Something about hard work that's satisfying to the soul. Honest days work for a honest days pay.
@nicolehoward48454 жыл бұрын
My dad worked for 40 yrs and I admire the hell out of any railroad employee regardless of the job. Takes true grit to be dedicated and safe. Thank all ya'll for keeping everyone safe!
@russelldye73048 жыл бұрын
When I left in 1990 section gangs still did most of the work with the normal track tools! We used claw bars,picks,shovels,tie tongs and spike mauls to put in an average of 18 ties a day and replaced sections of rail the same way! The big gangs such as steel gangs,tie gangs etc. used large track machines but there was still plenty of hard work to go around!You can still see M.O. W. Workers doing it by hand on KZbin!
@lk69126 жыл бұрын
Russell Dye I think they still do tons of small jobs by hand. It's probably faster to get a some guys out there with good old hand tools and get it done faster than hauling the equipment all the way for a little work.
@seanmartin55816 жыл бұрын
I'm a MoW guy and we still do lots of jobs by hand. Especially if it's short industry spur tracks and such.
@shanestewart52895 жыл бұрын
I worked on a section gang from 2008 to 2014 we used hand tools all the time . I went back to a section in 2016 and guys with a year experience we’re oblivious to basic techniques and the do do not when using basic hand tool. I was even told it was unsafe to dig a tie in by hand. I resigned from the railroad in 2017 and I don’t regret it.
@deputysheriff10013 жыл бұрын
Love it. I went to work for Southern Railroad (now Norfolf-Southern) in 1969 at Inman Yard in Atlanta, Ga. I remember those old days well. We didn't have computers so we had to physically walk the in-bound train to record the car numbers on a switch list by hand. Walked MANY trains in my life. Retired from N/S and went into law enforcement. Norfolk-Southern Railroad (I still call it Southern Railroad) will always have a place in my heart. It was a good living.Very good video. Thanks.
@gordonlachlan41443 жыл бұрын
I know Im kinda randomly asking but do anyone know a good site to watch new tv shows online ?
@nashkairo48633 жыл бұрын
@Gordon Lachlan Flixportal :D
@gordonlachlan41443 жыл бұрын
@Nash Kairo Thank you, I signed up and it seems to work :) I appreciate it !!
@nashkairo48633 жыл бұрын
@Gordon Lachlan you are welcome :)
@rapman53632 жыл бұрын
@@gordonlachlan4144 does anyone fall for this BS? You ask a stupid question about some random crap and BOOM all of a sudden some “random” stranger answers with the exact information and where to look. If people really fall for this then we are doomed as a species.
@bullfrog195413 жыл бұрын
Really like the old clips!
@kyleferber15193 жыл бұрын
Just curious to why people are not wearing reflective vests in the modern clips?
@thesportbikeman13 жыл бұрын
an awesome look at the history of MOW work
@vandalsavage61523 жыл бұрын
Maybe my old eyes deceive me but I didn't spot any brothers driving the new machines. I only saw brothers doin hard labour. So despite Mr Smuggins tellin us it's great on the NS, in some important ways nothins changed.
@telepathytoday2 жыл бұрын
I noticed the same thing. And all the white guys driving the machines look like they enjoy second dinner 😉
@KirtH272 жыл бұрын
This explains partially why there were so many small towns along railroads and most of the town worked for the railroad. We have land by the old Soo Line Gandy Dancer and they are now ghost towns. As things became more efficient they didn't need as many employees
@CH-tk8wx Жыл бұрын
Towns were situated along railroad lines for transporting goods and people prior to paved highways and the trucking industry, not for the railroad workers. Track gangs traveled the system living in self-sustained camps parked on sidings.
@JackpineGandy4 жыл бұрын
been there, done that, got the shirt...machines are nice and all, but the budget has to include keeping them in top operating shape and the job has to be big enough for adequate r.o.i. In the meantime there is still need of gandys who know how to use a spike maul and clawbar and #2 shovel
@SD45750013 жыл бұрын
Awesome video! Thanks for posting this!
@DaytonDistrictRailfan4 жыл бұрын
NS kinda just flexed their equipment
@geomodelrailroader6 жыл бұрын
we have come a long way since the gandy dancer.
@gkess71066 жыл бұрын
I’m amazed that the gauge is to the half inch for such a heavy system of tracks and rolling stock. What is the tolerance, in inches, allowed for the track width to vary? Such as 4’ 8 and 1/2 inches, plus or minus how much? 1/2 inch? 1 inch?
@stanpatterson50336 жыл бұрын
I don't know the honest answer of what the tolerance is, but I do know that if the track maintenance dept. isn't paying attention to those details, the rolling stock will quickly and violently advise you that the track needs work. I would think that a half an inch wouldn't be a big problem, but by the time you get to an inch, you'd be playing with fire. The risk of spreading the rails apart under heavy loads or high speeds could lead to a derailment. Under some circumstances, they can also tend to flop over inward, leading to the same problems. I have seen poorly maintained spur rails cause low-speed derailments, the spur line being neglected, old lighter-gauge track in place, rotten old ties that offer little support, ballast that is reduced to mud and weeds, spikes that long ago wiggled up and out of the holes they were in.... and despite the incoming shunt crews' best intentions and precautions, eventually the rails can no longer bear the abuse from heavy loads coming in around a tight curve. You end up with a loco and a car partly derailed, and guys standing around getting no work done, with equipment that is now held hostage at the scene until it can be safely re-railed and removed. Calls get made, blame gets passed around, but eventually someone must invest money into the spur if the customer is to continue using rail service.
@davidbaker24575 жыл бұрын
58" max gage.
@doczinger4 жыл бұрын
I think they might want to check on their CC trans service, looks like a 4 letter word slipped through at 2:38 or so.
@telepathytoday2 жыл бұрын
Interesting that the tracks are basically the same and that the specialized machines are made to replicate the original design. Maybe this is partly why we don’t have high speed rail in the USA. I’m not criticizing the innovation but maybe time to step back and rethink what it’s all about.
@CH-tk8wx Жыл бұрын
What they don't show you is the debauchery and dissipation that went on after hours...Lol
@mrerok Жыл бұрын
This is still nycta .. everything is done by hand
@molossis3 жыл бұрын
put F in the comments for the people that had to work on the rails back before the equipment.
@molossis3 жыл бұрын
F
@mickywanderer82762 жыл бұрын
Yeah the old ways were inefficient, labor intensive, and all that. Still....something to be about the gangs of men who knitted the nation together.
@molossis3 жыл бұрын
Norfolk Southern
@dawna12143 жыл бұрын
When the work was hard and dangerous you seen mostly black men on the crew. As it got animated ( less danger and better pay) we seen mostly white men. The more things change, the more they stay the same.
@rapman53632 жыл бұрын
What are you doing on this channel? Don’t you have a statue to tear down somewhere! 🤡🤡
@teacher5555556 жыл бұрын
then it was with hands and maybe machines. today its hands free all with multiple machines. tomorrow it will be completely automated with only one machine.
@manga126 жыл бұрын
well one or two the machines are exceptionaly large so there is only soo much you can put into a single one, and there are still times when it takes a bit of finnessing the rail or special situations that things are still done by hand, there are things that are one off sometimes that a machine just cant adapt fast enough to do or justify running an entire automated thing, like replacing one or two ties, thats where a couple of people come in with heavy equiptment and fix it, and there are places that are smaller like historic railroads where the automation in minimal so it is still done the old way, I know I have held ties up with a railroad spike puller at the fort wayne railroad when we were working on the tracks after the spread in the rail that dropped 765 on the ground, about 3 years ago at the open house, we put in a bunch of new ties and where the jackhammer could not drive the spikes it was done with a spikemaul, we are a not profit though
@rustywilliams83115 жыл бұрын
They will never replace the local gangs and general maintenance. A broke rail, a low joint, a bad switch point, they aren't bringing a T&S gang in to fix it. Still plenty of hand work involved.
@hodl20824 жыл бұрын
@@rustywilliams8311 yeah brother still hard work in rail.
@rafaelallenblock Жыл бұрын
Trackwork then: Lots of middle class black men plus a white guy in a suit wearing a fedora Track work now: A couple of middle class white guys driving automated machinery