This is from a question I got about different types of railroad switches. I tried to find and include as many as I could, but there are still more types out there.
Пікірлер: 645
@Suran1078 ай бұрын
I swear I'd even listen to this guy talk about his water cooler and staying hydrated. Just an absolutely pleasant and informative guy to narrate anything. Almost Morgan Freeman level but with a different style.
@JasonMcLemore8 ай бұрын
I grew up hearing this guy's voice as the station announcer for my local news station. Long before I knew about his railroad stuff through my son.
@ferdinandfrancis96738 ай бұрын
Agree!!💯
@fazapops8 ай бұрын
I'm sure you couldn't pay Danny Harmon a bigger compliment!
@edd17sp748 ай бұрын
1000%. Danny has the perfect voice for narrating.
@GeorgeZ2138 ай бұрын
Not sure what mic he uses, but is always very clear. No distortion. No need to wonder "did he say this or that?
@RetireEatsDelivers8 ай бұрын
Mr Harmon, my brother, passed away recently, he was a huge fan of your channel, and I'm so pleased he shared your channel with me. Watching your content makes me feel like we can still connect. Thank you for all you do sir!
@juliamason83938 ай бұрын
Please accept my condolences on the passing of your brother. I too have lost a family member. My oldest son passed away last Dec. He was just 46 years old.
@FalconXE3028 ай бұрын
@@juliamason8393 ...from across the world, my condolences to you.
@juliamason83938 ай бұрын
@@FalconXE302 Thank you . He was born weighing only 3lbs and 7 1/2 ozs in 1976. He lived longer than the Drs thought he would They said he probably. would not live longer than his 30's. An upper respiratory infection was what took his life along with complications of his dialysis. He had been born with kidney disease.
@lovedfriend20208 ай бұрын
@@juliamason8393 WOW, I am that same age with Spina Bifida, and back in 1976, doctors were not sure of life and age. I know I was born in one hospital in CT and transferred to another one due to they didn't have the right stuff needed.
@jacobdubielak8 ай бұрын
Man that is so sad he seems like a good brother to you
@wolfgang5488 ай бұрын
Your videos are always well narrated and in depth. It shows you're a true railfan.
@johnsweeney90318 ай бұрын
I worked for the Chessie System in the 1980s. One of the biggest causes of back injuries on the railroad was from throwing those manual switches. It seemed like we had training on how to avoid back injuries every other month.
@paulne15148 ай бұрын
I worked at a steel mill with over 100 miles of rail, and thousands of switches. In 20 years, not one injury from throwing a switch. The only maintenance we had was a broom! Guess where you worked, either the injured did it wrong or were to weak to do it the right way. Am wondering, were most of the injured women?
@MrBillCNW8 ай бұрын
It’s always a great day to have a Danny Hartman video uploaded and perfect timing. I can watch video with my morning coffee. Thank you Danny.
@distantsignal8 ай бұрын
Thank you Mr Bill
@tedyoder31668 ай бұрын
@@distantsignal😊😊
@marryellen77138 ай бұрын
He must be a millionaire. Man travels everywhere. He must have connections with every railroad. He knows were special trains is. I enjoy every video he makes.
@pjotrtje0NL8 ай бұрын
Florida alone has more types of switches than the entire Dutch railroad system! Very interesting, thanks Danny!
@distantsignal8 ай бұрын
Wow! Did not know that. And there are still more types on northern and midwestern RRs.
@killerbees1778 ай бұрын
Summer throughout the entire South was brutal. Glad you stayed healthy being out there
@rustyr08243 ай бұрын
Morgan Freeman level. Exactly. I was just telling a friend today that Danny could do the voice over for a railroad or history video and would do a most excellent job of it. Clearly spoken and soothing to the ears. And I love his food tips. Great job Danny.
@jeffreyandrews67008 ай бұрын
You covered a lot of good points about switches.😸
@JohnR.19688 ай бұрын
Great vid Danny.I worked for a company that built switch panels off site . My job was to deliver the prefab sections on a trailer that would extend to designated lengths., sometimes up to 76ft long. It would require special permits and routes. Also escorts to block lanes when making very wide turns. Keep the great vids coming!!
@avgjoe-cz7cb8 ай бұрын
I'd bet you think that was the good ole days, I would. It's good not to kill anybody as your job. 76' feet is a good throw for any QB.
@thomasbritton6408 ай бұрын
Danny I'm 72 years old and look forward hearing that bell 🔔 like music 🎶 to ears there are guite a few rail fans visiting and starting up and nobody comes slose
@gblargg5 ай бұрын
I thought "a 15-minute video on how a switch works??" and now I see it's full of information and terms about many variations, and excellent camera work (especially the drone shots from above).
@An-Unknown_Presence8 ай бұрын
I’m Feeling Lucky Today because Distant Signal Uploaded!
@joshsadventures17768 ай бұрын
From the railroad information, to the amazing videography, to the tasty food recommendations, your channel and videos are always the highlight of my day. You are awesome Danny! ❤
@justmousinaround8 ай бұрын
Funny thing about railroaders is they can tell you where all the locations are based on local food establishments.
@deathdealer_xiii10558 ай бұрын
One thing id like to add about switch targets is; as a railroader dont always rely on the switch targets. Always double check and triple check your switch points to make sure you are lined for the correct track you are coming in to
@EdwardRingwald8 ай бұрын
Very true! This is what I teach my Trainman trainees as a Conductor at the Florida Railroad Museum when switching for the locomotive runaround at our Willow runaround track. Never rely on the switch targets alone: Double and triple check your points before you signal the locomotive to proceed over the switch. Same thing when you reline the switch to the main track: Check your points.
@ellisjackson33558 ай бұрын
I only ever look at the switch points
@rbfishcs1238 ай бұрын
@@ellisjackson3355 Same, been burned once on incorrect target that was vandalized - won't do that again ;)
@SD40Fan_Jason8 ай бұрын
@@EdwardRingwald Hey Ed, how's the 8330 holding up? I miss that old Geep!
@marco23p8 ай бұрын
It can be tricky too! A switch can be lined halfway, in such way that the "open" point seems very open, making you believe that it's lined properly, while the other point is just slightly open. If coming from the point-facing end, you'll derail.
@michaelsimms17728 ай бұрын
Good channel for all rail Fandom questions.
@general51048 ай бұрын
Danny Harmon, the man with the golden announcer's voice! I JUST LOVE your channel !!! I railroaded with Southern Railway and with Norfolk Southern for almost 38 years. I've designed a lot of equipment, with GOD's help in design, for those companies. Lotta love !!!
@CDROM-lq9iz8 ай бұрын
As someone who always has to work inside blue-flagged areas, one type of switch worth mentioning in that context are "spring switches." They work extremely similarly to normal hand thrown switches, except the points are connected to the arm on the switch stand via a spring. The purpose of those switches is to allow trailing point movement of rolling stock across a switch thats lined against you. The points move out of the way as you go through and snap back to the way they were before, which prevents you from going back the way you came. It keeps people like me inside those areas protected from accidental movements.
@clarkpj18 ай бұрын
There was one of those in Marquette, Iowa on the Milwaukee Road when I was a kid to allow trains leaving the west yard to go southbound on the Mississippi river line. Loved watching it move back and forth as each wheelset went over it.
@James_Knott8 ай бұрын
I used to work for CN and there were plenty of those in Northern Ontario. The main line there was a single track, with periodic double track sections where trains could pass. Those sections had spring switches at each end. IIRC, they were also listed in the operating schedules, so that crews would know where they were. There were also "SS" signs next to them.
@CDROM-lq9iz8 ай бұрын
@@James_Knott That's interesting. I'm curious what kind of speeds they were used at. The spring switches I see all the time have an "S" on both sides of the target.
@James_Knott8 ай бұрын
@@CDROM-lq9iz That I couldn't tell you. I wasn't train crew. I was a technician with CN Telecommunications and often rode trains, including freights. It was also back in the mid 70s that I worked that closely with the railway. After that, I worked as a computer tech in Toronto for several years.
@paulkoza86528 ай бұрын
They had these on Missouri Pacific back in the 1970s when I worked there. They make sense for given situations.
@SignalAspect8 ай бұрын
Dont we love it when Danny posts?
@vanessasgram85 ай бұрын
We have been watching your great videos on KZfaq Video channel on our Roku. WE really enjoy them. I'm a lucky wife whose hubby encouraged me to learn and love trains! HE has since age 5 (he's 86 now and I'm 81). We have haunted GA. Folkston, Dalton and everywhere in between. LOVE your videos and thank you for the great quality sound. Also we love the fact that you don't stand too close, so we can see entire cars. Keep up the great work.
@Whitesmoke80808 ай бұрын
My brother fueled BNSF intermodal in Wellington, KS on the Amarillo sub. Wellington is the halfway point in which they do crew changes.
@robhow79628 ай бұрын
Wonderful filmmaking. I could be doing a million other things right now, and I'm completely engrossed in 50 year old railroad appliances.
@lorenwillis4258 ай бұрын
While filming that fuel truck, you got a great view of the yard ladder, all of those turnouts, evenly spaced in a row, numbered sequentially.
@BDTrooper768 ай бұрын
It has been awhile since your last posted video. I was thinking it must be related to the weather fronts pushing through your neighborhood. I'm glad to see you are well. Looking forward to your continued productions. This was another wonderful topic, switches, defect detectors, DPU. An endless supply of informative videos. Well done, and thank you.
@jasonmcbryde8 ай бұрын
Great explanation for switching. Thank you. Stay hydrated!
@wes5150.8 ай бұрын
"How do Railroad Switches Work?" They work very well when you have a brakeman !
@ramrod23148 ай бұрын
That's good info sir thank you for sharing. 90 Degrees is about 35 here in Ontario Canada. and when we start heading to 40 with a humidex, well that is not a good day. That is waaaay to warm for me. The drone you use is a handy piece of kit I must admit.
@anacoman32658 ай бұрын
Still the best video series on KZfaq when it comes to educating railfans on how railroads function! Keep it up, Danny!
@BeeLineEast8 ай бұрын
I worked at the old Bethlehem Steel Corp. Frog and Switch Division. In Steelton Pa. I started in 1971 and worked there till it closed in 1992. The Signal dept. there manufactured the switches and the switch points and frogs etc. Nice informative video.
@clydecessna7378 ай бұрын
Sir, try this: Take a plastic bottle of water, half fill it with water and place it in the freezer overnight. The next day fill it up with water and you have ice water for a long time; if you wrap it with a towel you will be surprised how long it lasts. Take a second or third bottle and freeze it to the top as you will use it later and it will melt while it waits for your use. Thanks for the trains, you have taught me a lot.
@chrisperry11518 ай бұрын
You’re the best, truly a brother from another, incorporating trains and great food stops. Danny wins 🏆 !!
@distantsignal8 ай бұрын
Haha! Thanks Chris!
@matthewb53648 ай бұрын
I love how you weave in other interesting bits of footage (like fueling, or other local attractions wherever you are) alongside the main subject of the video!
@CoffeeOnRails8 ай бұрын
As ever facinating to see the difference in style in US operations as compared to over here in Britain. We still have a lot of manual throws in yards and especially in small industrial sidings, but most stuff on the mainline is all remote controlled, either through motors or though a physical linkage to a signal cabin
@RNP6888 ай бұрын
Now this sunday is for real
@koryclarke19918 ай бұрын
Danny’s videos get an automatic like before I even watch his videos.
@redkevful8 ай бұрын
Over here in England, the derail switch is known as a Catch Point, usually installed on sidings just before the exit onto the mainline. Good video as normal
@hannahranga8 ай бұрын
Same as in Australia
@neiloflongbeck57058 ай бұрын
That's a trap point. Catch points were found on running lines 9n 8nclines facing the opposite direction to travel. These are now only found on heritage lines as all trains on the national network are fully braked.
@James_Knott8 ай бұрын
One of those would have come in handy in Lac-Megantic, Quebec, about 10 years ago. Look up Lac-Megantic rail disaster for details. Essentially, a train pulling several cars full of oil was parked on the main line, on an incline. The brakes weren't properly set and, after an engine fire, the train rolled down into the town and derailed, with the resulting fire destroying much of the town. There was no derail available, that might have been used to prevent the disaster.
@eastamericantrains5898 ай бұрын
During my conductor training they told us to basically ignore the target. We’re supposed to check the switch points to make sure they “properly fit” and that there is no obstruction in the gap regardless of if a target is present. You killed it Danny you taught this just as my instructor did.
@joewood13358 ай бұрын
gap and go
@SD40Fan_Jason8 ай бұрын
That's exactly right. Targets are not to be counted on because someone could have tampered with the targets or something could have run through the switch. Putting eyes on the points is the only way to be sure you're going the correct way. But if you are on a 40mph train in dark territory and you are coming up on a switch with a red target, you might have a better chance of getting it slowed down or stopped than just relying on points alone because you aren't going to slow or stop at every switch you encounter.
@justmousinaround8 ай бұрын
Had worked 5 years as a signalman there is so much that could have been covered. This video is a great start...
@distantsignal8 ай бұрын
Thanks. Any ideas, let me know.
@justmousinaround8 ай бұрын
@@distantsignal Have only watched a few of your videos but find them informative and entertaining. Will watch some more and if any ideas come to mind I’ll send them along.
@craigstergriffin20978 ай бұрын
Again, I appreciate the Foodie info you provide for folks who like the high iron and good eats that are nearby!
@kens.37298 ай бұрын
Your Topics are Always Off the Charts, Solid. It’s Amazing how the Majority of Switches in Operation Today are handled Remotely from Hundreds of Miles away.
@EdwardRingwald8 ай бұрын
Another fine Sunday morning watching a Distant Signal video after another fine Saturday as Conductor at the Florida Railroad Museum. I noticed the switch targets at the Tennessee Valley RR Museum (TVRM) are basically similar to the switch targets on the two switches on the Willow runaround at the Florida Railroad Museum, the only difference is an electric light on top of the switch stand which TVRM has.
@bennyfactor8 ай бұрын
Isn't it interesting how the illuminated vertical red-green signals are in the opposite orientation from automotive signals? And thanks for the sandwich tip, it looked outstanding.
@collinhooks38248 ай бұрын
Thanks so much Danny. You are a railfan national treasure.
@SoFlaSooner8 ай бұрын
Thanks for another excellent video, Mr. Harmon. Very informative, as usual. I could listen to your voice all day.
@AidenSexsmith8 ай бұрын
Mr. Harmon, a few days ago, I was biking in the old Tampa Yard. Dad showed me some old street trackage in the area A great video and I love trains.
@CowpoteAdventures8 ай бұрын
The goat of KZfaq returns for another epic video if you kind of fun to see a video of the evolution of engines of how they started what they are now I live in the great city Minnesota. We have lots of trains well done, young man.
@distantsignal8 ай бұрын
Many thanks.
@pinchy088 ай бұрын
I should consider getting me one of those water coolers. Great advice Danny.
@Epyon30018 ай бұрын
Thanks Danny!
@Winter_Sportster8 ай бұрын
Totally agree with Suran107! Now, after that super-satisfying water cooler comment, I'm gonna HAVE to go get one and forget the bottled water!!!!👍👍👍 Great video as always! Thank You! Kim
@philipcollins54408 ай бұрын
This was quite interesting 🤔 I've learned a great deal I didn't know 😅 thanks 👍
@kevinheard83648 ай бұрын
This is sincerely one of the most enjoyable channels that I have *ever* heard; and with a name like mine, I've "heard' lots of them. Great job, as always, Mr. Harmon
@distantsignal8 ай бұрын
Many thanks, Kevin. That's a nice compliment.
@mikehowey48698 ай бұрын
Great explanation of how switches work.
@dripguy8 ай бұрын
Nice overhead shot of the Amtrack train Danny!
@iiigraghu8 ай бұрын
A Great Presentation 💐🙏 Hearty Greetings from India 🇮🇳
@robertridley-fj8zz8 ай бұрын
Opened this on notification, but got distracted, until whilst outside, a CSX SUV drove down my street (which is unusual though not without simple explanation). Seemed a good reason to put aside what I was doing to come watch this.
@wiseolesage8 ай бұрын
This is a great video to any railfan. Thanks !
@dougthornton68848 ай бұрын
Another super video ! I love all the technical stuff. But you have to be on the right of way to get that RR smell !! Thank you for all the great info !!!
@maryharper7648 ай бұрын
This is the best channel I've watched your voice is awesome I put you on TV at night so I can calm down and go to sleep keep up the good work MR Harmon - Mary Harper have a great day
@distantsignal8 ай бұрын
That's a very nice compliment, Mary. Thank you!
@maryharper7648 ай бұрын
@@distantsignal no problem
@artiek11778 ай бұрын
“…red and yellow and rusty & more rusty…”. 😂. Great video as always Danny.
@dapdne49168 ай бұрын
Used to live next to a train track (most used locomotive built in 1970's). Usually lumber and slso possibly diesel. I was so delighted when I found our train coming the other way. My train expert friend located this process being accomplished down the track about quarter of a mile. Thanks for the details. 🎉(Union Pacific)
@distantsignal8 ай бұрын
Very cool!
@capt45508 ай бұрын
Danny when I get an alert Distant Signal has a new post a smile always comes on my face and the day gets brighter. Keep up the good work my friend
@kennethgrimsley76568 ай бұрын
Thank you for mentioning my neck of the woods ("The Bowline") Danny.
@RCAvhstape8 ай бұрын
Great video Danny. I learned all my switch knowledge from working with my dad on model railroads. He had books full of historical railroad information on all kinds of stuff. I was taught that if you have to walk over railroad tracks (you shouldn't, but if you have to) to take care to stay away from powered switches, if that thing moves and catches your foot you are having a bad day.
@James_Knott8 ай бұрын
I used to work for CN and often walked in a rail yard. One thing I was taught was to never step on top of the rail. So, you also wouldn't place a foot near enough to a switch to worry about it.
@gregbowen6178 ай бұрын
It might be 00:45 on a Monday morning here in Melbourne Australia 🇦🇺, but I am not going to sleep before I watch the master at work! Thanks for an excellent and informative video! Cheers from oz…
@georgettedebuhr26608 ай бұрын
Your videos make my day, Danny Harmon. Very informative. Very pleasant to hear you narrate just about anything. Keep the great videos coming and have a nice day 😊
@matthewrinehart95148 ай бұрын
The first frog you did a close up of looked almost new. I appreciate your videos❤
@tombell86268 ай бұрын
Being retired from Tampa Water Department, and having frequented the old Naval Reserve Center on Ybor Channel, I really enjoy the videos featuring Tampa. Thanks so much Danny, you not only provide me with information, you conjure up memories!!!
@jeffreyamernick98108 ай бұрын
Your new light is helping you look fabulous in your backyard standups.
@distantsignal8 ай бұрын
What light?
@jeffreyamernick98108 ай бұрын
One pro to another knows a well lit standup looks like it isn't lit. Either that, or the sun was perfect for you in the backyard. It looked especially great this time. Thanks for the awesome content, I've been following you for your years. Safe travels @@distantsignal
@distantsignal8 ай бұрын
Yeah, no lights on my standups. I try to do them in the afternoons. After the sun gets in the west, it shines on my next door neighbors house, which is a solid-white two-story. it's about 350 feet away so at the right time it makes a perfect bounce card.
@Cedar19697 ай бұрын
My uncle was engineer on the ACL . His run was the east / west route across Florida. This great local video has energized some memories.
@handlaidtrack4 ай бұрын
Fantastic video explaining turnouts and their hardware, terminology, and functions!
@SD40Fan_Jason8 ай бұрын
Danny this is great info! Not all-encompassing like you said, but this certainly covers a lot of territory. I was wondering, you had the footage, but you did not explain the features of a crossover or a ladder track. For those wondering, a crossover is generally when you have two parallel tracks and a pair of turnouts between them so you can cross over from either Left to right, or right to left. There's a whole section of rules governing crossovers where such geometric figures are positioned on double track, or at the end of sidings, etc. And the Ladder track is line of track made up almost exclusively of turnouts in a yard. Each rung begins a new yard track, and while it is not capable of storing cars or equipment for obvious reasons, the ladder is often where equipment ends up staging in between switching maneuvers. Some yards have a rule that the ladder track shall be lined for the very last track, or perhaps track 6 when not in use. While the vast majority of ladders have the rule to leave lined as last used. The other thing you'll find with ladder tracks are that the switches do not have any padlocks. Newer switches won't even have any keeper hasps because they're designed mechanically to catch the handle and hold it when thrown. (Like the first switch in your video) older switches had some sort of keeper, usually just a giant "S" hook on a chain. In my training video, long gone now that I'm retired, I had the duty of explaining to new conductors the difference between a Rigid switch, a variable (often called a run-through switch) and a spring switch. Rigid switches were any kind of switch that did not have a mechanism to permit a train running through a fouled switch. I can safely say all the switches in this video were rigid switches, even the remote controlled ones. If a train ran through a rigid switch, (Run-through means making a trailing movement against the alignment of the switch) it would break the switch! Those little pot switches have swing arms on them that were intentionally made to break if a great amount of force was put on them. (Such as being run through) The modern day fuse if you will. But those tall WEIR switches did not and would suffer a great amount of damage if run through. Meanwhile a variable switch has a set of springs in the mechanism and will align with whichever direction a trailing move is made. Before railroads stopped maintaining them for such action, they were quite popular on sidings and especially on Wyes where there was no expectation on the trailing movements, only a facing movements. My fondest memory of this type of switch was there at Wooton park in Tavares, where the Sorrento branch began off the Florida Central mainline. And finally, spring switches were heavy-duty spring mechanisms that allowed trains to trail through them in either position, however the switch would return to its original alignment afterwards. Very useful on Sidings where a train would have to pass another train. If a train was in the siding, and they were behind a spring switch, then they could hold for the train they are supposed to meet and then proceed after that train had passed without handling the switch. Of course there was a safety hazard of the spring switch not restoring properly and derailing the very next facing movement. Or if the train leaving the siding should stall, and accidentally reverse direction mid-train. With class ones moving toward their PSR goal of 3-mile long trains, the safety factors involved with variable- and spring-switches are far too risky and so most of those switches have now been removed and replaced with rigid switches. But back in the day when an 8,000 ft. train was considered to be Extra-Long! the use of a spring switch or variable switch was much more reliable. I know you probably would have used this info in your video had you had the footage and time! Don't take this as a "You missed or forgot!" comment. I don't mean it that way at all. It's just the old trainer and fellow railfan in me that felt like it needed mentioning, after the video. Footnotes if you will. Thanks again Danny and keep up the good work!
@Andrea.5838 ай бұрын
Really interesting and informative. Here in the UK we still have a few places where turnouts are operated by rods connected to levers in adjacent signalboxes (Towers in the US).
@B-and-O-Operator-Fairmont8 ай бұрын
Amazing. Here in the US, the last pipe-connected "armstrong" switch was removed from service some ten years ago. There are just a handful of staffed towers left, mostly around Chicago, and they are all electric or electro-pneumatic.
@seantaft92818 ай бұрын
Always agreat day when distant signal posts a video, best train channel ever!!! And absolutely the best commentary 😊
@rogertemple71938 ай бұрын
Thanks for the train info about both the trains and the tracks on your show take care and have a great week Thank You.🤠👍 🚂🚃🚃🚃🚃🚃🚃🚃🚃🇺🇲💨
@bigizzysworld42538 ай бұрын
Always a great day when Danny releases a new video
@anthonygreene5628 ай бұрын
Brought back plenty of memories and knuckle busting wrench turning when adjusting those switches. I was a signal maintainer/testman for the NJ TRANSIT commuter railroad...
@antonmccune52038 ай бұрын
I loved that overhead view of Amtrak 91! Great videography!
@davevan88648 ай бұрын
Just plain well done info......Always enjoyable. Thanks
@robertdean93928 ай бұрын
Great to wake up and have one of your videos to watch wihile eating breakfast before heading to work !!!! This video answered alot of questions I have wondered about over the years. Thanks again, be safe and hydrated, and hope to see you on the" high iron " sometime soon !! Dean
@BNSFTrains108 ай бұрын
7:29 yep the heat sucks but Water is mostly is what I used when I watch the trains.
@CFRF138 ай бұрын
Glad you decided to switch it up for this video. Keep up the great work. 😉
@paulkoza86528 ай бұрын
Great video. I especially liked the remote control switches that can be operated from the cab.
@countdooku19718 ай бұрын
Yet another informative and educational video. Danny, you could teach a university level course on railroading and it would never be a boring class to be in.
@Railroad_Talk8 ай бұрын
Great video as always! I shared your video with my community mainly newer conductors getting into the trade or looking to get into the trade. Appreciate the effort and attention to detail. Good stuff
@robertoluis19488 ай бұрын
Great video, congratations and another congratulations for show the Cuban sandwich, an excellent creation of my contry
@arthurschipper89068 ай бұрын
The basso profundo of rail videos hits a base clearing home run once again. Thanks Danny.
@distantsignal8 ай бұрын
That's pretty fancy complimenting... and much appreciated!
@esjay20118 ай бұрын
Brilliant video so many variations. Great to see the refuelling.
@shawnpowell58768 ай бұрын
Its always a great day when Danny posts a new video! There's only one other person with an amazing voice to listen to and that's Morgan Freeman! Danny could talk abt the weather Alaska and he'd have my attention! Thanks again Danny for sharing another great video with us and look fwd to seeing your next to the next one! Cheers from Laurel, Delaware USA
@byrongilbert37208 ай бұрын
another excellent video. the highlight of my day.
@squibrail40148 ай бұрын
Outstanding video. Lots of great information, not just about railroad operations, but history, a hydration reminder, and even a restaurant review too.
@alainaarrhodge59008 ай бұрын
Love your videos, Danny! Keep them coming and enjoy the fall cool down.
@bobpatterson90268 ай бұрын
Another well done video. Always a pleasure to watch you do your thing
@Ken_in_Wisconsin8 ай бұрын
Thanks Danny. I always enjoy your videos.
@tincanboat8 ай бұрын
Great video. Lots of great information and scenery.
@danherrmann87552 ай бұрын
Thanks for the explanation on the railroad. With out you Danny. I would never know about the railroad. Thanks for your time. Later
@craigymac53868 ай бұрын
Excellent and very informative video yet again Danny. Hello from Scotland 🏴👍
@Maddog30608 ай бұрын
That Cuban sandwich looked absolutely perfect; I want one now.
@frisco-mustangsub13147 ай бұрын
Thank you very much Danny for the info! Happy Monday!
@dshack46898 ай бұрын
Awesome video and topic and narration - as always!