Soo Line GP38-2s had the interesting hood feature of pull-up hinged covers over the engine somewhat similar to the pull-up doors on an EMD switch engine. This allowed cylinder maintenance without lifting the hood off. It’s a great feature to model as each door has two handles plus there are four lifting lugs running down the center of the hood. The toppers are the cylindrical exhaust pipes that are only about twelve inches above the hood. There is a square plate where the tubes come up and there is a gap between the sides of the tubes and the hood. Put all that together and it makes a very distinct model.
I live in Davenport, Iowa just two blocks from the old Milwaukee Road mainline to Kansas City. It became the Soo Line in the mid 80s. Then it belonged to the I&M Rail Link, until it was purchased by the Dakota, Minnesota and Eastern. Later, it became the property of the Iowa, Chicago, and Eastern RR. Now it all belongs to the Canadian Pacific. Lots of changes, but it was fun seeing all the different railroads go by along the river. Between mins 4-6, that is the LaFarge Cement Plant just west of Davenport.
I remember KCS pushing cars up to the Folgers Coffee plant. Very cool. FYI. At the 32.40 minute point, it shows the crew at mile marker number 1 for the Kansas City Southern Line. It's gone now. It's become a upscale apartment bldg area.
if you want to find a ton of ATSF Bn and Sante Fe engines. St louis is your spot! caught a unpatched BN bnsf engine on point of a stack train! then it got better! caught a unpatched ATSF engine on point of a mixed freight! St Louis really love there unpatched fallen flags!
If you're talking about that pop pop pop that might sound like short bursts of air being released that's the air tank pressure release on the locomotive IIRC
@railwayfan This is the northeast end of the _West Bottoms_ area of Kansas City, Missouri. The videographer appears to have been standing under Woodswether Road overpass with the camera facing southwest. The silver through-truss bridge above the train was removed when the gooseneck rail junction was recently modernized. The train is heading toward Union Pacific's (former Missouri Pacific) Neff Yard located 3 miles east of this location in an area called the _East Bottoms_ . By 26:52, the camera has panned to the northeast. The westbound train on the left has just entered UP's (former MP) _Falls City Subdivision_ which follows the west bank of the Missouri River north to Omaha, Nebraska. The train on the bridge passing from right-to-left is traveling northbound across Hannibal Bridge, which is a double tracked swing bridge over the Missouri River. It connects the West Bottoms to North Kansas City, Missouri. BNSF's (former Chicago Burlington Quincy) Murray Yard is about 1/2 mile north of Hannibal Bridge in North Kansas City.
Location is called Broadway on Union Pacific. The SP train is on a track called the incline, while the tracks going up and over the Broadway control point is called the Gooseneck. You'd get run off down there today where he was standing, but you can see it all from above easily today. goo.gl/maps/sACbkBSK5nw
That first clip brought back so many memories. I used to watch those F40Cs fly by when I was a kid.
Soo Line GP38-2s had the interesting hood feature of pull-up hinged covers over the engine somewhat similar to the pull-up doors on an EMD switch engine. This allowed cylinder maintenance without lifting the hood off. It’s a great feature to model as each door has two handles plus there are four lifting lugs running down the center of the hood. The toppers are the cylindrical exhaust pipes that are only about twelve inches above the hood. There is a square plate where the tubes come up and there is a gap between the sides of the tubes and the hood. Put all that together and it makes a very distinct model.
....if they invent time travel, im going back to 1986. and aint coming back!
KCS is my home road, I grew up in Westville Ok.
lots of good times.
The horn on that 6611 is perfect 👌🏻
I live in Davenport, Iowa just two blocks from the old Milwaukee Road mainline to Kansas City. It became the Soo Line in the mid 80s. Then it belonged to the I&M Rail Link, until it was purchased by the Dakota, Minnesota and Eastern. Later, it became the property of the Iowa, Chicago, and Eastern RR. Now it all belongs to the Canadian Pacific. Lots of changes, but it was fun seeing all the different railroads go by along the river. Between mins 4-6, that is the LaFarge Cement Plant just west of Davenport.
And now CP KCS so maybe it will get more relevant All those after MR were a lame joke..
Great work, love the classics!
Nice video love the variety….thanks for posting 😁
Im a joplin railfan and im inpressed who got this vide
Vintage video at 720p at 60 fps are not seen many.
thanks for sharing
This was SD footage upconverted during editing.
Terrific trains, terrific locations, interesting era in railroading. Thanks!👍👍😊
this was my favorite time before everybody took the MAC plunge....
I remember KCS pushing cars up to the Folgers Coffee plant. Very cool. FYI. At the 32.40 minute point, it shows the crew at mile marker number 1 for the Kansas City Southern Line. It's gone now. It's become a upscale apartment bldg area.
Love those classic searchlight signals!!!!!!
Very good work. I really enjoyed the shots from KC. Thanks.
very nice video. thanks much. always have had spot for SOO.
Love this video lots of memories
SOO Line has the quietest horns of any mainline RR.
Unless you were an engineer in an EMD spartan cab locomotive with the horns directly above the engineer’s head.
@ 6:05... i thought the soo 4400 was a red letter soo?
There was always something intriguing and interesting about granger railroads.
very cool. subscribed.
Caboose sighting!
interesting how they used a front end loader to shove the hoppers
Does anyone know where the location is at 32:12
I love the Soo 40-2B
if you want to find a ton of ATSF Bn and Sante Fe engines. St louis is your spot! caught a unpatched BN bnsf engine on point of a stack train! then it got better! caught a unpatched ATSF engine on point of a mixed freight! St Louis really love there unpatched fallen flags!
13:00 What kind of horn is that on 6611?
Leslie RS-3L
2nd loco is a B unit.
What's that sound through the first part of the video? Sounds like pressure valves or sparks or something.
If you're talking about that pop pop pop that might sound like short bursts of air being released that's the air tank pressure release on the locomotive IIRC
Where are they at , at 26:13? Looks very interesting.
Not sure it's official name off hand, but it's not far from where the old Union Station was in Kansas City.
@railwayfan
This is the northeast end of the _West Bottoms_ area of Kansas City, Missouri. The videographer appears to have been standing under Woodswether Road overpass with the camera facing southwest. The silver through-truss bridge above the train was removed when the gooseneck rail junction was recently modernized. The train is heading toward Union Pacific's (former Missouri Pacific) Neff Yard located 3 miles east of this location in an area called the _East Bottoms_ . By 26:52, the camera has panned to the northeast. The westbound train on the left has just entered UP's (former MP) _Falls City Subdivision_ which follows the west bank of the Missouri River north to Omaha, Nebraska. The train on the bridge passing from right-to-left is traveling northbound across Hannibal Bridge, which is a double tracked swing bridge over the Missouri River. It connects the West Bottoms to North Kansas City, Missouri. BNSF's (former Chicago Burlington Quincy) Murray Yard is about 1/2 mile north of Hannibal Bridge in North Kansas City.
Location is called Broadway on Union Pacific. The SP train is on a track called the incline, while the tracks going up and over the Broadway control point is called the Gooseneck. You'd get run off down there today where he was standing, but you can see it all from above easily today.
goo.gl/maps/sACbkBSK5nw
Graffiti free rail cars!
Is this 1985 ish?
Add about 10 years.
@@RailroadMediaArchive What year were they filmed?
@@elizabethpate2740 not sure. Probably 1995 or '96.
I wish i could see soo line trains
Tails 199 peekaboo
Some of that is from clear block production
Randy Funk some of this is the raw footage used by CBP, yes.
Þtàñķ you for postiñg
It's good but I need more BN ACTION!
Love signal
KCS 4012 is Ex B&M 200, Nee B&M 212
SOO 4400 yay.