I visited my cousin in Moorhouse near Sth Elmsall in 1979 on a trip back to the UK, and used to catch a train from there to Doncaster to get to, well, pretty much everywhere. I remember the beautiful old station buildings on the down line, and now replaced with a very smart looking box!!! Such a shame, remember taking Cravens units to Leeds from there, and (brand new) HST's ripping through. Loved the quality of the video.
You'd think they would cover the load (looks like sand) at 3:48 as the patrons on the station get covered with the product blowing off the load. If a truck was doing that on the roads here in Australia the driver would be close on crucified...
I visited my cousin in Moorhouse near Sth Elmsall in 1979 on a trip back to the UK, and used to catch a train from there to Doncaster to get to, well, pretty much everywhere. I remember the beautiful old station buildings on the down line, and now replaced with a very smart looking box!!! Such a shame, remember taking Cravens units to Leeds from there, and (brand new) HST's ripping through. Loved the quality of the video.
You can see those wheels rolling on both of the class 47s that just departed Tamworth, how awesome!
Superb shots !
Great video. Lots of nice looking trains. Thank you for sharing Dave
A Very enjoyable video, plenty of action , Thank you Kyle
Train after train after train, constant action. Great editing, thanks for putting in the effort, I think it's worth it. Cheers.
Thank you Kyle for yet another great video.
Excellent compilation/presentation. Makes very ejoyable viewing
Thank you for watching, Keith. I'm pleased you enjoyed it.
Awsome picture quality, watching it through my oled TV on the 1080 settings
Another super video again Kyle.
Thank you, Mike.
Love the 47 speeding past in the evening sun 3:20.
Thanks for watching.
Those '20's' are some piece of kit!
Thanks for watching.
Muito bom!
Great Video Kyle
Thank you.
Very nice 👍
Thank you.
Halogen lights. I hate them when they get you in the eye.
You'd think they would cover the load (looks like sand) at 3:48 as the patrons on the station get covered with the product blowing off the load. If a truck was doing that on the roads here in Australia the driver would be close on crucified...
Unfortunately not on GC metals from Rugby to Wembley
Cool
Thanks for watching.
@@KyleLaw19 no problem
What Class were those first locomotives?
Class 68s mate