some point driver will be needed as the train can't go to all the individual places each cargo need to go.
Get right or Get left, afraid of the past sir?
Long haul trucking is killing people because more is expected of the drivers than is humanly possible. Rail transport of trailers between inter-modal ports is the safest and best method. Drivers pickup and deliver trailers/loads in their own region and sleep in their own bed at night.
Thank you the video. I cannot believe the trailers can handle load. Fascinating!
I remember watching triple crown roll through town everyday when I was younger. I used to think they were boring but now I kinda miss them.
Thats cool never seen that set up before.
Awesome catch ! 👍🏻
I’ve seen trains before but not like this- that is a must see on how it’s loaded 😁
This setup has been around for a long time. And the speeds they traveled were faster than what you saw at the end.
I worked at Wabash national semi trailer manufacturer in Lafayette Indiana in 97-99, we built a lot of these, they had a large cast iron front coupler and a very heavy duty rear framework but I don't know what they used to reinforce the middle, we built a lot of them and was a hot item for a while
Beautiful sounds of trains
Used to live near a yard where they built up and broke down these RoadRailer consists. Sometimes the trailers were obviously repainted from Schneider orange but sometimes they'd just throw Schneider trailers right in the mix. As far as I know, Schneider was the only other company using this kind of hardware. It seemed to me like this was great way to do multimode. Sure you lose double stacking but you don't need all those double stack cars and you don't need cranes and whatever to hand the trailers. These RoadRailers seem much more efficient.
As fast as they accelerated tells me those were empty.
Perhaps...but don't be surprised at the acceleration even if they were loaded. Those were some high hp locos up front. Those roadrailers even if loaded were WAY under the HP/ton ratio for this train.
Fully loaded they would weigh between 61 to 62k lbs, which with a average road tractor weighing 18k lbs reaches max legal limit of 80k lbs.
That’s roughly 30 tons per trailer or about the same weight as many rail cars weigh empty. It’s just not enough to make modern locomotives break a sweat!
NS was the only Railroad to use these. I don’t know l old this video is to but they had a lot of trouble with this system. Mostly derailments because they were so light. This is the only Railroader I’ve seen in 15 years, so what’s that tell you. As far as I know NS went back to intermodal only.
Doug McMullen
Conrail and NS both used them years ago and NS was able to fix a lot of issues except they couldn’t fix the lack of profit.
Matt Moschkau 👍👍
Glad you showed the track crossing. Nice that you panned around to show the area 3C still used today?
Time to get a tripod.
Thank you.
They are special built trailers with a 2 inch train-line airline going down the side. The ICC bumpers flip up to allow the piggy-back wheel-set. NS is the only carrier that I know that has them,(Note the entire train is "Triple Crown trailers).
The only advantage from this method of Intermodal is weight saving. From a utility aspect most customers either have their own intermodal trailers/containers, or lease them . In the Triple crown situation you are leasing from NS entirely.
The only utility these road railers have is if they can be delivered remotely,(ie: at the customers location rather than a railyard),which would require expensive loading unloading equipment.Also the weight saving would be lost because who would want a whole train delivered remotely, when it can be piggybacked from the railyard in the same amount of time??Roadrailers are a good concept,but has little utility for the rail customer.
RIP Triplecrown.
The main advantage was that unlike normal TOFC trains, Roadrailers didn't need cranes or lifting equipment at terminals. That saved money and time, but that still wasn't enough to make it successful.
Not to mention road trailers have a much short lifespan than railcars and lower weight carrying capabilities.
That was pretty neat. Never saw it done like that before. Nice.
That is really cool how those tracks are designed like that. That's some skilled work right there. Impressive. Being a railfan myself, I'd be in awe hanging out there.
Many people do. There's a nice little building with vending machines etc where you can sit and watch trains. If you're interested, look up a map of Dolton Illinois, or the "Matteson Cloverleaf" just southeast of Matteson Illinois. Those are quite impressive as well, but they don't provide food or anything there.
A solution for less traffic on road ✌️✌️✌️..in india this is being used for a while now...and in the whole Lockdown period this technique was used more often....but in india instead of trailers...indian railways loaded the whole truck on it's bed... it saves journey time and also fuel and less traffic on highways
2:56 that track is called a diamond crossing because it splits into 4 or more track ways, almost creating a diamond.
this is railway
can you explain how it works though becayse i dont understand it at all
Thats an Interlocking.
I work for the railroad and have never heard diamond crossing
@@roydavis5222 oh. I just call it diamond because it shaped like diamond 😅
I remember them roadrailers back in the old days now after all these years I never saw them again but no matter what they will always be a memory.
I load/unload these trailers a lot. Loaded with parts for Auto plants or empty knockdowns and totes going back to supplier.
General Motors developed these in the mid 80s. We're gonna be primary shippers for the ,then,new Fairfax B.O.P. plant.
This is such an efficient way of doing intermodal! I hope it is adopted in Europe, too. Thanks for posting.
It was deemed a failure in the US, I doubt they are gonna try something that was deemed a failure again.
See these trains a lot in Peru, IN
Hi greeting from Indonesia. Oh mann, we didn't see a kind like this in our country, and look that break pipe that spread across the trailer, just amazing. I'm sorry my bad english
I kind of wonder how the ones at the head end handle the stress of pulling all of them. I guess they're built for it. But I would assume they would not include actual rail cars with them because it would be too much weight for them to pull and tear them apart.
thought the same thing
strange that there's not even one beam to handle the pulling stress
TheRantingCabby I have seen Roadrailers used in regular freights in Australia but all the Roadrailer vehicles were at the rear of the train.
That is one reason Road Railers aren't profitable for trucking. They have to be built heavier to take the strain which means less cargo and more fuel used.
Wikip says 'weighs 1000 lbs more than a regular highway-only trailer'. Earlier types incorporated railroad wheels into the trailer. With these, the rail bogey stays in the rail yard. With these, no cranes needed at the origin & destination. So there's that. Are they not being made any more?
I've never seen anything like this before. I'm thinking these are not like your regular trucking trailers.
Nice RoadRailer catch with the D9W leader
Rest in peace, Triple Crown trains.
yup
?
All the creaking and cracking, I could fall asleep to this.
'Twas a lot of trucks off the road
Sean Vance; yes a lot of trucks off the highways for sure but way more trucks around your neighbourhood for certain. point to p[oint trucking long proved to be the safest and most efficient with cleanest footprint.
Sean Vance there where a lot of road trailers nice diamond
Sean Vance truck drivers still have to make final delivery.
No any more triple crown is,gone bye
There are more trailers than trucks
You learn something new everyday
As much as I enjoy a good train video, I have to say this one was as interesting as taking a good shit and then realizing that I don't have any toilet paper to wipe my big ass with!
AmaZing and Very COoL. I had no idea these existed. And you are right.. That's ACCELERATION :) Thank you for the video. Cheers!
I have never seen that befor
Not that type of connection.
Some of these roadrailers might be registered in Pennsylvania where they get Permanent Trailer plates PT plates. NJ Trailer plates are TAA-10A-TZZ-99Z post 2004.
Now I know what roadrailer means. Never seen one before.
How do they turn corners? Does not look easy.
They turn on corners easily.
Not even a struggle, that train is the lightest train on the system
Are the trailers a special design for this kind of use? I think the average tarmac trailer is not designed to be strong enough to haul 50+ other trailers.
Yes, weight is 1000 lbs heavier than a road trailer.
I have never seen that hook-up before. Very cool.
jesus that is a LONG consist. I've not seen that long of a consist before of nothing but Big Rig Trailers LOL!!!!
Great work...Best train cargo...Big like from Romania!!!!
When you're company cant afford real intermodals and this was the last resort
@xv70 1 Ok ....but you can stack two to four trailers on 1 intermodal so how much space are you really saving and if you actually watched the video he said those triple crowns were going out of service....DUH🙄
Seen the opposite combination frequently in NC. A peterbilt on train wheels tugging rail cars down the line. Never seen this setup however.
I counted there were 508
Jonathon Cole: damn 509... i need to count them again?
509 x42 ft...=
i was looking for this.
Except the documentation for these cars states 125 max. My favorite part is it says absolutely do not hook up any regular rail cars to these.
Gracias
Oh boy here it comes all aboard all aboard Philadelphia ,Pennsylvania ,Westchester,and all points West ,South ,North, East all aboard all aboard!,1:01
Lol here in Germany we have train wagons for that they get lifted up with a crane put on wagon get secured and off they go
Yeah we have that in America too, I'm not to sure what the hell this is I've never seen a train like this before.
Very Beautifull and Very Excellent catching 😍
It's a marvel how NS's Triple Crown Train worked....
Interesting concept......and a good blast on the horns too.
I like train videos on you tube
Denise Tindall What? you going to run a train on TH-cam??
Denise Tindall so do I. I really notice People think railfanners are weird
Denise Tindall
I feel you. I have some videos as well.
That's crazy those trailers can support all the weight and stress of the trailers behind them
I've seen those semi trailers come apart under load. Not a good idea.
@akron/nov61972 the fact is, they did it till everything was fucked and cost too much to replace/upgrade. what does that tell you.
I remember that noise........ beatiful video
первый раз вижу такой перекресток жд..и первый раз вижу чтоб так прицепы транспортировали)
Такая же фигня. Хотя сам бывший железнодорожник (электромеханик сцб).
Wot
Необычно,
Amazing video