Servus Mace! Yes - I had a wonderful trip to Wuppertal and an amazing ride on the Suspension Railway! If I had the opportunity I would do it again! Best regards from Munich, Gernot
@UntilWeGo5 ай бұрын
Cheers!
@timgebhardt65466 ай бұрын
I live around 30km from Wuppertal, back when I was a child in the early 80s a lot families here made a trip to Wuppertal on the weekends. We parked the car where the Schwebebahn started and rode it to the zoo, spent the day at the zoo and road it back afterwards. I'll never forget the feeling when I first felt the sensation of it swaying in the curves :D The ride was a attraction of it's own, and equally important for me as the zoo :)
@JohnHazelwood586 ай бұрын
Me was born and raised in Wuppertal and used the "flying train" on a daily basis! Best part: no traffic jams you as got when you're going by car or bus ... and you actually you don't really have to wait for the next "Schwebebahn" to arrive! You can hop in every 3 minutes!! Sadly I remember the crash in 1999 ... a lot of people in that accident I knew! It was the first ride of the day, which I usually used, but lucky me pushed the snooze-button on my alarm for 5 more minutes ... when I arrived in town: I've never saw so many rescue vehicles and stuff - that was really scary!
@hape38626 ай бұрын
No audio from 7:25 to 8:40.
@fabianstriebeck80546 ай бұрын
das war lustig
@BigWhoopZH6 ай бұрын
That's funny that this video comes right after my subscription yesterday. Wuppertal is my hometown. I took the Schwebebahn to school every day.
@YezaOutcast6 ай бұрын
the best thing about the suspension monorail is that it disconnected from roads entirely, which makes it invulnerable to traffic jams, 5 meters of snow and other annoying stuff that troubles normal traffic. and there is also no timetable, because every 5 minutes a new monorail train arrives on every station.
@SiqueScarface6 ай бұрын
I will test Vancouver public transport in July, when I will be there for two weeks. And then I can comment. There are three more systems built on the same Eugen Langen patents, but none as long as the Wuppertal Schwebebahn. There is the Schwebebahn Dresden, and there are two transporter bridges crossing a river (Osten) and a canal (Rendsburg). The later one is interesting because it is suspended from a railway bridge.
@MagnificentGermanywithDarion6 ай бұрын
I can't wait to check out the Schwebebahn in Wuppertaler on one of my future trips to beautiful Germany :). Thanks for sharing.
@UntilWeGo6 ай бұрын
Hope you enjoy it!
@jensen78756 ай бұрын
I really love the "Schwebebahn"!
@MunichChild6 ай бұрын
Hi Mace, I did not say you pronounce my name wrong but with a little accent like nearly all native English speakers. 😊I think your pronounciation of German is rather good 👍 Regards from Munich, Gernot P.S.: the "t" at the end is not silent but my friends pronounce my name more French like "Gernòò" but that´s another story ...
@RustyDust1016 ай бұрын
Consider the time span it was running, and the millions of people traveling with the Schwebebahn, its track record for number of dead and/or injured is outstanding. In over 110 years exactly one tragic accident with 5 deaths and around 20 injured people is incredibly low. As it stands it is the safest public transport system on the planet by any metric you might choose. It also has potential for improvement. The French took this idea and enhanced it by making the train into an actual dangle train with an even higher safety margin at much greater speeds. A dangling train automatically pivots out at the bottom, tilting into the curve just by physics instead of technology, thus reducing sideways g-forces significantly. This allows for much higher curve speeds that automatically adjust due the centripetal forces pushing you INTO the seat or floor instead of at a lateral movement to the floor of the train. You just a slight increase of weight on your feet or bottom but don't need to counter the outward movement yourself. Unfortunately the French never implemented a long distance train, and only built a short test track which was later demolished. The patents have yet to be released, so it was never implemented into a reality elsewhere. So the Schwebebahn remains only one of a handful of hanging suspension trains in the world.
@holger_p6 ай бұрын
As shorter the network, as smaller the accident rate. Of course there are thousands of rope hanging cable cars or funiculairs, with 0 injuries or deaths.
@kazkorianor6 ай бұрын
Looks super like something form Diesel Punk
@MunichChild5 ай бұрын
P.S.: love your videos and watch them again and again
@UntilWeGo5 ай бұрын
Awesome and thank you I am glad you enjoy it
@ropeburn66846 ай бұрын
There's still a major diary producer in the area using "Tuffi" as a brand. 🐘❤
@holger_p6 ай бұрын
It's not much different in idea from the chicago elevated. Hanging vs. standing is just a design feature. It's simple technique like the sliders on your curtains. Hanging stays upright by itself, while standing upright (like a monorail) is quiet complicated.
Hello! Minute 7:26 to 8:41 The sound was GONE! A technical instructor at a very large chemical industrial facility once said that accidents don't "happen"; They are “caused”!
@DIVERSION-one6 ай бұрын
Wupper = The name of the river "meandering" through the town. Tal = valley
@CavHDeu6 ай бұрын
There's an old video (before the wars) which got colorized, stabilized and upscaled to hd.
@silviahannak32136 ай бұрын
No Sound today? The Melody you hum....that's from Austria. An der schönen blauen Donau. (At the beautiful blue Donau) Johann Sebastian Bach. Junior u guess.
@seorsamaclately42946 ай бұрын
Johann Strauss Jr., Bach war aus Eisenach und längst gestorben.
@martinstock6 ай бұрын
up to 80,000 passengers daily this is however slightly outdated, the current numbers are around 85,000 passengers daily
@tomunterbarmen21656 ай бұрын
Do you know that Asperin was invented in Wuppertal too? And the former german President Rau was Born here? Or Friedrich Engels? Interesesting, no?😊
@dontshanonau13356 ай бұрын
The pros: looks neat. The cons: unmitigated logistical catastrophe if even one of the carts breaks down on-route.
@aphextwin57126 ай бұрын
The more daily pros and cons are: + Doesn’t take up space at ground level, like a tram would - Stairs and elevators are needed (something a tram wouldn’t need) It shares that downside with a subway but it is cheaper to built and has nicer views. Switches are difficult to implement which makes branching lines difficult. A subway can also move up to ground level in the outskirts where there might be enough space for that (you can also do this with a suspension railway but you don’t get the benefits of cheaper construction just because it floats at ground level, though you could eliminate the stairs and elevators).
@holger_p6 ай бұрын
Any rail bound system has a problem with bypassing and detours in case a car get's stuck.
@wietholdtbuhl61686 ай бұрын
Moin!Try AUTOSTADT in Wolfsburg 😮ITS Amazing!
@TheCyberandi6 ай бұрын
Cool pullover. Do you like EBM=Electroc Body Music. or is it something completely different?
@UntilWeGo6 ай бұрын
Thanks but it’s something different 🤘
@MunichChild6 ай бұрын
Unfortunately at 7:25 you muted yourself
@patriciahiddings32736 ай бұрын
Sound stops completely at around 8 min in
@sindbad84116 ай бұрын
I think the term you looking for is Steam Punk What is Steampunk? Fiction to Subculture | Explained for the Curious kzbin.info/www/bejne/e3jKpGlshpmXetU Cool footage 2017 Steampunk Picnic kzbin.info/www/bejne/gH_ToaigiK6Wrbc Wave Gothic Festival in Leipzig East Germany
@UntilWeGo6 ай бұрын
Correct sir 🙏
@genoobtlp44246 ай бұрын
„Just“ 80k daily riders… with 25-30m long basically trams is still quite impressive… I mean, if you tried that with a „standard“ us buses of 40-80 (number obtained from codot) people, that’s still 1-2k buses, so 16.66666 HOURS of buses at a bus a minute (1k, or 2k if you count both directions), basically the physical limit of what can be moved, this doesn’t include the fact that travel demand isn’t consistent throughout the day and there’s a difference between rush hour and off peak… Don’t try to model how to move 73k cars a day through any reasonable street, technically a two lane highway (1900 cars an hour per lane) could just about do it, but with rush hour you‘d probably end up at 4,6 or more lanes… And don’t forget, Wuppertal is a fairly narrow valley, space is an issue and the Schwebebahn nicely fits over the river bed for most of its journey
@holger_p6 ай бұрын
Any metro or subway has it's own network, independent from rush hours and street situation. This is what you could compare with. They just considered this as the best option in price. One rail is cheaper than two rails, and hanging is the safest and cheap option for monorail.
@genoobtlp44246 ай бұрын
@@holger_p I know, though in terms of vehicles you should probably compare it to a tram (30m single headed cars with 2+aisle and 4 double doors is comparable to the typical 60s-80s tram of 20-40m with 2+1 seating and 4-8 slightly smaller doors) and a vehicle up to every other minute is the kinda standard limit for reason and signalling systems and reasonably achievable in pedestrian zones or grade separated tramways… Heavy rail like metros and S-Bahn usually runs more like 60-100m units up to 200-300m long…
@marcelmuseler66976 ай бұрын
MfG aus Wupper Valley 😁
@fabianstriebeck80546 ай бұрын
you can see the confusion in the north americans face when they see germany before the great war, as they only know the country from the wars onwards - as if before 1914 Germany was just empty. from the barbarians to now is our culture. to them 1914-2024. hahaha. so funny. but always ready to see them learn.