There's nothing better feeling than jumping on a 1.5 km Freight, train kicking back with a cold 6 pack of VB travelling 1200 km to the Bottle shop for more. I wish they had a barbie at the back of the train.
It’s just amazing how trains in the US and Australia differ. Not one car has any graffiti on it and the tracks seem well maintained . Almost unreal how quiet they are. Great video !
Our road trains are longer, before they get to the cities as well. Sometimes 3 prime movers moving a whole host of trailers. I showd a road train to a US trucker , and he was amazed how we do things. I said "We might buy your trucks, but we do it better and more imaginatively."..lol. He only tows three trailers there on his job. He was amazed our blokes pulling 5 and 6 trailers, let alone the rest.
@@brianmorris8045 my father was friends with a Truckee....I remember riding along for days in atikison or Kenworth in the outback....bbqs along the way in the middle of no were
Dude y'all trains really don't compare at all js man we have big GE's awesome EMD's and heavier, longer trains and way more classes of railways although its some railways that are similar in power and quantity like rio tinto which is very unique with crew less Auto trains ❤
I bet the lack of freeze/thaw cycle in much of Australia certainly helps. In much of the USA, it gets below freezing regularly during the winter. Parts of Arizona, south Texas, Southern California, and extreme Deep South don’t get them normally. Constant Freeze/thaws can damage tracks.
Great videos. . I spend as much downtime as I can now travelling rural and outback NSW to look at freight trains and affiliated infrastructure. At the age of 54 I still can't pinpoint why I like trains and even looking at railways without a train running on one. I guess I'm not the lone ranger here
I visited Australia from Europe in 2002. I did the IP from Perth to Adelaide as a seating passenger (more was too expensive. We had 2 wagons with cars on it, did not see those in your video. Adelaide was all diesel and I visit Belair and Dry Creek to see the long distance freight. Impressive with the fueltanks and a crewcars behind the locomotives and than the rest of the long trains. SCT was there too with their massive boxcars. The video brings back much memories to my holiday, thanks!
Thank you for the marathon run you provided for us….. early mornings and late nights ….was educated by you r presentation about trains & their movements, mostly facts I didn’t even know existed in our big wide land of Aust…!! Thank you .. (Ps. small suggestion….1. Use a tripod -easier for you…. and 2. show us on a map shot where each sequence is located- easier for us !)
There's something about regional NSW. Its like time stood still there for about 100 years. Modernisation is catching up with it now but still an underrated area of the world.
The Indian Pacific is amazing! 27 cars! They look like the Budd stainless steel passenger cars which ran on many US streamliners in the 1950s. The only American train that compares in length today is Amtrak's Auto Train (Virginia-Florida), and half of its cars are auto carriers. (We do have the superlong freight trains like yours.) I'd love to come to Australia, ride the IP and see this freight action in person!
I could watch your videos all day! Such good photography and very informative commentary. Thank you. When you mention a crew change at Parkes for the Indian pacific, I assume you mean the loco drivers and not the cabin crew? Do the drivers travel on the train or stay in accommodation in the town?
Thanks for the comment glad you liked it, the crew who bring the train from Sydney will stay at a hotel in Parkes and work a corresponding train back to Sydney or travel home in a car the following day. A Parkes crew will take the train to Broken hill and so on and so forth until Perth. Pacific National have depots in Sydney, Parkes and Broken Hill. The cabin crew remain on the train at Parkes but I am unsure if they stay on the train the whole journey or change over during the trip.
Loved it! Well done there! The only thing that I found is about where you’ve put the word “capaeble” as it should be capable; other than that fab vid! Looking forward to more! Will explore ur channel soon! 😊👍 Watching these vids has allowed me to enjoy one of my hobbies trackside without being there!
The Indian Pacific is a wonderful journey. The only issue is the quality of the line between Blayney and Broken Hill. No one got any sleep night one East to West...
US intermodal trains dont have graffiti on them. Im sure some australian freights do as well. US freight is so much more impressive, our trains go farther and are longer
Double stacking must be reducing the bridges they could go under. Must be a lot of work planning those journeys, unless they take some containers off the top when getting closer to the cities.
Yes, the Pacific National double stacked trains in this video are double stacked to and from Parkes. PN run shuttles to and from Sydney with additional loading
Awesome video. Thank you for posting it. I have saved it to my favorites. So the train for Manildra at Bomaderry will run via the Blue Mtn line and Sydney?
Yes, if it was to go via the Main South it would not pass through Parkes station rather turn off at Goobang Junction and head to Cootamundra via Forbes
G530 has been doing nearly every Adelaide Sydney Sydney Adelaide run since I started filming it in Adelaide, June I think I first saw it. Took a few goes to actually capture it though
You have answered my question about the 3 locos and the reason for them. It is reasonably flat here in WA and 2 locos are fine through to Perth. I wonder if the train length is set for about 1800 metres over there because of the passing sidings on the Nullabor. Also noted there was no fuel tanker sitting behind the locos with this AN Coy set up. SCT have tankers attached with in line fueling on the Perth run. Also Australia has been running double stacked freight for quite a while, much to the surprise of BNSF fans in the USA. There was a Brisbane Adelaide freight train via Sydney - What happened to the Inland Rail project. Was it cancelled due to some unhappy farmers in country NSW along the projected route. Hope you get an International Audience for your videos.
Absolutely Awesome! I just think the longer the train, the more that can go wrong. Fingers crossed . . . Not sure why the helpers (middle and rear) are way more prevalent in the USA? Rare in Australia.
A quality video, very impressive, especially the night recordings, must be top notch gear you are using. By the way, Bogan Gate is near 40kms from Parkes, and the "Broken Hill Explorer" is actually named (by NSW TrainLink) "The Outback Explorer". At 1.07 you are across from Laurie McGills "Overland" property and that is at Monomie, not Bogan Gate. There used to be a small station and siding at Monomie, all demolished in the late 1970's. It was to your left on the other side of the passive crossing, no trace remains, it was all flooded out there in Nov 2022 and the line was left hanging in the air. Also the GrainCorp terminal closed in 2017 at Bogan Gate (near the station), you must be referring to the former GrainFlow site at Bogan Gate West (4kms west of the town on Leafy Tank Road) which was bought out two years ago by the Manildra Group and now known as "Manildra Group, Bogan Gate West". Loved the scene of the little 48 class leading the 81 at Bumberry, nice catch.😉
Thanks for the added info. I decided when creating the film that I would use specific train locations as descriped in video titles rather than the actual intermittent locations in which the train is passing as there are a lot and I am not going to mention who owns the property adjacent to the line. The Broken Hill Explorer is referred to, by us in Sydney as the trains title, anything outside of that is upto travellers discretion so that is interesting to know. If you have watched our previous videos we are also well aware of the flooding that occurred on the line during those times. The grain flow site did in fact get bought out by Manildra so nicely done in that respect and is an error on my behalf. Either Ether the site can still be referred to or be easily found by people wishing to visit the area should the chance arise.
@@south_coast_freight_ Thank you, I was on the train to Menindee the other week and the on train crew announced it as "The Outback Explorer" as does the NSW TrainLink website, each to their own. Railway history is important to a number of us who video out this way as the history is slowly disappearing as the years pass. Hence the mention of Monomie etc, keeping our past alive. Good quality video from you, keep up the good work.
Cool assortment of trains there, cool scenery too
Hello
There's nothing better feeling than jumping on a 1.5 km Freight, train kicking back with a cold 6 pack of VB travelling 1200 km to the Bottle shop for more. I wish they had a barbie at the back of the train.
A great video, shows how vulnerable we are, with a single track.
11 minutes in, and I'm honestly blown away. Buy your cinematography really amazing
Great stuff. Also a great look at outback NSW. Thanks
Nice to have descriptions of where, when and what we are watching.
Love NR-30 and NR-31, the locos in "Great Southern" livery. Hope they are rostered when I travel on "GS' in late February.
It’s just amazing how trains in the US and Australia differ. Not one car has any graffiti on it and the tracks seem well maintained . Almost unreal how quiet they are. Great video !
Our road trains are longer, before they get to the cities as well. Sometimes 3 prime movers moving a whole host of trailers. I showd a road train to a US trucker , and he was amazed how we do things. I said "We might buy your trucks, but we do it better and more imaginatively."..lol. He only tows three trailers there on his job. He was amazed our blokes pulling 5 and 6 trailers, let alone the rest.
@@brianmorris8045 my father was friends with a Truckee....I remember riding along for days in atikison or Kenworth in the outback....bbqs along the way in the middle of no were
Dude y'all trains really don't compare at all js man we have big GE's awesome EMD's and heavier, longer trains and way more classes of railways although its some railways that are similar in power and quantity like rio tinto which is very unique with crew less Auto trains ❤
There's graffiti alright. Look a bit closer mate.
I bet the lack of freeze/thaw cycle in much of Australia certainly helps. In much of the USA, it gets below freezing regularly during the winter. Parts of Arizona, south Texas, Southern California, and extreme Deep South don’t get them normally. Constant Freeze/thaws can damage tracks.
Great video! Not to be picky, the site at Bogan Gate is a former AWB site now owned by Manildra Group not GrainCorp.
Great snap shot of this vital piece of Australian transport and its infrastructure
Thanks for the video 📹 could watch all Sunday in New Zealand 🇳🇿 like the intermodal/ mixed manifest, take care & thanks ❤
Great videos. . I spend as much downtime as I can now travelling rural and outback NSW to look at freight trains and affiliated infrastructure. At the age of 54 I still can't pinpoint why I like trains and even looking at railways without a train running on one. I guess I'm not the lone ranger here
Great video. Really enjoyed the different angles an info of the trains and nice views of country NSW...
What an opening scene. I nearly reached for the popcorn. Great vid. I love the outback and great to see the grain silos in operation again.
NICE WORK MATE VERY NICE WORK WITH THE SHOW AND THE TRANS VERY NICE
Massive machines, Hi from England
Wow that opening great stuff well done Dave quite the bump at the crossing 26.37 in
Nice video :)
Awesome video! Beautifully shot, capturing the feel of the whole thing. Obviously a lot of time and patience went into making this. Thank you!
Thanks for a bumper edition! I loved every minute of it and always learn about framing of shots from watching your work.
I visited Australia from Europe in 2002. I did the IP from Perth to Adelaide as a seating passenger (more was too expensive. We had 2 wagons with cars on it, did not see those in your video. Adelaide was all diesel and I visit Belair and Dry Creek to see the long distance freight. Impressive with the fueltanks and a crewcars behind the locomotives and than the rest of the long trains. SCT was there too with their massive boxcars. The video brings back much memories to my holiday, thanks!
Simply perfect footage.
Great video for a train buff like me. I would love to ride on the Indian Pacific just for the thrill of it, it would be an epic adventure.
I'm glad the weather was nice and warm for you in the early shots :) Great video!!!
I love the double stacker intermodal trains! they aren't very common in australia so it is a treat to see one!
Thank you for the marathon run you provided for us….. early mornings and late nights ….was educated by you r presentation about trains & their movements, mostly facts I didn’t even know existed in our big wide land of Aust…!!
Thank you ..
(Ps. small suggestion….1. Use a tripod -easier for you…. and 2. show us on a map shot where each sequence is located- easier for us !)
There's something about regional NSW. Its like time stood still there for about 100 years. Modernisation is catching up with it now but still an underrated area of the world.
Awesome 👍 Fantastic 👌 Video ❤❤❤
Nice video, very high quality...no distracting chatter or music.
The Indian Pacific is amazing! 27 cars! They look like the Budd stainless steel passenger cars which ran on many US streamliners in the 1950s. The only American train that compares in length today is Amtrak's Auto Train (Virginia-Florida), and half of its cars are auto carriers. (We do have the superlong freight trains like yours.)
I'd love to come to Australia, ride the IP and see this freight action in person!
Love the SCT double stacked.
SA and NSW great train action.
yeah pretty good camera tricks happening here. much appreciated, looks like good fun.
Nice! Never see Aussie train action. Thanks this is a good vid. Subbed! and enjoyed!
This video is absolutely brilliant!
Yet again, another fine, well put together video mate! Devasted I wasn't able to join you that trip, you cleaned up well!
Thanks from America stunning video
Looks like you use floodlight especially at 1.03
Most frequently used level crossings in the country are lit up at night by street lights
great video mate .. looking forward to seeing more for you ... many thanks!
I could watch your videos all day! Such good photography and very informative commentary. Thank you.
When you mention a crew change at Parkes for the Indian pacific, I assume you mean the loco drivers and not the cabin crew? Do the drivers travel on the train or stay in accommodation in the town?
Thanks for the comment glad you liked it, the crew who bring the train from Sydney will stay at a hotel in Parkes and work a corresponding train back to Sydney or travel home in a car the following day. A Parkes crew will take the train to Broken hill and so on and so forth until Perth. Pacific National have depots in Sydney, Parkes and Broken Hill. The cabin crew remain on the train at Parkes but I am unsure if they stay on the train the whole journey or change over during the trip.
Thank you for the video! Very interesting and amazing trains! I love freight trains!
From Adelaide. Thank you for posting. Great camera work and super locations too.
Great video, much enjoyed, didn’t see any “Outback” though.
australia locomotives resemble appearances of european british models with american engine and signaling
Loved it! Well done there! The only thing that I found is about where you’ve put the word “capaeble” as it should be capable; other than that fab vid! Looking forward to more! Will explore ur channel soon! 😊👍 Watching these vids has allowed me to enjoy one of my hobbies trackside without being there!
The Indian Pacific is a wonderful journey. The only issue is the quality of the line between Blayney and Broken Hill. No one got any sleep night one East to West...
Beautiful trains 👍💯
Great footage of impressive quality. Congratulations! Thanks for sharing!💯
This is awesome to see how the Aussies have super clean R.R. s. No graffiti. No funky old uniits. Clean tight railroading. No Americana here. Cool !
US intermodal trains dont have graffiti on them. Im sure some australian freights do as well. US freight is so much more impressive, our trains go farther and are longer
Awesome catches there totally 😎👍🏻 Have a great day and enjoy 🚂🫵
-4 degrees c sounds delightful after a high of 42 deg c here in the PNW USA
Same here in summer!
Double stacking must be reducing the bridges they could go under. Must be a lot of work planning those journeys, unless they take some containers off the top when getting closer to the cities.
Yes, the Pacific National double stacked trains in this video are double stacked to and from Parkes. PN run shuttles to and from Sydney with additional loading
super train video
Nice vlog!!
Great Video 👍👍👍
Awesome video. Thank you for posting it. I have saved it to my favorites. So the train for Manildra at Bomaderry will run via the Blue Mtn line and Sydney?
Yes, if it was to go via the Main South it would not pass through Parkes station rather turn off at Goobang Junction and head to Cootamundra via Forbes
Great video and great catches
I'm no railway engineer, but that crossing at 26m 30s onwards, looks pretty rough to me. Locomotives and rolling stock bouncing all over the place.
G530 has been doing nearly every Adelaide Sydney Sydney Adelaide run since I started filming it in Adelaide, June I think I first saw it.
Took a few goes to actually capture it though
i'm going to say it, if anyone should've brought KCS it's Pacific National! Oh and I'm an Aussie!
You have answered my question about the 3 locos and the reason for them. It is reasonably flat here in WA and 2 locos are fine through to Perth. I wonder if the train length is set for about 1800 metres over there because of the passing sidings on the Nullabor.
Also noted there was no fuel tanker sitting behind the locos with this AN Coy set up. SCT have tankers attached with in line fueling on the Perth run.
Also Australia has been running double stacked freight for quite a while, much to the surprise of BNSF fans in the USA.
There was a Brisbane Adelaide freight train via Sydney - What happened to the Inland Rail project. Was it cancelled due to some unhappy farmers in country NSW along the projected route.
Hope you get an International Audience for your videos.
Very Nice
ARTC track never fails to dissapoint. That dip at the level crossing at Yarrabandai is a joke.
I saw your comment before I got to that part of the video. That dip is insane!
Absolutely Awesome! I just think the longer the train, the more that can go wrong. Fingers crossed . . . Not sure why the helpers (middle and rear) are way more prevalent in the USA? Rare in Australia.
Nice Video!
52:01 I love Australian trains 🚆
What a great video , really liked it ❤
It´s amazing! I love it! 😀
Don`t the fires get away from the person that is watching them.???????????
A quality video, very impressive, especially the night recordings, must be top notch gear you are using. By the way, Bogan Gate is near 40kms from Parkes, and the "Broken Hill Explorer" is actually named (by NSW TrainLink) "The Outback Explorer". At 1.07 you are across from Laurie McGills "Overland" property and that is at Monomie, not Bogan Gate. There used to be a small station and siding at Monomie, all demolished in the late 1970's. It was to your left on the other side of the passive crossing, no trace remains, it was all flooded out there in Nov 2022 and the line was left hanging in the air. Also the GrainCorp terminal closed in 2017 at Bogan Gate (near the station), you must be referring to the former GrainFlow site at Bogan Gate West (4kms west of the town on Leafy Tank Road) which was bought out two years ago by the Manildra Group and now known as "Manildra Group, Bogan Gate West". Loved the scene of the little 48 class leading the 81 at Bumberry, nice catch.😉
Thanks for the added info. I decided when creating the film that I would use specific train locations as descriped in video titles rather than the actual intermittent locations in which the train is passing as there are a lot and I am not going to mention who owns the property adjacent to the line. The Broken Hill Explorer is referred to, by us in Sydney as the trains title, anything outside of that is upto travellers discretion so that is interesting to know. If you have watched our previous videos we are also well aware of the flooding that occurred on the line during those times. The grain flow site did in fact get bought out by Manildra so nicely done in that respect and is an error on my behalf. Either Ether the site can still be referred to or be easily found by people wishing to visit the area should the chance arise.
@@south_coast_freight_ Thank you, I was on the train to Menindee the other week and the on train crew announced it as "The Outback Explorer" as does the NSW TrainLink website, each to their own. Railway history is important to a number of us who video out this way as the history is slowly disappearing as the years pass. Hence the mention of Monomie etc, keeping our past alive. Good quality video from you, keep up the good work.
Great videos
12:26, what is this train at
Fantastic man . 👍🏻😎 Robin out
Great videos you have how do you get from one site to another to film the same train?
Maybe put dates in as well when you filmed??
Well done indeed!
great
How do you know when the trains are scheduled? Is there a website with the information?
ARTC Master Train Plan available on their website
🎉🎉🎉🎉
🎉
Well, looks like Australia has the same problem we do with vandals painting the railcars, hmm.
New 🆕 subscribe 🔥👊🏽 amazing hunting 🤝🏽
So weird seeing double stack well cars and high cube boxcars in Australia
How long have those been operating in Australia?