Young & Funny yeah, and also if you were a chill and cool conductor, you would be a FAN favorite by the Train fan community and the regular people! I know a few conductors who were really cool!
There she is, right there at 5:20, the one and only Barbara Hand! Barbara was an actual Tower Operator in the system. She'd retired from her position shortly before I began working as a Tour Guide in the New York Transit Museum in 1990, which is where I had the honor and privilege of meeting her.
Yea I was down there too with her. I knew her as a kid when she was out on the other towers, when I volunteered down there under Gail Dawnson, Barbara was there. She was an awesome person!!
Hard to believe in 1981 she was still having to use W-E circa 1920s "scissorphone" carbon phones as a microphone - and the following shot with the 1930s-era PA speaker. NO WONDER THE MTA was SUCH A MESS !!!! And these people dealt with the sh!t sandwich of equipment they were given to make work - and work they did (mostly). Any rider of the LIRR knew Harold and Jay if they were paying attention. They should rename the tower "HAND" instead of Harold...
They still run the R46's on the Rockaway shuttle. I take them nearly every weekend in the summertime. It's amazing that 40 years later the sights and sounds in this video are still familiar to many people in 2021.
Hi and yes. I was maybe 13 when this movie was made. My grandpa would take us to Aqueduct, Broad Channel, and Rockaway. Right around the same time, me and a friend had a problem when we got off at Far Rockaway and these punks from the projects started throwing bricks and bottles at us and they were much older. Back then, my father would worry and send me off. No one back then really worried too much about a kid riding the train. Thankfully, we got away! R46 was my favorite though, especially one with working AC. We missed being able to see out the front window though! Glad to hear they are still in service.
Wow, I haven’t seen this video in over 30 some odd years!!! At 3:56 that is me when I was a Conductor working in Command Center typing train incident reports. It was a few months after this video was taken that I got promoted to Motorman.
Some additional info on this video. The Motorman was named Adams and the Conductor was Smith (Smitty) I had worked with Smitty when I worked the "extra" list, and he was the best conductor that I had ever worked with. M/M Adams had a vast knowledge of the transit system and it various trains, a real gentleman.
Smitty is my dad. I just accidental found this video not expecting to see him. He retired in Oct 1989 and is 91 years young still enjoying his retirement. Thank you for the great compliment you gave him. 🚇
What not a lot of people do not know is that it is the same mechanics, just enhanced with modern technology to make it all better… but it is still the same bones and roots of the beginning; it is one of the infinite things that makes The City so special.
Love this video, I operate the A train now for about 11 years and they still use the same equipment, very reliable and durable, I can’t wait to see the new trains come in.
I've rode on the A train and other routes in the New York Subway system for over 50 years. I've heard the song many times, even sang it! I like the behind-the-scenes look at how the system works and the people who work there. I like the footage from the old days. it gives anybody who has never been on the subway an idea on how it works and what they do to keep New Yorkers and the thousands of visitors moving.
Frankly Speaking my dad was a T/O on the IND line for 29 years, #1 on the F line for 24 years. My brother and father of my kids both worked IRT division. I was the only fool that worked for MaBTOA. I wanted to go to motors so bad, but there was no division switches when I was there.
Pre-G.O.H. R-46's Rockwell International Trucks P-Wire Braking System G.E. Slide Controller You could cut The Radio in to transmit Command Center's announcements directly over the P.A. All Door panels had Guard Lights, Automatic/manual Identra Setting side signs (automatic Side Signs), enter 2 digit code = press start, and all side signs would go to that Route/Destination. i.e. 54 was (E) to 179th St. Jamaica, etc. Hostler Auxiliary backup Controller, ELE44 Skate Key controls MDC. (Before the "Vapor Key" was introduced in 1985 The old "Command Center", room 300 at 370 Jay Street. ...And the Classic Defining N.Y.C.T.A. Blue Stripe This is when when the system had personality. Now its as interesting as a hospital bathroom.
Oh gimme a break. The r143/160/179s are nice. They represent the future of the transit system. These times were nice But the reality is, you have to get with the times
I operated the R-46 train. This was the 1st train with new technology. You had the 1st of its kind captain chair that swiveled. The brake handle & the throttle were connected onto one lever. So easy to conrol. Up for speed down to slowdown or stop. I used to operate with my left hand while my right arm, bent at the elbow was out the window. Just like a Cadillac. Comfortable as hell!
Still, it does help educate people about the nature of subway operations. I'm sure if you compare 1981 to 2013, there will be advancements in technology while retaining the same general concept.
To this day, i always wanted to become a NYCTA motorman. So hard to always see when is the next exam and hiring. Learned to fly planes, drive 18 wheelers, but this is the real dream job i always wanted since i was a child.😔🚉
I was in the C/R class of 7/83. Knew all these people. Tons of ancient equipment, yet some relics are still used. A&C lines were my faves. Great memories of Ms. Marie Flores at Euclid.
Those were some beautiful trains they had back then! What a great man, he really enjoyed and cared about his job. It looks really fun! For reference, the IND/BMT fleet at the time was R10, (maybe the R11 I’m not sure), R16, R27, R30, R32, R38, R40(both types), R42, R44, and R46. Very diverse system at the time. Compared to today, now we have less than half of that.
I was 6 in 1980 when riding my first subway car which was an R46 on the F from Herald Square to Rockafeller Center! Well that set I rode was clean! Second time, I ride an R40M set on the AA in 1984, then a few months after ride the dirty cars on the 1 and 2! Things got much better after 1989 rolled around, but the way things were in the subway would make anyone afraid to ride it especially in the overnight hours!
The A- train was a very brutal line back in da day especially riding through Brooklyn. The last car was always dark and full of thugs and if you rode the last car, hide your valuables cause they would definitely try to rob you.
In the 80's and part of the 90's the A used R40 slants all the time. That wasn't anything unusual. Then after the C stopped using the R10's and R16's they used R40 slants so they were on the line for many years.
@@ninofromkitchennightmares1497 Your right, my mistake because in 2005 I use to see them on 168 St. where I was working at the time being used on the C line.
👋👋👋👋👋This is a touching Film of the New York City Subways until I'm crying. All those car fleets in this picture are all retired from service. Those memories touch my heart as a train buff & model railroader. Thanks for these memories and the staff that worked at that time when i was in high school when at that time when all this action was on the subway rails. 😢😭🙂
An amazing entourage of dedicated, and knowledgeable people running a very daunting operation - the largest of its kind in the world - and pioneers who built it.
Please change your YT profile picture as it appears to be a mockery of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Mocking Our Lord Jesus Christ is a grave sin that places souls on the wide path to Hell if the souls do not repent/receive forgiveness for their sins prior to death. Peace!
Awesome documentary, chock full of facts and figures as well as the personal touch. Rode the subway through the 1970s til the year I left New York: 1981, the year this was filmed!
I miss these days. So much variety of trains. Even on one line alone there can be as much as 4 different models running. You never knew what was coming. The subway today feels so generic. Although the R160s have different variations of which only a foamer could tell the difference, it's all the same shit to me. Boring. Bring back the 75 footers!
+JayJayinNYC Its still like that on the J train. Especially in lower Manhattan. You'll never know if you'll have an R160 and easily-readable signs, or have to suffer through one of their clapped out R32's or R42's.
In the 80s, they started putting in the digital signs. They first did it on the E line. In the 80s, the E ran exclusively R46s for many years. Then they changed them to R32s in the 90s after the R46s were rebuilt and they liked the shorter dwell time on the R32s.
Worth noting that ALL those subway models are still in service. The MTA decided recently not to replace the A train model seen in this video. A new model was tested to replace it but not implemented. Those old token booths that had the change exchanging hands had the coins flushed up against the window. I don't know if that was some sort of protocol but that's how it looked back then. Some of the models in the video were reduced in service but can still be ridden. Graffiti crime has been improved greatly. There is no longer any double lettered trains.
Even if I didn't know that this documentary was from 1981, I would've been able to tell that this was from the 1980s. The A train models were different and people used subway tokens instead of MetroCards.
Beat Street the king of the beat. I see you rocking that beat from across the street. Beat Street it's a lesson too. Because you can't let the street beat you🎵
Just to think the R46s are still in service today is absolutely fricken crazy to be honest with you. 😱😲😮 The NYCTA said in 1981 that the R46’s were originally due for replacement in 2011.
I operated R32s R38s R40s Modified R40s Slant R40s R42s R44s R46s R68s R68As R143s R160s and R179s and I’ll tell you my FAVORITE is the R160s 💪🏽 this footage is from the year I was born 👶🏽
The R44s were in the words of the T.A., "lemons" with problems in the "trucks" (wheel sets). They had to share R40s with the AA/B line. The R32s weren't bad either.
I grew up but left L.I. and then NYC in 1978 for Los Angeles !! It's now 2024, 43 years later, still in L.A., but still do, and always have missed New York City, the subways, and the people.. I'm entering this reply just 20 days remaining before this country is more than likely about to elect its very first female president, and whom, as it happens, I share the same last name as with ! I watched this movie because I've loved trains all my life and have been a model railroader here, but began the hobby there when I was a child in the mid-1950s in New Hyde Park 🙂
The way he announces stations and transfer lines, it’s more better than the automated announcements of today. That shortened “Transfer is available to the A, C, D & 1 trains” is not saying much.
Sucks there's no IRT equivalent of the R44/46. Would've been awesome to have an IRT car with the 1970s interior. Sucks the IRT didn't get any new cars in the 1960s and 1970s
Rail Faner They are somewhat EMU. In the video, it said that for the R46, the power and brake is in one handle (like the current NTTs), so if the motorman moves the controller to position and he is in the head can, all cars respond.
hardworking people right here.i hope they all enjoyed a well deserved retirement.
That's the good thing about working for the city, you get good benefits even after you retire.
io89
Yeah... now you see 6 lazy assholes working together to change a lightbulb
Young & Funny yeah, and also if you were a chill and cool conductor, you would be a FAN favorite by the Train fan community and the regular people! I know a few conductors who were really cool!
@phillyslasher I bet you work for the MTA holding the ladder with the other 6 guys changing the lightbulb...
There she is, right there at 5:20, the one and only Barbara Hand! Barbara was an actual Tower Operator in the system. She'd retired from her position shortly before I began working as a Tour Guide in the New York Transit Museum in 1990, which is where I had the honor and privilege of meeting her.
Yea I was down there too with her. I knew her as a kid when she was out on the other towers, when I volunteered down there under Gail Dawnson, Barbara was there. She was an awesome person!!
Wow that's very interesting though.
Hard to believe in 1981 she was still having to use W-E circa 1920s "scissorphone" carbon phones as a microphone - and the following shot with the 1930s-era PA speaker. NO WONDER THE MTA was SUCH A MESS !!!! And these people dealt with the sh!t sandwich of equipment they were given to make work - and work they did (mostly). Any rider of the LIRR knew Harold and Jay if they were paying attention. They should rename the tower "HAND" instead of Harold...
@@musicom67 Right on, my friend!
They still run the R46's on the Rockaway shuttle. I take them nearly every weekend in the summertime. It's amazing that 40 years later the sights and sounds in this video are still familiar to many people in 2021.
👏🏼
Hi and yes. I was maybe 13 when this movie was made. My grandpa would take us to Aqueduct, Broad Channel, and Rockaway. Right around the same time, me and a friend had a problem when we got off at Far Rockaway and these punks from the projects started throwing bricks and bottles at us and they were much older. Back then, my father would worry and send me off. No one back then really worried too much about a kid riding the train. Thankfully, we got away! R46 was my favorite though, especially one with working AC. We missed being able to see out the front window though! Glad to hear they are still in service.
They also still run on the A and C as well as Q
Wow, I haven’t seen this video in over 30 some odd years!!! At 3:56 that is me when I was a Conductor working in Command Center typing train incident reports. It was a few months after this video was taken that I got promoted to Motorman.
I wish as a young man in NYC I had gotten a job in the subway system..
I love these old documentaries. I hope these guys are all retired and happy somewhere.
As a Conductor I worked with this Motorman.
What was it like? Also how did the R38's preform back then? Sounds kinda weird
@Blue Skies Media Yes?
@@squiddog7086 It was a long run
Did Motormen have any issued uniforms or what?
Some additional info on this video. The Motorman was named Adams and the Conductor was Smith (Smitty) I had worked with Smitty when I worked the "extra" list, and he was the best conductor that I had ever worked with. M/M Adams had a vast knowledge of the transit system and it various trains, a real gentleman.
randyk49 kool!
Nice to know! I hope both men are or have really enjoyed their retirement!!!
Nice to know! I hope both men are or have really enjoyed their retirement!!!
Smitty is my dad. I just accidental found this video not expecting to see him. He retired in Oct 1989 and is 91 years young still enjoying his retirement. Thank you for the great compliment you gave him. 🚇
@@fnihp30 my dad Smitty is in fact still enjoying his retirement. 91 years young and still going strong.
As a former Conductor, former Train Operator, and a current Train Service Supervisor, this video makes me smile 😁😁😁
My Grandfather Was A Train Driver On The ( F ) Train. God Bless His Soul. I wanna be just like my late grandpa Arthur Preudhomme
You mean motorman!
When u look at it like this u see how incredible the system is. The older models in my opinion had more character to it.
They do and we’re in a Larger Variety
What not a lot of people do not know is that it is the same mechanics, just enhanced with modern technology to make it all better… but it is still the same bones and roots of the beginning; it is one of the infinite things that makes The City so special.
You should have been with me in the Mad Men era of 1960s NYC.
Schizo comment
The double letter designations (AA, CC) used to indicate local trains. Today there is only the A, C, E.
Excellent footage! Thanks for posting!!
The R46 debuted on the A line 1975 making it the oldest subway trains we have now. I remember them when they were new!
I take the A train to work and I enjoy the R46 rather than the new trains
@@Ezekiel144k What are your thoughts on the brand new R211 subway cars?
The R44 is the oldest (currently run on the SIR which counts as the subway) first ran in 1971
@@nycfanner_205 True! And when the last R44s were delivered in 1974 I had long hair over my ears, long sideburns and a mustache. 😁
Nice seeing the R46 when they had the Rockwell lightweight trucks, and that controller.
Love this video, I operate the A train now for about 11 years and they still use the same equipment, very reliable and durable, I can’t wait to see the new trains come in.
I just don't understand why the best video on earth only has 146K views??
I've rode on the A train and other routes in the New York Subway system for over 50 years. I've heard the song many times, even sang it! I like the behind-the-scenes look at how the system works and the people who work there. I like the footage from the old days. it gives anybody who has never been on the subway an idea on how it works and what they do to keep New Yorkers and the thousands of visitors moving.
I retired two years ago from dept of subways it was a great experience to have worked through the ranks
This video is amazing, inspiring & educational. Videos like these should be on the History Channel
Gotta love this soundtrack.
Yea the MTA was short of funds so they bought a Korg electric piano from Big Dudes Music City for $250.00
what's the song called
@@jaydottt_transitfanner Sounds like something you'd hear in Super Mario.
My father was a Conductor on the IRT #2 Train for 24 years.
Frankly Speaking my dad was a T/O on the IND line for 29 years, #1 on the F line for 24 years. My brother and father of my kids both worked IRT division. I was the only fool that worked for MaBTOA. I wanted to go to motors so bad, but there was no division switches when I was there.
Fascinating insight into the day to day running of the NYC subway. Thanks for uploading!
As a rookie Transit employee (motorman) all I can say is the more things change, the more they truly stay the same!
It's been 8 years, how your career going?
@@cjuice9039 8-and-a-half to be exact. Only another 16 to go before retirement
@@JorgeCat78 Hope you next 16 years goes well. Respect for replying to such an old thread
as the Cinderella song says...
Pre-G.O.H. R-46's
Rockwell International Trucks
P-Wire Braking System
G.E. Slide Controller
You could cut The Radio in to transmit Command Center's announcements directly over the P.A.
All Door panels had Guard Lights,
Automatic/manual Identra Setting side signs (automatic Side Signs), enter 2 digit code = press start, and all side signs would go to that Route/Destination. i.e. 54 was (E) to 179th St. Jamaica, etc.
Hostler Auxiliary backup Controller,
ELE44 Skate Key controls MDC. (Before the "Vapor Key" was introduced in 1985
The old "Command Center", room 300 at 370 Jay Street.
...And the Classic Defining N.Y.C.T.A. Blue Stripe
This is when when the system had personality.
Now its as interesting as a hospital bathroom.
Oh gimme a break. The r143/160/179s are nice. They represent the future of the transit system. These times were nice But the reality is, you have to get with the times
Well one thing I can say is the Kawasaki r68s stay looking so shínny and pristine. And they still ride smooth. Air conditioning is flawless
No need to worry, the R211 Trainsets will be a break from the Gray and Teal of the current subway car interiors.
You are correct sir! The hostler was great. Used to override the deadman with a toothpick!
I operated the R-46 train. This was the 1st train with new technology.
You had the 1st of its kind captain chair that swiveled. The brake handle & the throttle were connected onto one lever. So easy to conrol. Up for speed down to slowdown or stop. I used to operate with my left hand while my right arm, bent at the elbow was out the window. Just like a Cadillac. Comfortable as hell!
08:23 i love how that conductor talked
That’s my dad and what’s funny is that he doesn’t talk like that. We’ve been cracking up listening to this video.
@WHITTY IS10NYCTOMG He sounds like hem was in the 50’s. Haha
I love watching old NYC videos.
Those times where people working are so relaxed and more professional
Still, it does help educate people about the nature of subway operations. I'm sure if you compare 1981 to 2013, there will be advancements in technology while retaining the same general concept.
To this day, i always wanted to become a NYCTA motorman. So hard to always see when is the next exam and hiring. Learned to fly planes, drive 18 wheelers, but this is the real dream job i always wanted since i was a child.😔🚉
Yea man! I agree! I live in the Chicagoland area (suburbs) and it seems hard to become a train operator for CTA (Chicago Transit Authority) here too.
I was in the C/R class of 7/83. Knew all these people. Tons of ancient equipment, yet some relics are still used. A&C lines were my faves. Great memories of Ms. Marie Flores at Euclid.
Those were some beautiful trains they had back then! What a great man, he really enjoyed and cared about his job. It looks really fun!
For reference, the IND/BMT fleet at the time was R10, (maybe the R11 I’m not sure), R16, R27, R30, R32, R38, R40(both types), R42, R44, and R46.
Very diverse system at the time. Compared to today, now we have less than half of that.
only smees left are R46 R62 R62A R68 and R68A
I was 6 in 1980 when riding my first subway car which was an R46 on the F from Herald Square to Rockafeller Center! Well that set I rode was clean! Second time, I ride an R40M set on the AA in 1984, then a few months after ride the dirty cars on the 1 and 2! Things got much better after 1989 rolled around, but the way things were in the subway would make anyone afraid to ride it especially in the overnight hours!
Now in 2022 it is much worse, all the attacks on innocent people.
Lou Rawls operating the train!
"You'll never find... a subway train like mine"
Was that really Lou Rawls????
Steve Kapschock LOL! Hilarious!
It always have to be a pig to think he’s funny
I'm a retired musician...... 🎼 l[ "someone who LOVES (steam) TENDERs ..............like I do"....... ]l
Thank you for your hard work and service.
I love these vintage videos of the New York City Subway!
ahh back when everything was manual
psychic friend freadbear uh uh uh
psychic friend freadbear hello what doing
psychic friend freadbear still pretty much is... A lot of it over 100 years old
Two-Face yea but there’s ATO and CBTC
So true
The A- train was a very brutal line back in da day especially riding through Brooklyn. The last car was always dark and full of thugs and if you rode the last car, hide your valuables cause they would definitely try to rob you.
This was the era of Bernie Getz !
at kingston throop avenues you will see a r40 slant
In the 80's and part of the 90's the A used R40 slants all the time. That wasn't anything unusual. Then after the C stopped using the R10's and R16's they used R40 slants so they were on the line for many years.
R40 slants were also used on the B line in the mid 80 until they were scrapped in the mid to late 90's.
@@jonbase6004 but they retired I. 2008
@@ninofromkitchennightmares1497 Your right, my mistake because in 2005 I use to see them on 168 St. where I was working at the time being used on the C line.
👋👋👋👋👋This is a touching Film of the New York City Subways until I'm crying. All those car fleets in this picture are all retired from service. Those memories touch my heart as a train buff & model railroader. Thanks for these memories and the staff that worked at that time when i was in high school when at that time when all this action was on the subway rails. 😢😭🙂
The R46 is still in operation, fortunately!
*This is historically awesome!*
at 9:35 I remember the NYC Transit police patrolling with their wooden night sticks.
And unlike cops today, they weren’t afraid to use them.
Nowadays they get written up if they defend themselves.
An amazing entourage of dedicated, and knowledgeable people running a very daunting operation - the largest of its kind in the world - and pioneers who built it.
My mom used to take the A train in Nostrand Avenue and I used to ride the train with her when I was 2 yrs old.
Such sweet footage!
This is so awesome. Would love more!!
R40 slant at 4:35
Gaby Rojas you must be a buff
Gaby Rojas cool find
Omar Velez dude just because she found an r40 slant train doesn’t mean she’s a buff
Correction it a R40 slant Pregoh
Wait no
I love those blue pregoh stripes!
i like you
Eastwood S the r160 has something similar to them the cuomo wrapped cars
I like the pre goh to
@@mbtabusandtrainannouncemen8131 imagine R160 PRE-GOH 😳
To me this is new school stuff. I'm from the era of Low V's, R1-R9's, R10's R14's, R16's.
WOW! How old are you?
+MrVegita22 Obviously over 50
+Nick Apples I was asking him for his age not an estimation fam
MrVegita22 Well some people don't like giving out info like that.
The Low V’s through the Arnines are pretty cool. However the Smee fleet of the R-10 through the R-44/46 are amazing 😉
Enjoyed this, thank you for sharing it.
Looks amazing similar today as it did 43 years ago! I love the ethics of those hardworking men & women.
My dream job is to be an MTA train conductor.
Take test
Please change your YT profile picture as it appears to be a mockery of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Mocking Our Lord Jesus Christ is a grave sin that places souls on the wide path to Hell if the souls do not repent/receive forgiveness for their sins prior to death. Peace!
I hope you got this
man i miss those tokens wait 1981 i was 10 years old living in brooklyn
Those are my stops! Grew up between Nostrand Av & Kingston-Throop Avs stops in the 80s and 90s.
Very cool brings back fond memories!
Awesome documentary, chock full of facts and figures as well as the personal touch. Rode the subway through the 1970s til the year I left New York: 1981, the year this was filmed!
Back then there's no R160s :(
The A train always seems to get hellish again after it is "fixed"
gotta love the R44s On the (A) Train But R46 instead in this video
The New York subway is light years ahead of Toronto. I feel like this is Toronto in the year 2000
Its really good. The NYC Subway system has come along way :)
This brought me back. I always wanted to be a subway engineer.
Anthony Mollica the correct title is train operator. I should know. That's been my job for 24 years.
Thank you for your service
You gotta love the according phone!!! Like from the Adams Family
My Grandpa was a foreman of the track workers in NYC at this time. I still have the pocket Watch (engraved 1984) the MTA gave him in retirement.
Take the voice from the r110a onto the R142 cars (R142A, And R142S). You did an awsome job with The voice.
+Doh 45688, Including The R142.
Beautiful I miss nyc
I miss these days. So much variety of trains. Even on one line alone there can be as much as 4 different models running. You never knew what was coming. The subway today feels so generic. Although the R160s have different variations of which only a foamer could tell the difference, it's all the same shit to me. Boring. Bring back the 75 footers!
+JayJayinNYC Bring back the R10's... once the Kings of the A.
+WitchidWitchid Yeah, those were some kick ass cars. They were awesome on the Forest Hills lines as well.
+JayJayinNYC
Its still like that on the J train. Especially in lower Manhattan. You'll never know if you'll have an R160 and easily-readable signs, or have to suffer through one of their clapped out R32's or R42's.
+Judd Kramer I hate people like u
Only the J train is like that now with the r42/r32/r160s. But that's only because of people complaining of the C still using r32s
WOW Look at the P-Wire R46 cab with Regulation Speed or Manual Speed
That was probably before they deactivated the last step of the field shunting. Still on Rockwell's too. 80 MPH, no problem.
...And don't forget the "Hostler Auxiliary Controller" & The "ELE44" Key
Back when the R44s and R46s had rollsigns.
In the 80s, they started putting in the digital signs. They first did it on the E line. In the 80s, the E ran exclusively R46s for many years. Then they changed them to R32s in the 90s after the R46s were rebuilt and they liked the shorter dwell time on the R32s.
Worth noting that ALL those subway models are still in service. The MTA decided recently not to replace the A train model seen in this video. A new model was tested to replace it but not implemented. Those old token booths that had the change exchanging hands had the coins flushed up against the window. I don't know if that was some sort of protocol but that's how it looked back then. Some of the models in the video were reduced in service but can still be ridden. Graffiti crime has been improved greatly. There is no longer any double lettered trains.
The only ones left are the R32, R42, R44, & R46
I wish there was one for the F train out of 179th Street. My Dad was number 1 there for over 25 years until retirement in 1995
Really nice on how the Rapid Transit was like back in the old days
8:40 TOKENS!
I miss the R44s.
Hunter deja I believe what I meant by this was that I miss how frequently they used to run. Two years ago; I'll never know what I was thinking 😂😂😂
Hunter deja Nah, the A and R got the 46's. The 44's are on the SIR.
Rail Around New York,
the F too
The Metro_ologist I thought the R44s were on the F
Hunter D bruh my name is Hunter D wtf
Even if I didn't know that this documentary was from 1981, I would've been able to tell that this was from the 1980s. The A train models were different and people used subway tokens instead of MetroCards.
I worked on the Metrocard project as a tester!
I wish I was alive when those trains were around.....but DEAR GOD THE GRAFFITI! These trains have and will see better days.
Will? Where, Underwater? Lmao
The Graffiti is what made those trains
More like made those trains look look ghastly.
There under water
If to go to Atlantic u will find some MTA train in the water
Beat Street the king of the beat. I see you rocking that beat from across the street. Beat Street it's a lesson too. Because you can't let the street beat you🎵
Loved operating the R-46 on the
B-end (no cab for Motorman) with the pushbutton hostler. Used to overide deadman with a toothpick!
Omg this is so Cool, it looks like one of the best jobs in the world
Where can I find more vids like this?
Just to think the R46s are still in service today is absolutely fricken crazy to be honest with you. 😱😲😮 The NYCTA said in 1981 that the R46’s were originally due for replacement in 2011.
I operated R32s R38s R40s Modified R40s Slant R40s R42s R44s R46s R68s R68As R143s R160s and R179s and I’ll tell you my FAVORITE is the R160s 💪🏽 this footage is from the year I was born 👶🏽
I was made in 82 & operated all you say plus R-10 & the R-27s
nope, the 110A is a converted pump train, & the 110B is all kinds of jacked up
The R44s were in the words of the T.A., "lemons" with problems in the "trucks" (wheel sets). They had to share R40s with the AA/B line. The R32s weren't bad either.
Venom the god That was the R46. The problems on the R44 were on the technology advancements since they did test them out before procurement.
The nostalgic part of seeing the old trains is an unexplainable bliss from the past. The new tech trains lack that soul and character.
Jesus. their communication equipment/phones look like they are from the 1920's, probably are.
I MUST drive/operate a NYC Subway Train in this God given lifetime!!!
I grew up but left L.I. and then NYC in 1978 for Los Angeles !! It's now 2024, 43 years later, still in L.A., but still do, and always have missed New York City, the subways, and the people..
I'm entering this reply just 20 days remaining before this country is more than likely about to elect its very first female president, and whom, as it happens, I share the same last name as with !
I watched this movie because I've loved trains all my life and have been a model railroader here, but began the hobby there when I was a child in the mid-1950s in New Hyde Park 🙂
The way he announces stations and transfer lines, it’s more better than the automated announcements of today. That shortened “Transfer is available to the A, C, D & 1 trains” is not saying much.
Crazy how we go from this, to what we now have is the Subway Action Plan.
wow i am loving it the train from far rockaway to manhattan thats a long trip i been it on it trust me i am from there
The Good Old Days... things were different then... people were tolerant of each other, more common sense.
Yes, "The good old days" when Trains were full of graffiti, and crime was at an all time high😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂
I miss the blue stripe on the R44-46s. I wish they did not taken them off when they did the overhuals on them.
+NeoTurboManiac , the R44/ R46 were supposed to look like the IRT R62 Cars including r62A, and the r62 was supposed to look like the r68.
They kind of brought it back on the r160, the overhauled ones have blue and gold wraps on them.
Yeah. They look like the M9 railcars that have been popping up here and there. They have the same blue and gold stripe.
Me too
Sucks there's no IRT equivalent of the R44/46. Would've been awesome to have an IRT car with the 1970s interior. Sucks the IRT didn't get any new cars in the 1960s and 1970s
Do the subway cars work like Electric Multiple Unites? Or does the lead car pull the entire set?
Rail Faner They are somewhat EMU. In the video, it said that for the R46, the power and brake is in one handle (like the current NTTs), so if the motorman moves the controller to position and he is in the head can, all cars respond.
6:50 IZ THE WIZ
carlito montana/ The Wiz or The Miz?
I remember r44's with non digital roll signs.
R44 was refurbished in 1990 - 1991 before they replacement part's of their lifetime technology 90s
37 Years Later And The A Train Is Still Terrible. The (A)wful Express. Lol. Excellent Documentary. 👍
LOL good one
Can't be no worse than the G(arbage) local.
5:48 is that a r46 or r44
Never mind its a r46
Same these days were so good but if you remember how bad the graffiti problem was you would think again 1 car last 1 week
Great video.