These workers are awesome. Railroads are very skilled and dangerous jobs.
@danielkreutler1552Ай бұрын
Thank you for your service Jim. We appreciate you running train for the last 10years.
@ReturnoftheNative-w8kАй бұрын
Thank you, this was such a good documentary.
@bryantwhitis6446Ай бұрын
You more appreciate the engineers of the railroad. For the inpatient motorists at the crossing be patient there's a good safety reason it can't go no faster than its doing. If you can be lucky enough and figure out its a long load. Turn your vehicle off. If weather permitted check your oil level and fluids level. And lastly the railways companies are a great investment that will be in operation for long, long time too come.
@earllutz2663Ай бұрын
Thank you for the documentary. It was very interesting.
@bradleymcwilliams6348Ай бұрын
Thanks for posting
@sebastianbarthel2393Ай бұрын
It's always a bit fascinating about the Definition of a Job. Someone watching a movie like this one, wondering that those people seeing they daily work as something normal. And maybe somebody remembering this question he asked once himself in the past and reconize that he's allready five, ten or maybe more years in that very job working! That's how it is!
@whereisthedollarАй бұрын
Nice!
@TraxproductionzАй бұрын
Huh, no comments? Great documentary but why does it seem so old for being recently uploaded? Hell, DM&IR doesn't even exist anymore!
@JustAGamerA12 күн бұрын
probably got pulled out of the archives, or was recently digitalized.
@takingabreakkАй бұрын
❤❤❤
@IlikeCatFАй бұрын
When was this video originally made?
@paralyzes14 күн бұрын
Sounds like 1998
@fuzzwork13 күн бұрын
1999 i think
@JustAGamerA12 күн бұрын
some time after 1990 if CP already acquired the soo line