Is it November already? No, but if you live on periodical publishing time like Trains magazine, it's close. November 2014 is Trains' technology issue, and they've reported on something I posited here last December: Photo/video shot via drone (page 7). Since then, I've seen them numerous times on geek blogs like Tested, but no one, to my knowledge, has sunk the money into the hobby and actually risked their robotic pride for elevation and for glory.
No one, except midwest-based Delay In Block productions and Evan Lofback of Knoxville, Tennessee, Trains reports. Rather than talk about how I envisioned the use of drones in railfan videos, I'd rather let Mr. Lofback show you exactly how good it can be. I've watched this quite a few times already and it's not getting old, even with diesels and eastern railroads!
So, now does it make sense?
If you're itching to try it, I can tell you that the first one to upload on YouTube a Colorado railroad video using a drone and notifies me or leaves the link in a comment on this post will have it appear as the first video highlighted on the sidebar on Colorado Railroads.* It will be up for at least a month. That's exposure! A narrow gauge and/or steam train video by drone would last longer, given the scenic and aesthetic value.
Evan Lofback has quite a few drone videos on his channel worth your time if you're interested.◊
* - content must meet basic standards. No bonus, bounty, payment, or other benefit (expressed or implied) will be given. No links to non-railroad related sites.
Showing posts with label Out of state. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Out of state. Show all posts
Monday, September 29, 2014
Saturday, September 13, 2014
Special POTD: Big Boy's Last Sherman Hill September
Just north of the border of Colorado near US-85, about equidistant between the outskirts of Cheyenne and the state line is Speer, Wyoming. Like most railroad places, it's just a spot on the map, a waypoint between here and there. In this case Speer is the junction where the north-south route of the old Denver Pacific connects with the main east-west Union Pacific Overland Route over Sherman Hill. This past week, 56 years ago, a Union Pacific Big Boy rolled westbound from Speer toward Sherman Hill with its manifest freight, and Dave Straight was there to photograph it.
Another September would never come for most of the Big Boys to haul freight. Just 10 months and 2 weeks to the day after this photo was taken, the same 4015 would make the last revenue run for any Big Boy over these same rails before being retired and eventually scrapped. Only 8 Big Boys were spared, including 4005 sitting at Forney in Denver and the celebrated 4014 undergoing restoration (as this is written) in Cheyenne, just a cinder's glide from where this was taken.
Special thanks to Dave Straight (and John Hill) for sharing this finely aged photograph with us.◊
Photo of the Day: Dave Straight, contributing photographer to Colorado Railroads |
Special thanks to Dave Straight (and John Hill) for sharing this finely aged photograph with us.◊
Tags:
Big Boy,
Dave Straight,
Denver,
Forney Museum of Transportation,
history,
John Hill,
main line steam,
Out of state,
POTD,
Special POTD,
steam,
Union Pacific
Location:
Speer, Wyoming 82007, USA
Friday, September 12, 2014
Mike Armstrong's Steam Galore Annotated For Colorado Railroad Fans
Mike Armstrong is a photographer and videographer, posting on YouTube as CoasterFan2105. His body of work has grown quite a bit. So, as a showcase, Mr. Armstrong has put together a compilation of his steam videos and called it Steam Trains Galore! At the time of this writing, it has over 2.1 Million views. (You read that correctly.)
For 2 million pairs of eyes, the video is chock full of Colorado narrow gauge action (and a bit of RGSR's standard gauge engine 18). Thus, I've produced a small collection of notes detailing the different segments with links so you can skip to the parts that interest you. Honestly, my first impulse is to just let it run and see if you can identify the segments yourself. Just in case, however, I put the cheat sheet below.
Note: clicking the time links below will open the video in a second window (after an ad, which I have no control over, unfortunately)
Great videos, Mike!◊
For 2 million pairs of eyes, the video is chock full of Colorado narrow gauge action (and a bit of RGSR's standard gauge engine 18). Thus, I've produced a small collection of notes detailing the different segments with links so you can skip to the parts that interest you. Honestly, my first impulse is to just let it run and see if you can identify the segments yourself. Just in case, however, I put the cheat sheet below.
Note: clicking the time links below will open the video in a second window (after an ad, which I have no control over, unfortunately)
- 0:01 - 0:12 Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge RR (D&SNG) Eureka & Palisade engine 4 "Eureka" crossing Animas River south of Silverton
- 3:03 - 5:46 Denver & Rio Grande Western (D&RGW) engine 315, which was restored by Durango Railroad Historical Society, at work pulling various specials on the D&SNG.
- 8:13 - 11:43 C&TS and Mudhen 463
- 8:13 D&RGW 463, one of two surviving "Mudhens," leads a double-header on the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic RR (C&TS) along with D&RGW 487 on a mixed photo freight over the 63 mile line.
- 8:43 passing the tank at Lava
- 9:06 entering the bottom of Tanglefoot Curve below Cumbres Pass
- 10:38 exiting the top of Tanglefoot Curve immediately above the entrance
- 11:08 decending the 4% grade toward Chama, NM (love the through-truss shot!)
- 11:44 - 12:03 D&RGW mikado 484 on the C&TS rounding the balloon loop at Antonito, turning the train for the return trip to Chama.
- 15:38 Intro photo of San Luis & Rio Grande SL&RG railroad standard gauge engine (former LS&I) 18 descending towards La Veta, CO with a consist for SL&RG's passenger arm the Rio Grande Scenic Railroad (RGSR)
- 15:48 - 17:50 SL&RG 18 eastbound from Alamosa across the San Luis Valley then climbing the grade toward La Veta Pass and topping the grade at Fir, CO. Finally, descending the east side of the pass nearing La Veta, CO
- 17:51 - 19:57 SL&RG 18 returns with the same consist climbing dramatically back over La Veta Pass to Alamosa. Notice the wheel slip by locomotive 18 starting at 19:10. Don't get stingy with the sand now!
- 20:03 - 22:05 Eureka & Palisade number 4 idles for water at Hermosa then departs northbound for Silverton. (several beautiful shots)
- 22:06 - 22:10 Photo of the west side of Durango's Narrow Gauge Avenue (yes, technically a street)
Great videos, Mike!◊
Tags:
Cumbres and Toltec Scenic,
DRGW 463,
DRGW 480,
DRGW 484,
Durango and Silverton,
heritage locomotive,
heritage railroad,
narrow gauge,
Out of state,
passenger,
SLRG 18,
standard gauge,
steam,
summer,
web videos
Location:
Colorado, USA
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
GEs Juice Train Sells More Than Tropicana
Here's a nifty little commercial that GE put together. You'd never think that they were selling locomotives. Suddenly, I have a craving for freshly juiced diesels.
Hello, Caterpillar? Nice paint job, but that's not enough. GE's PR puts EMD's image on ice.
Anyone else notice the nod the ad gives to railfans?
If you're a fan of the 80s show Knight Rider, you're in for a big treat as well. The 80's dreamed of a talking car. 30 years later, GE touts a talking train.
Again, EMD, where are you? Where's your ACe in the whole?◊
Hello, Caterpillar? Nice paint job, but that's not enough. GE's PR puts EMD's image on ice.
Anyone else notice the nod the ad gives to railfans?
If you're a fan of the 80s show Knight Rider, you're in for a big treat as well. The 80's dreamed of a talking car. 30 years later, GE touts a talking train.
Again, EMD, where are you? Where's your ACe in the whole?◊
Tags:
GE,
Locomotive,
media,
Out of state,
public relations
Friday, October 26, 2012
Lessons from 1993's Wreck of the Sunset Limited
Amtrak's "pointless arrow" in 1993 |
My essential point is: Alignment-based derailments are too common to not be fixed.
* Spoiler: A loaded Amtrak passenger train at speed rammed a defective bridge truss that was knocked off its 84 year-old gravity-held mooring only 8 minutes before by a barge that was steered by an inexperienced pilot in dense fog. The Wikipedia article has more details for the those who don't have an hour to watch.
Tags:
Amtrak,
Opinion,
Out of state,
passenger
Location:
Near Twelvemile Island, AL, USA
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Video: Yesterday's Magic Rails To ... um, Yesterday
As the mercury slowly climbs out of winter and into our spring (hopefully), cabin fever has again sprung many images and ideas formerly locked in the human heart. Old tools and "new"Christmas gifts that have sat for some months find themselves wanted again by their owners. Whether you find yourself a veteran of the state's grand(e) scenery or a newly minted greenhorn, the Colorado high country is calling!
One reliable aspect of the Rocky Mountains is that they change very little in 50 years. For a prime example, look no further than below. If this featurette was made in our time, the travel to the Rockies would appear much different. Yet Durango and her sister city of Silverton would merely appear with newer automobiles and vivid color scenery, and maybe a few less period actors and staged gunfights.
Entire video link or skip to the good (Rio Grande) part
Films like the one above would appear before a movie--instead of gobs and gobs of previews--to entertain viewers and promote companies, concepts, and opportunities like travel by rail and tourism in remote western towns. The impact of such films on the subject, in conjunction with fictional movies using the local scenery likely can't be overstated, yet likely can't be calculated either beyond the common anecdotal evidence. Or, in plain english: this film contributed in a large way to preserving Colorado's steam tourism, but we'll never know how much.
Only 10 years later however, a trip completely by rail to Silverton would become impossible with both the abandonment of the WP portion of the California Zephyr and the abandonment of the Rio Grande narrow gauge from Antonito to Durango. Don't let those ideas die unless you have to! Next year, something or someone might not be there.
PS: Can't get enough old film? Check out The Royal Gorge.
One reliable aspect of the Rocky Mountains is that they change very little in 50 years. For a prime example, look no further than below. If this featurette was made in our time, the travel to the Rockies would appear much different. Yet Durango and her sister city of Silverton would merely appear with newer automobiles and vivid color scenery, and maybe a few less period actors and staged gunfights.
Entire video link or skip to the good (Rio Grande) part
Films like the one above would appear before a movie--instead of gobs and gobs of previews--to entertain viewers and promote companies, concepts, and opportunities like travel by rail and tourism in remote western towns. The impact of such films on the subject, in conjunction with fictional movies using the local scenery likely can't be overstated, yet likely can't be calculated either beyond the common anecdotal evidence. Or, in plain english: this film contributed in a large way to preserving Colorado's steam tourism, but we'll never know how much.
Only 10 years later however, a trip completely by rail to Silverton would become impossible with both the abandonment of the WP portion of the California Zephyr and the abandonment of the Rio Grande narrow gauge from Antonito to Durango. Don't let those ideas die unless you have to! Next year, something or someone might not be there.
PS: Can't get enough old film? Check out The Royal Gorge.
Tags:
California Zephyr,
Denver and Rio Grande Western,
Durango and Silverton,
history,
movies,
narrow gauge,
Out of state,
passenger,
Preservation,
steam,
web videos
Location:
Durango, CO, USA
Sunday, January 15, 2012
Knott's Celebrates 60 Years
Photo by Mark Rightmire, The Orange County Register |
Tags:
Denver and Rio Grande Western,
Galloping Goose,
heritage railroad,
history,
Locomotive,
narrow gauge,
Opinion,
Out of state,
passenger,
Preservation,
Rio Grande Southern,
steam
Location:
Knotts Berry Farm, Buena Park, CA, USA
Friday, January 6, 2012
Death of Young Railfan Pinned On Bullying By Schoolmates
Editor's note for younger readers: The following story deals with the death of a 13 year-old by suicide. For younger readers, I recommend you discuss the issue with your parents, pastor or another counselor before reading this post or it's related links.
Now, to proceed...
Tags:
Departing,
Opinion,
Out of state,
Union Pacific
Location:
Cheyenne, WY, USA
Sunday, November 27, 2011
UP 844 Goodwill Tour Videos Show A Classy Main Line Steam Engine, Crew
Rail photographers Skip Weythman and Dan Barker work as a two-man video team that does a very good job capturing the beauty of locomotives as their trains travel the broad expanses of western railroads, especially in Colorado. Their pacing shots of Union Pacific Steam are exceptional, considering the difficulty of steadying the shot, keeping an even rate of speed, and the physically demanding nature of the work. Their work stayed true to form despite the cold weather during Union Pacific's goodwill Centennial tour of the southwest states, which is winding down in Ogden, Utah, at the time of writing. Their work shows in the first four videos in the playlist below.
Tags:
extras,
Out of state,
Skip Weythman,
steam,
Union Pacific,
web videos
Monday, October 3, 2011
Carving Up A Diesel Locomotive
I watch a lot of documentaries and non-fiction TV. Up until now, however, I'd never seen a show about scrapping locomotives. It's sad to see any locomotive cut up and parted out, but, if you have ever wondered about what's under the hood of those huge diesels, this video shows how the vultures--er, reclamation specialists carve up a KCS engine that has turned its last mile.
Play the video (in Shockwave player) above or watch the video at National Geographic
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Trainstar: Review of Unstoppable
Trainstar, says that Unstoppable is "great train porn." While I may not agree with her wording, it's a great way to sum it up. Check out her review. With two of my own favorite actors, Denzel Washington and Chris Pine (Sgt. Getraer's son, Captain Kirk) in the lead, I realize it's about time that I check it out.
Location:
Stanley Yard, Toledo OH, USA
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)