Gimme Gimme Gimme Stainless Steel

Ойын-сауық

The Company that Brought us the Future.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budd_Co...
My Other Links:
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Пікірлер: 137

  • @tiernanstrains
    @tiernanstrains2 ай бұрын

    The B in Budd stands for Based

  • @coconutmall333

    @coconutmall333

    2 ай бұрын

    Based it is. Totally accurate.

  • @user-ib9pz6id5b

    @user-ib9pz6id5b

    2 ай бұрын

    Based, ultimazely dis-destroyable

  • @katiest-amand2488

    @katiest-amand2488

    26 күн бұрын

    Based Utilitarian Drivable Dominators of the market. That’s what Budd stands for.

  • @sandwichdriving101
    @sandwichdriving1012 ай бұрын

    Amazing how Budd still didn't break even after the company itself went bankrupt

  • @mylesspear

    @mylesspear

    2 ай бұрын

    You can’t kill a Budd. 😎

  • @GintaPPE1000

    @GintaPPE1000

    2 ай бұрын

    That's how our modern economy works. Build good high-quality product, and you go out of business because your stuff is so good that nobody needs to buy a replacement. Build disposable trash, and planned obsolescence rewards you with repeated orders and the cash to stay afloat. It’s a race to the bottom that rewards all the wrong kinds of engineering.

  • @Pensyfan19
    @Pensyfan192 ай бұрын

    This further contributes to the fact that you should never retire anything ever. Because Budd Don't Break.

  • @botaohenryfeng9587

    @botaohenryfeng9587

    2 ай бұрын

    Go and buy some new bits every now and then and they are always good as new

  • @DiamondKingStudios

    @DiamondKingStudios

    2 ай бұрын

    We should at least keep around the technology so we can continue to make it just as good. Unfortunately that is impossible for too many reasons than I care to learn.

  • @emmareporter4324

    @emmareporter4324

    2 ай бұрын

    same with gm buses, take care of them, and they will last a century, i mean a lot of the ones on the road still that are preserved are between 40 and 60 years old. this isn't counting the few old looks still on the road. but i think the best bus to fit the "never retire" category should be the new flyer low floors, they're easily accessible, and they're still reliable like a fishbowl.

  • @Coquihallacanyon
    @Coquihallacanyon2 ай бұрын

    budd dont break

  • @boston_and_maine

    @boston_and_maine

    2 ай бұрын

    spv2000 statement 🗿

  • @robk7266

    @robk7266

    2 ай бұрын

    Unless if it's a metroliner

  • @cryorig_transit05

    @cryorig_transit05

    2 ай бұрын

    Perfect example: The Amfleet

  • @DiamondKingStudios

    @DiamondKingStudios

    2 ай бұрын

    @@robk7266I mean Budd was mostly doing the carbody manufacturing; we can blame GM for the SPV-2000’s faulty motors and Westinghouse Electric for the Metroliner. Budd still don’t break.

  • @GintaPPE1000

    @GintaPPE1000

    2 ай бұрын

    @@robk7266 The same Metroliners that were the fastest trains in the world when they debuted - a whole 35MPH faster than the 0 series Shinkansen - even though they were developed on a rushed 18-month schedule and on less than 1/3rd the budget? Whose availability rates would be a figure considered acceptable in any country besides the United States? Which are still in service as control cars today and will outlast 3 generations of subsequent electric traction (E60, AEM-7, Acela) by the time they're finally gone, while their Japanese counterparts have already been retired for 13 years? This was a project that was all but intentionally set up to fail, and yet the worst that came out of it was a train that initially had European rather than American reliability. As the 8 cars that had their propulsion systems rebuilt proved, this wasn't even unfixable - they had less than half the out-of-service rate and went over twice the distance between failures as the originals - the federal government simply gave up. Even Budd hasn't managed to repeat a miracle like that again.

  • @paxvictori2385
    @paxvictori23852 ай бұрын

    The company broke before the coaches did

  • @saxmanb777
    @saxmanb7772 ай бұрын

    ABBA and BUDD. A combination I never thought possible.

  • @YaoboyProd2K15
    @YaoboyProd2K152 ай бұрын

    Budd don't break...but they died out.

  • @ParasocialCatgirl

    @ParasocialCatgirl

    2 ай бұрын

    What a lack of planned obsolescence does to a mf

  • @haeffound
    @haeffound2 ай бұрын

    00:30 Ok, that version of the SPV200 rocks.

  • @DiamondKingStudios

    @DiamondKingStudios

    2 ай бұрын

    Budd didn’t break; GM did. They gave the engines.

  • @bobeksmradlavy5109
    @bobeksmradlavy51092 ай бұрын

    bring back Budd

  • @TigerofRobare
    @TigerofRobare2 ай бұрын

    Unfortunately there won't be another Budd the way purchasing is done in this country.

  • @vinalboy
    @vinalboy2 ай бұрын

    My father worked for almost 40 years as an electrical design engineer at the Budd Red Lion plant.

  • @nanismeelasla

    @nanismeelasla

    2 ай бұрын

    im pretty certain that plant is or at least was a superfund site

  • @vinalboy

    @vinalboy

    2 ай бұрын

    It absolutely was a superfund site.

  • @nanismeelasla

    @nanismeelasla

    2 ай бұрын

    @@vinalboy fortunately I'm pretty sure it got cleaned up at some point a few years ago

  • @vinalboy

    @vinalboy

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes it was cleaned up. After that I believe Teva a generic drug prescription manufacture was there. After they shut down I believe it’s been turned into a golf course. Not sure however. I live about 30 minutes from the site. I’ll have to take a drive out there soon to see what’s exactly there.

  • @georgekarnezis4311
    @georgekarnezis43112 ай бұрын

    I am still crying about Nippon Sharyo’s failure to build the California/midwest bi levels.

  • @f.g.9466
    @f.g.94662 ай бұрын

    Love the aesthetics of steel cars so much, I'm happy for designs and materials to move forward and improve, but the aesthetic of a Budd steel car will always be the best looking rolling stock to my eyes. There was a rolling stock manufacturer in Portugal named Sorefame that built steel rolling stock under license from Budd. Budd even got a symbolic amount of shares in the company. So a lot of multiple units, passenger cars and metros that were seen in Portugal look very identical to these iconic designs. A lot of have already been scrapped or sold, but there's a few still in service. As a matter of fact, this unit in Portugal ended up building shells for CTA's 2400 Series and for SEPTA's N-5 cars for the Norristown HSL. Sadly Sorefame shutdown in 2004 shortly after being sold to Bombardier. There's a new consortium trying to develop Portuguese rolling stock manufacture once again, with an emphasis on using steel, and one of their ambitions was supplying parts to the North American market again.

  • @peter_kelly
    @peter_kelly2 ай бұрын

    SEPTA terminating that multi level car order with CRRC seems like a positive.

  • @selflesssamaritan6417
    @selflesssamaritan64172 ай бұрын

    Work hard, *train* hard.

  • @ninyaninjabrifsanovichthes45
    @ninyaninjabrifsanovichthes452 ай бұрын

    These coaches outlived their own manufacturers

  • @TheSUNGlassKid
    @TheSUNGlassKid2 ай бұрын

    If Budd were to come back, what’s stopping this new company from being just as bad as the current crop of companies?

  • @DiamondKingStudios

    @DiamondKingStudios

    2 ай бұрын

    I wish that would be the role of leadership culture, a good relationship with the workers, and accountability to the traveling public, though that is wishful thinking.

  • @Jaypro128
    @Jaypro1282 ай бұрын

    Built Unbreakable Durable Designs

  • @JMLoll

    @JMLoll

    Ай бұрын

    Love this!

  • @pizzajona
    @pizzajona2 ай бұрын

    0:06 the irony is the WMATA 7000 series with the pressing problem is made of stainless steel. Also the issue was mostly WMATA’s fault, not the manufacturer

  • @mk3a

    @mk3a

    2 ай бұрын

    It's crazy how WMATA then is very different from WMATA today

  • @saharya104
    @saharya1042 ай бұрын

    God I love budd

  • @de-fault_de-fault
    @de-fault_de-fault2 ай бұрын

    When JDM guys start talking about R32s and I picture Budd Brightliners...

  • @brianhubert8418
    @brianhubert84182 ай бұрын

    Budd don't break. I think it will be very tough to find any other rolling stock that has been so rugged and still looks good after so much time. The Amfleet Is are going on 50 years old and look how much of the VIA equipment, some of it 70+ years old is still running in daily service, not at some tourist train or museum, but in daily intercity service.

  • @stephenkeever6029
    @stephenkeever60292 ай бұрын

    Alan, you always provoke, pleasure and amaze me!

  • @BrennanZeigler
    @BrennanZeigler2 ай бұрын

    Bring back Budd

  • @USBCord

    @USBCord

    Ай бұрын

    y e s

  • @maas1208

    @maas1208

    Ай бұрын

    Yes

  • @oldsmobilethompson1658
    @oldsmobilethompson16582 ай бұрын

    Aw yeah gimme more quick music videos. This here is the type of Video Art that I cherish.

  • @thetrainguy1
    @thetrainguy12 ай бұрын

    We need another Budd.

  • @destroyer-cq2lm
    @destroyer-cq2lm2 ай бұрын

    Budd always did a pretty good job

  • @apexhunter935
    @apexhunter935Ай бұрын

    Thank you Budd, you were the true pioneers of a better tomorrow. Stainless steel for life!

  • @ItzTrains_Productions
    @ItzTrains_Productions2 ай бұрын

    Amen bro 🙏

  • @scottydude456
    @scottydude4562 ай бұрын

    *BUDD DONT BREAK*

  • @stationshunter
    @stationshunter2 ай бұрын

    As long as they keep the maintenance good you could run these for a good few centuries if we really wanted to.

  • @charliesullivan4304

    @charliesullivan4304

    2 ай бұрын

    We want to.

  • @davidty2006

    @davidty2006

    2 ай бұрын

    Age is just a number. Old stock is still useful and good just needs maintaining and reffitting every now and then.

  • @gandhihype
    @gandhihype2 ай бұрын

    i was supposed to be in Mamma Mia in high school. this goes way too hard

  • @chicagolandrailroader
    @chicagolandrailroader2 ай бұрын

    Budd don't break

  • @davidsixtwo
    @davidsixtwo2 ай бұрын

    Thanks, budd

  • @MEATYOKERRable
    @MEATYOKERRable2 ай бұрын

    B is for bullet proof.

  • @giogullotto
    @giogullotto2 ай бұрын

    Budd. Don't. Break.

  • @jonathankleinow2073
    @jonathankleinow20732 ай бұрын

    It's like Frank Sobotka said in The Wire: "We used to make [stainless steel railcars] in this country, build [stainless steel railcars]. Now we just [accept low bids from nationalized manufacturers in other countries who do just enough work in this country to clear the Buy American hurdles]."

  • @maas1208
    @maas1208Ай бұрын

    Budd was truly our Buddies

  • @ItsMarcinS
    @ItsMarcinS2 ай бұрын

    WE NEED A FULL VIDEO VERSION OF THIS

  • @succerberg84
    @succerberg842 ай бұрын

    Heavy ✅ Bulky ✅ Stainless steel ✅ 0 aerodynamics ✅ reliable ✅ American ✅ Yeah, this is budd

  • @chrispontani6059
    @chrispontani60592 ай бұрын

    Reece Martin hates unpainted trains, and of course he’s too popular to read all comments or respond to me. But you are 1000% correct. Stainless is a CLEAN look.

  • @GintaPPE1000

    @GintaPPE1000

    2 ай бұрын

    Modern urbanists in general are obsessed with the idea that America had no good ideas or competent capabilities because of the rail industry's fortunes in the last 70 years. Even though every European and Asian manufacturer that's come to the US has also struggled with building stuff that's up to the standards of the US rail industry.

  • @Davids_Hobbies
    @Davids_Hobbies2 ай бұрын

    This goes unbelievably hard!

  • @SalmanMentos
    @SalmanMentos2 ай бұрын

    We makin Soda cans with this one🗣🗣🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔛🔝

  • @ayindestevens6152
    @ayindestevens61522 ай бұрын

    Welp considering I need a man and I like Budd Cars yeah this makes sense

  • @placeholdername0000
    @placeholdername00002 ай бұрын

    One of the greatest crimes of Amtrak was not buying the IC3. There, I said it. If the new and more powerful engines had been retrofitted, as was done on the sets sold to Denmark, Sweden and Israel, you'd have a fine train capable of doing both commuter service and rural intercity services. Also, there's an electric version of it, so the North East Corridor could also have benefitted.

  • @generalfeldmarschallpolycr8118
    @generalfeldmarschallpolycr81182 ай бұрын

    As someone from Indonesia, where our national rail company transtitioned into Stainless Steel carriages in their next gen. I do agree that Stainless steel are based as hell

  • @J-Bahn
    @J-Bahn2 ай бұрын

    Hell yes! More Abba train songs please! Also kind of ironic your featuring the Metroliner in the old footage; they were super delayed too (although to be fair they were rushed)

  • @DiamondKingStudios

    @DiamondKingStudios

    2 ай бұрын

    Blame Westinghouse for that, not Budd.

  • @GintaPPE1000

    @GintaPPE1000

    2 ай бұрын

    Developed in half the time and a third of the budget of the Shinkansen Series 0, and yet still 35MPH faster. 27% unavailability was also pretty common for most European multiple unit designs of the time. If the Metroliner's goals were more realistic and the project wasn't forced to do it all in just 18 months, it could've easily become a success.

  • @J-Bahn

    @J-Bahn

    2 ай бұрын

    @@GintaPPE1000 like I said they were rushed; honestly the bigger problem was that they were kencapped by the track the signals and the mp54s who’s windows they would suck out.

  • @metronorthfoamer4085

    @metronorthfoamer4085

    2 ай бұрын

    Budd only did the bodyshells and final assembly, electricals were provided by Westinghouse and later GE, so Budd in the end didnt mess up the Metroliners in what they were responsible for (cab cars are still going strong, they just look old).

  • @beckiverson1531
    @beckiverson15312 ай бұрын

    goes hard

  • @mk3a
    @mk3a2 ай бұрын

    0:05 note that WMATA's 7000 series by Kawasaki is also Stainless Steel, but boy did it break. Also, WMATA almost went with CRRC for the 8000 series but decided to go with Hitachi (good choice btw).

  • @sonicboy678

    @sonicboy678

    2 ай бұрын

    Thing is, the 7000s' failures are generally less attributable to the _manufacturer_ than usual. Unless protocols improve, going with the definitely-not-builder of the 4000s won't do WMATA much good.

  • @HIDLad001

    @HIDLad001

    Ай бұрын

    @@sonicboy678 They went with Japanese Hitachi Rail. If they went with Hitachi Rail Italy (AnsaldoBreda), they would have been built in Miami, Florida. BTW The MTA is getting new Hitachi Rail Italy railcars to replace it's *Budd UTVs* on Metro SubwayLink. Budd don't break, but the other manufacturers of most of the parts did.

  • @daanwillemsen223
    @daanwillemsen2232 ай бұрын

    I may be a European aluminium dweller but the Budd Company took stainless steel and turned it into art

  • @CoffeeOnRails
    @CoffeeOnRailsАй бұрын

    i'm still convinced the metroliner was a soviet train that accidentally was displaced into the US. it's very dumb brick go fast (then again the 91/IC225 set's are basically the same)

  • @davidty2006
    @davidty20062 ай бұрын

    Ahhh Budd... Why am i getting Metro-Cammell vibes from this? guess the 2 are similar, good trains that are still going.

  • @TheNataliesansh
    @TheNataliesanshАй бұрын

    Amfleets will prob be rolling somewhere in the world in 2100 because they never break

  • @dutchvanderlinde154
    @dutchvanderlinde1542 ай бұрын

    Great

  • @souvikrc4499
    @souvikrc44992 ай бұрын

    Back when America had its own railcar manufacturing industry.

  • @cryorig_transit05
    @cryorig_transit052 ай бұрын

    Peak passenger trains

  • @HIDLad001
    @HIDLad0012 ай бұрын

    The Miami Metrorail's Budd Universal Transit Vehicles lasted over 30 years without a rebuild of any kind.

  • @conrail2518
    @conrail25182 ай бұрын

    Is Conrail?

  • @chrisliang4646
    @chrisliang46462 ай бұрын

    How do we bring Budd back and make em stay?

  • @DiamondKingStudios

    @DiamondKingStudios

    2 ай бұрын

    I worry we’ll have to relearn the manufacturing processes. Maybe if new passenger routes are proposed and work is down towards them demand can be created to warrant the continued operation of the Budd plants. But if a domestic company creates passenger equipment, I think they should make it look just like the old Budd streamlined cars. I don’t think we’ve gotten much better since, except with some safety improvements (removal of asbestos/lead). Other than that (and I hate that this seems to be most plausible of a solution) pray that some rich man decides he’s going to take his personal money and build a Budd factory just for kicks.

  • @marcleslac2413

    @marcleslac2413

    2 ай бұрын

    @@DiamondKingStudios Or one of us if we win the lottery.

  • @DiamondKingStudios

    @DiamondKingStudios

    2 ай бұрын

    @@marcleslac2413 You’d have to win the really big billion-dollar prize multiple times. I doubt even a nine-figure millionaire could start one of these himself and produce equipment at such a scale to make the price affordable for railroads.

  • @olivernajera3077
    @olivernajera3077Ай бұрын

    We know one of these never derailed; because if it did then the Earth would not still be here.

  • @stephencrossman9151
    @stephencrossman91512 ай бұрын

    Sometimes the answer can be staring you right in the face

  • @davidl6558
    @davidl65582 ай бұрын

    The world needs trains that are structurally sound for 10,000 years

  • @maxmegamax2174
    @maxmegamax21742 ай бұрын

    based

  • @connection_ok
    @connection_ok2 ай бұрын

    Alan 2am posting????

  • @marcleslac2413
    @marcleslac24132 ай бұрын

    Imagine if we restarted budd.

  • @MaximeVigneux
    @MaximeVigneuxАй бұрын

    you could do Chuck Norris facts about budd's train car

  • @Robloxity_News
    @Robloxity_News2 ай бұрын

    RIP Budd....

  • @GaigeGrosskreutzGunClub
    @GaigeGrosskreutzGunClub2 ай бұрын

    Sorry we need all that stainless steel for the cybertrucks

  • @yukkyarzupro1108

    @yukkyarzupro1108

    2 ай бұрын

    And those things are easy to rust for some reason compare to INKA stainless steel train

  • @DADeathinacan

    @DADeathinacan

    2 ай бұрын

    they wanted the stainless steel to look good when formed into body panels(apparently it was looking "wavy"), so made it worse at being stainless

  • @buddmetroliner200gaming3
    @buddmetroliner200gaming32 ай бұрын

    LOl

  • @abigailosx
    @abigailosx2 ай бұрын

    So when are we getting the Alan Fisher Radio channel?

  • @tonylarose4842
    @tonylarose48422 ай бұрын

    Stainless steel looks good! Some genius should use it on a car

  • @CABOOSEBOB
    @CABOOSEBOB2 ай бұрын

    How much would it cost to start budd up again

  • @DiamondKingStudios

    @DiamondKingStudios

    2 ай бұрын

    Billions upon billions. I shudder at the thought.

  • @CABOOSEBOB

    @CABOOSEBOB

    2 ай бұрын

    @@DiamondKingStudios could you start it small, a few trains for a small transit agency, and then grow?

  • @DiamondKingStudios

    @DiamondKingStudios

    2 ай бұрын

    @@CABOOSEBOB Even then, I feel like it would cost a lot to import all the metals, manufacture the equipment, and ship them products to the transit agencies, even on a small scale. Railroad equipment includes some of the largest ground transportation vehicles one can make.

  • @jonathanstensberg
    @jonathanstensberg2 ай бұрын

    Dang maybe…maybe free trade isn’t an unalloyed good?

  • @GintaPPE1000

    @GintaPPE1000

    2 ай бұрын

    Free trade works when everyone else wants to play that game too. Otherwise, trying for "fair competition" in a field where nobody else is playing fair just results in you losing - and let's not pretend either European or Japanese (and now Chinese/South Korean) manufacturers didn't have a huge amount of government help.

  • @AL5520
    @AL55202 ай бұрын

    Budd made great simple cars but they failed miserably when they tried to do more than that. There plenty of old basic refurbished rail cars in Europe, Asia and other places that still work well but if you want a more modern up to date equipment it will be more complicated to build and will have more teething problems, especially in the US where companies must redesign their rolling stock to adapt to the specific requirements and state of infrastructure and do it locally. Budd fell because they couldn't adapt to the new world and because the US decided to stop investing in rail.

  • @GintaPPE1000

    @GintaPPE1000

    2 ай бұрын

    “Failed when they tried to do more?” The Metroliner was the fastest train in the world when it debuted, being 35MPH faster than the 0 series Shinkansen. It was also rushed through development in only 18 months and forced to make do on only $90 million of funding - *1/2 the time and 1/3rd the budget of its Japanese counterpart.* The average availability rate of 73% wasn’t even particularly-poor by any standard except the GG1’s - European electric locomotives and multiple units were considered fine with as low as 70%. The fact Budd managed a mild fumble out of a project set up to fail is a testament to how good they were. Contrast the story of the Metroliner with the likes of the APT, LRC, TGV-001, Avelia Liberty, and anything wearing the Siemens logo, which were just as problematic with proper planning and funding. If anything, the struggles of every foreign manufacturer to adapt to the US rail market shows that Budd didn’t fall because they couldn’t adapt. They fell because they built rolling stock that was too good to require replacement - which means no business in a stagnant passenger market. Meanwhile the planned obsolete appliances that Siemens tries to pass off as trains will not only need replacement after 15-20 years, but the manufacturer is actively trying to market that as a good thing.

  • @AL5520

    @AL5520

    2 ай бұрын

    @@GintaPPE1000 The top speed you've mentioned was reached by a Budd Rail Diesel Car after strapping a GM jet engines on it just for the speed, not exactly an actual train aimed at servicing passengers. There were many tests just to reach high speeds and a rocket sled on tracks managed to reach far higher speeds in 1954. As for the Budd company, they did great job in what they new how to do but in this case they failed, mainly because they didn't have the expertise required and also lack of money and time, that for some reason you consider as a positive - and it's not. Th speeds of those cars in service was lower than the speed of the 0 Series Shinkansen and the reliability was poor, even after many redesigns and improvements and were retired or used as regular hauled cars. Their last attempt was a replacement to the RDC (the one they slapped a jet engine on) called SPV-2000 that was unreliable and short lived. The good thing that came out of the Metroliners is the body of those cars, that was great and what they were good at, turning into the famous and long living Amfleet. I'm not saying that Budd was a bad company, they did great and have advanced rail travel with great innovations but long lasting cars (and many other things) were a thing back than and cars built by others are also still in use today. What they lacked was the ability to change, which happens to many companies, and the lack of interest and investments by the US government didn't help. As for Europe, unlike what you're trying to portray the European designs are a success. When developing a new complicated thing there are always problems delays and teething periods but they are rarely as problematic as those of the Budd Metroliner and are resolved after a while. Today things are much more complicated, development takes longer and there are far more delays but the end product is mostly better.

  • @GintaPPE1000

    @GintaPPE1000

    2 ай бұрын

    @@AL5520 Firstly, the Black Beetle was not a Budd project. It was a private venture by the New York Central, and it reached 183MPH, not 164MPH. You seem to be under the impression the 0 series was much faster than it actually was: its top speed was 130MPH, 125MPH in revenue service. Secondly, the Metroliners' reliability was only unspectacular by US standards. 73% availability rate was considered perfectly workable by the standards of most contemporary European EMU designs, and while that got worse as they aged, the fact the 8 rebuilt cars had over twice the mean distance between failure shows the issues weren't unsolvable - the problem was a lack of money to overhaul the propulsion system rather than just move stuff around to reduce overheating. Thirdly, Siemens products are not better. They look more modern, but the Charger has a distance between failures about 1/5th that of the P42DCs they're supposed to replace, and the Venture has proven so unreliable they're being withdrawn repeatedly from service and substituted with Amfleets that Amtrak is bringing back from retirement. I don't care how many new shiny features they have - if they don't work, then passengers never experience them.

  • @AL5520

    @AL5520

    2 ай бұрын

    @@GintaPPE1000 I know exactly what was the speed of the 0 and, for that time, it was the fastest, and more importantly constant. The Metroliners might have had a higher theoretical speed but in service it rarely maxed out at 120 mph, which is lower than the constant 130 mph (and later 137 mph) of the 0. As for the availability of Metroliners, it was around 60% and at times even reached 40%.

  • @briandynamite7942
    @briandynamite79422 ай бұрын

    If gm didn’t make absolute trash for engined the spv2000 would have worked and maybe budd would be around, but no

  • @GintaPPE1000

    @GintaPPE1000

    2 ай бұрын

    The GM engines and transmissions weren't the problem on the SPV-2000. They were taken straight out of commercial buses and trucks. The problem was how Budd designed the cooling, ventilation, and water pump systems: they were all electrically-powered because that's what the numpties in Europe were doing rather than having them being driven mechanically off the diesel engines themselves, and Budd was blindly copying what they did in an attempt to compete. That was compounded further by them selected a British diesel engine as the APU, and mounting everything underfloor in a cramped arrangement that overheated very frequently. When the diesel failed, it would bring the whole car to a stop because the propulsion diesels would soon overheat without cooling water being pumped through them.

  • @briandynamite7942

    @briandynamite7942

    Ай бұрын

    @@GintaPPE1000 I didn’t know this thank you,

  • @coconutmall333
    @coconutmall3332 ай бұрын

    Bi-level Superliner’s, Amfleet’s, Silverliner’s, and RDC’s are the steel of bangers by the Budd’s manufacture, and now the Transit systems can’t get those at all anymore, well the ‘Build, Back, Better Act.’ Is completely a laughingstock, and the Infrastructure is started to worn out like rust and dried. Poor sleepy joe should’ve just quit being a president. But I guess he wanna continue to fight his country, and now I had to live in with these two Boomers beefing and wanna debate to be president. Trump should be in jail where he belongs.💯💀 Note - **I don’t support politics, nor their ideologies, or controversial agendas about American’s political. I am not a liberalism either. So it just my opinion. *

  • @Mart_7512

    @Mart_7512

    2 ай бұрын

    About the politics, I unsubbed Our Changing Climate after he became *TOO* politically incorrect. He forgets that Western Europe is the best place for urbanism, and is *CAPITALIST.*

  • @TheRandCrews

    @TheRandCrews

    2 ай бұрын

    wtf is this schizo posting should’ve just left the first part of the paragraph, just garnering unwanted attention then goes put out a disclaimer

  • @lachlanbrown3112
    @lachlanbrown31122 ай бұрын

    I am very confused

  • @nether_bat

    @nether_bat

    2 ай бұрын

    Budd was famous for their use of stainless steel in trains

  • @wobblebee1242
    @wobblebee12422 ай бұрын

    Budd don't break

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