[SFS] The time I told someone to BREAK a train, instead of FIX it... | Stories from the Shop

Sometimes you gotta break a few eggs to make an omelet, right?
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  • @TheBeeMan1994
    @TheBeeMan19945 ай бұрын

    For those of you, who want to learn, and who are like "Well this tourist/museum railroad has (X) locomotive that has a wore out 567, how come they dont fix it if its that simple?" One, the obvious, funding. And two, there's many different variations of the early EMD engines, The early 567s have a lot of variation compared to the later engines. 567s were originally built by Winton Engine Works in 1938, they were designed to replace the predecessor, 201A. Winton (and before then Cleveland Engine Works) built engines for GM-EMD, Winton was purchased by GM in 1941. Until about the mid 1950s the 567s had a lot of major redesigns and revisions to fix issues they were prone to have. There were 4 567 variations that were significantly different to each other during this time, the 567V, 567W (Winton), 567A and 567B (GM). The V and W blocks are unique to their own designs and share nothing in common with any later engines (They even have a belt driven blower instead of gear drive). The A and B series were closely designed to the more modern C block, with a gear drive blower assembly but had its differences, mainly the one piece camshafts and radically different head design, and a significantly different cooling system A and B blocks can easily be determined by their square air box and crankcase covers. Then came the C block, this set the standard for EMD engines for years to come, they have round air box and crankcase covers, "modern" heads, split type camshafts, and the new power pack assembly that EMD used from there on. So the issue that museums run into with early first generation power, is that there are no parts available for the 567V/W blocks, they haven't been produced for at least 60 years. The A and B blocks were able to be sent to EMD and be "retrofitted" and "reclassed" as a 567 AC or BC block, this hasn't been a thing for at least 50 years. So if your stuck with a non-updated A or B block, if any parts fail, That's it, its done for, your not getting any replacements unless you can find NOS parts, or machine them. These blocks were very notorious for breaking camshafts (they were one piece machined instead of segmented like later EMDs) and cracking heads, along with cooling system issues. An updated AC or BC block can accept nearly all the parts a later C series engine can use, including 645 power assemblies (The engines I run at work have 16-645BC engines). These engines are significantly easier to fix and repair and can be fixed with off the shelf parts. So unless there is someone rich out there who wants to completely restart production of replacement parts for W/V/A/B blocks, the ones remaining operational are on borrowed time, any significant failure will sideline the locomotive forever, unless the entire engine assembly is replaced, which could require modifications to the electrical, frame, and air equipment on board. Another fun little tidbit: When looking at an EMD engine, for example a 16-645 E3A, The numbers before the hyphen is the number of cylinders, the number after the hyphen is the power assemblies cubic inches, The next letter is the engine family (or major revision) (E), 3 is Railroad application, and A signifies a minor revision (Like on 710s where you have G3, G3A, G3B, G3C etc) And when swapping something like a C block to 645 power assemblies, it requires not only the assemblies themselves, but revised balancers for the cam and crankshaft, otherwise, the difference in weight can make the engine literally shake itself apart.

  • @Hyce777

    @Hyce777

    5 ай бұрын

    Good lord Beeman, thank you for the details on these engines. That's cool. I knew there was a square and round cover 567 but that was about it... lol!

  • @user-ch4ff9ps7r
    @user-ch4ff9ps7r5 ай бұрын

    There was a time at the shop I work at where a customer whose transmission was going out wanted to get a new one via warranty since the job was quoted at around $2,500, however he couldn't for whatever reason unless a separate party like a shop broke it. So he bribed us with Olive Garden gift cards to take his car out, I think it was an older Mercedes E350, and try to break the transmission. Behind the shop, we revved that thing to the moon and dropped it from neutral to drive, which is a great way to break an automatic, and eventually, after many minutes of pure bliss, it did. On the service ticket we wrote that it "failed under light to moderate use," and the dealership paid for labor and a new transmission. You could say that we prioritize customer service, LOL.

  • @Stooltoad5017

    @Stooltoad5017

    5 ай бұрын

    Olive Garden gift cards? That’s one way to bribe people lol.

  • @mildly_miffed_man1414

    @mildly_miffed_man1414

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Stooltoad5017i’d commit crimes for an olive garden gift card

  • @TheInternationalHarvesterMan
    @TheInternationalHarvesterMan5 ай бұрын

    As a wise man once said, sometimes you gotta break a few omelets to make an egg… wait

  • @Junction_Shorts

    @Junction_Shorts

    5 ай бұрын

    Bro got confused

  • @stuckonthepot6187

    @stuckonthepot6187

    5 ай бұрын

    You got to omelet a break before you egg some makes

  • @ninjadoge2006

    @ninjadoge2006

    5 ай бұрын

    your not locked in here with me I'm locked in here with you... no wait the, the other way

  • @JohnSchuster-yc6dp

    @JohnSchuster-yc6dp

    5 ай бұрын

    Fr

  • @renafae

    @renafae

    5 ай бұрын

    Making the mother of all eggs here Jack! Can't fret over every omelette

  • @AllisonChainz3718
    @AllisonChainz37185 ай бұрын

    Sounds like if Mr. Smiley couldn't break that engine it could survive anything.

  • @jamesTBurke

    @jamesTBurke

    5 ай бұрын

    Maby but he ain't me

  • @Spudstered

    @Spudstered

    5 ай бұрын

    @@jamesTBurke what did you, WHAT DID YOU DO?

  • @jamesTBurke

    @jamesTBurke

    5 ай бұрын

    @Spudstered I have demo experience

  • @737Garrus

    @737Garrus

    5 ай бұрын

    If it can survive Mr. Smiley, it's *Certified Indestructible.*

  • @jeremiahharrison9749
    @jeremiahharrison97495 ай бұрын

    Smiley Guy: "Oh I wonder what Im gonna do on shift today--" Mark (making bird noises): "BREAK THE CHOO CHOO!!!"

  • @peregrina7701
    @peregrina77015 ай бұрын

    I think you found the best possible compromise. If that choo choo didn't break under the tender caresses of Smile Man it could probably be trusted for a few weeks until the parts arrived. There's something to be said for proof testing in such cases. Thanks for the fun story :)

  • @genoobtlp4424

    @genoobtlp4424

    5 ай бұрын

    That’s the point of testing this shit: try to break it, so it can’t happen accidentally (unless you give it to enough people, they’ll figure out ways to create accidents)

  • @SheepInACart

    @SheepInACart

    5 ай бұрын

    @@genoobtlp4424 That logic creates as many issues as it prevents, because thrashing stuff can create problems that take days or even weeks to show (that small metal chip or hairline fracture can be invisible on the day, but grenade the entire motor suddenly later), and the excessive wear isn't either accounted for in the maintenance schedule nor felt evenly. For example I've swapped oil/filters both before and after a track day and its come out blacker after than before, despite only a few hundred clicks between.. if I'd considered it a shake down and driven with that oil it would have caused failure of something before next scheduled change. Or to put it another way, you fire a proof round in a new firearm and thats good, you do NOT fire a proof round every time you reassemble it after maintenance, that would be bad.

  • @Spook_Boi
    @Spook_Boi5 ай бұрын

    poor tom. if i was told "see that thing? im gonna look the other way and everyone else will too, you have five hours to break it. go nuts" i would be fuming if i couldnt cause something to budge and break

  • @Pentium100MHz
    @Pentium100MHz5 ай бұрын

    That makes sense. The guy tried to break it on purpose, could not do it, that means that most likely the locomotive was good enough to be used. Especially since, as I understand it, it would not have been a huge deal if it broke while it was being used.

  • @SternLX
    @SternLX5 ай бұрын

    Upper Management: "Is that man trying to break that unit?" Shop Personnel: "Nope, testing it's durability." 😁

  • @1TruNub
    @1TruNub5 ай бұрын

    Yes, a Diesel Masquerading as a Steam Engine might be a problem

  • @genoobtlp4424

    @genoobtlp4424

    5 ай бұрын

    Well, they used to include steam generators to masquerade as a steam engine for what the coaches were concerned….

  • @wta1518

    @wta1518

    5 ай бұрын

    So the water goes in the fuel lines, right?

  • @nicholasdowns3502

    @nicholasdowns3502

    5 ай бұрын

    @@wta1518, yes, and the fuel goes in the water lines. Makes steam pressure so much faster that way.

  • @Darthalamus

    @Darthalamus

    5 ай бұрын

    @@nicholasdowns3502 it also makes loco go bang much faster also water in fuel lines would put out the fire and fill the smokebox and firebox with water

  • @Blur4strike

    @Blur4strike

    5 ай бұрын

    Well, inside of every GE there's an Alco waiting to get out.

  • @itsjustaviper
    @itsjustaviper5 ай бұрын

    This loco was never seen again after it was broken beyond comprehension 😂😂

  • @Hybris51129
    @Hybris511295 ай бұрын

    I would really like to hear more about the time you yelled at a guy for violating a blue flag in the shop. I think you said he got fired for other things but the blue flag/lock out-tag out violation is what stands out most in my mind.

  • @solarusthelonghaulerrailfa3226
    @solarusthelonghaulerrailfa32265 ай бұрын

    Interesting when you want it to break it won’t break but when you don’t want it to break it breaks 😊😊

  • @DumbGoogle-yz9cr
    @DumbGoogle-yz9cr5 ай бұрын

    This reminds me of a recent maintenance issue I had with our work Van's, no where near as fun but here it is, So I'm handed over a van from previous shift and told it might not start and it had to be jump started earlier in the day, I'm a non van critical role that day so I'm not swapping van for someone who really needs it and we had no spares, So our Van's do regularly go flat (fridge, freezer, alarms, cctv etc etc equipment that sometimes likes to stay on) so I'm letting the van run idle while I load and unload not turning it off for well over an hour so if its charging it has a hope to build charge and sort itself out. A few hour pass of normal running and bam no start, I'm walking distance from returning Van's so I walk over grab another van and jump start it again. At this point I'm calling maintenance needing a jump in the morning is ok, during mid run nope something is wrong. Put the call in explained the situation and I'm asked will it start now? And I say yes I jumped it again let it idle for a while, I'm then told if it starts the technician will probably list it as a non fault and charge the company for the call out and do I want to continue and log the fault.... I'm like seriously? Yes it's not fit to go out. I complete the fault log and hang up, explained it to my boss who then said so it wont start right? I nodded Then proceed to return to the van and turn EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL ON left it for 20 minutes came back and the van wouldn't start and sure enough they came in and actually fixed the issue The fun of maintenance, procedures and working the system to keep everything running!

  • @PowerTrain611
    @PowerTrain6115 ай бұрын

    Old EMDs are indestructible, man. You can run them forever on hopes and prayers, they do not care. And yeah, those modular power assemblies make life SO much easier. You can change out an entire power pack in about 4 hours (God willing) with basic hand tools, save for some special EMD specific tools, but those are easy to come by or find substitutions for in a pinch. Plenty of stuff that uses 567 blocks now runs with 645 power packs because 567 parts are getting pretty hard to come by these days, but 645 stuff is still plentiful. Reading and Northern's ex-NS F units for example. This is why I love EMDs.

  • @FlamingTightyWhiteis
    @FlamingTightyWhiteis5 ай бұрын

    I'm literally the same machinist, just in the automotive setting. Test it like an airplane, beat on it see what happens

  • @KPen3750
    @KPen37505 ай бұрын

    Either God was holding the valves in or the engine just kept working out of total spite!

  • @peregrina7701

    @peregrina7701

    5 ай бұрын

    My money's on spite.

  • @jerrysgardentractorsengine2243

    @jerrysgardentractorsengine2243

    4 ай бұрын

    3155, spitting up oil: “I didn’t hear no bell!”

  • @chrisgill7824
    @chrisgill78245 ай бұрын

    The camera looks so much better, We get a better view its running at 60fps, and It looks like better effects too. It is definitely better for the channel and I am happy to help. 😁 It's good enough to read the text on the boxes on the shelves behind you lol.

  • @Hyce777

    @Hyce777

    5 ай бұрын

    Thank you again, my friend!

  • @andrewreynolds4949
    @andrewreynolds49495 ай бұрын

    Perhaps we need a 101 on block maintenance now, this was a great primer. Now I understand why some mechanics at my local museum say the F9, CF7 and SW8 all have (mostly) the same engine block: the 567s had the larger-bored 645 assemblies installed, even if the block itself is original. As long as the loco can pull freight, might as well get some use out of it while waiting for parts. If I'm reading correctly, BNSF downrated the GP50s as the GP25, possibly by changing the governor, gave them new, less powerful traction motors and removed the Super Series wheelslip system

  • @jtw9840
    @jtw98405 ай бұрын

    I like how this story gave the front-line workers an opportunity to prove their point that the locomotive needed to be repaired prior to going out for duty by "breaking" it before it left. The fact that it couldn't be broken is ironic, but it demonstrated that at least one person in "management" could see things from their perspective and was willing to give them a shot. On an unrelated note, the new camera looks nice (well, the images it captures look nice--you know what I mean).😊

  • @gdrriley420
    @gdrriley4205 ай бұрын

    RPM also increased over the years which helped power. 567 started at 800 and by the end were at 900 which is where 645 started, part of the issue with the 50s was running the 645 at 950RPM, it’s been solved now. 710 run in the low 900s or at 950 although they are design for 1000 RPM On MPI locomotives 645 got to T2 and EMD offers the 710 in upto T3

  • @Hyce777

    @Hyce777

    5 ай бұрын

    Oh cool! Thanks man.

  • @SheepInACart

    @SheepInACart

    5 ай бұрын

    That is correct, but to be fair, 800 to 1000rpm is a 25% increase in power strokes (and 710cu vs 567cu is another 25% in displacement) engine output went up 450% in the same time. Power increase is instead mostly from higher boost pressure and increased exhaust temperatures, although this is of course cumulative with impact of better port flow, increased combustion efficiency, higher rpm and lower losses. It interest me how much trends in large diesel engines during the horsepower wars mimics the trend in piston aircraft engines during ww2, and how displacements are rising more rapidly and RPM falling again as fuel efficiency, emissions and total lifetime costs once again take over design considerations (increasing power further would have little impact on freight without increasing either train speeds or locomotive weights, although who knows what the future holds major changes to factor of adhesion could revolutionize this).

  • @EWLR89
    @EWLR895 ай бұрын

    Hearing about the EMD power assemblies it really makes sense on the longevity of those EMD units. Seeing GP7/9 still working on short lines and grain elevators when their contemporaries from GE, Alco, and others were scrapped decades ago. Also pulling power assemblies (as well as foot crew safety) played into ATSF rebuilding all those F7's into CF7's. Great shop talk a usual Hyse.

  • @andrewreynolds4949

    @andrewreynolds4949

    5 ай бұрын

    I've heard GE has a thing for planned obsolescence, as well...

  • @EWLR89

    @EWLR89

    5 ай бұрын

    @andrewreynolds4949 I can understand that nowadays, but in the 60-70's?

  • @andrewreynolds4949

    @andrewreynolds4949

    5 ай бұрын

    @@EWLR89 True, back then they were more worried about trying to finally build something that actually ran reliably

  • @crazyjack3357
    @crazyjack33575 ай бұрын

    Listening to Mark talk about preventable maintenance While I'm try to fix a controller oh yeah it all coming together

  • @FuelFire
    @FuelFire5 ай бұрын

    That thumbnail is absolute bomb. Wings did an awesome job once again. And the new cam is really nice too.

  • @Crlarl
    @Crlarl5 ай бұрын

    Now _that's_ dynamic breaking!

  • @stratagama
    @stratagama5 ай бұрын

    Fun facts that maintenance with EMD is why Chicago's Metra only uses EMD locomotives for its commuters service. So much so that they are repurposing freight locomotives to passenger service instead of buying something more modern and better suited to the tighter passenger train operations. I suspect as they go into widespread operation they will have a ton of derailments like the sdp40f had back in the day

  • @andrewreynolds4949

    @andrewreynolds4949

    5 ай бұрын

    The reasons why the SDP40f was so prone to derailments (steam boiler sloshing, harmonic forces with lightweight baggage cars, and the truck bolster design) don't really apply to the SD70MACH, it's unlikely they will cause any significant problems

  • @stratagama

    @stratagama

    5 ай бұрын

    @@andrewreynolds4949 Fair enough, the articles I read set up the sdp40f had derailment problems because of the 3 axel bogies were too big and lack the adequate rotation capability to navigate the tight curves of major terminus stations. But but if that's just straight up incorrect then I humbly eat my words

  • @andrewreynolds4949

    @andrewreynolds4949

    5 ай бұрын

    @@stratagama That's likely the issue particularly with the Chicago area and other large termini, but something to note is the SD70MACH has much better, more flexible wheelsets than the SDP40f did. I look forward to seeing how they do; the main complaint I see about them is they're perceived as too large, too heavy, and thus too inefficient for commuter service, but I wonder if the extra axles might help with acceleration.

  • @00Zy99

    @00Zy99

    Ай бұрын

    @@andrewreynolds4949 The middle axles are unpowered, making the MACHs A1A-A1A, like the old E-units. The energy that would have gone to them is diverted for HEP. Also, its worth noting that Metra had (technically still has, iirc) the F40C on roster. That was essentially the HEP version of the SDP40F, with six axle trucks and all. And by all accounts the F40Cs gave excellent service until retirement a few years ago (though, as noted, they MAY still have a couple in reserve).

  • @patrickoguinn4553
    @patrickoguinn4553Ай бұрын

    I worked for the AT&SF in the 70s and 80s so I love your railroad stories and I can really relate.

  • @locomotiveAlex1996
    @locomotiveAlex19965 ай бұрын

    Typical that the one time an EMD 50 series unit might been forgiven for breaking and the thing shows uncanny reliability... we here in the UK call that sods law XD

  • @Its-Just-Zip
    @Its-Just-Zip5 ай бұрын

    I've worked in a couple of situations with maintenance people who are rightfully very proud of their work. But if I need a truck to run and I've got one that is borderline operable it's going to have to start running. I think this solution was the best possible one because it lets the machinists keep pride in their work by being pretty sure it's not going to break and it also lets one of them have one hell of a time trying to break it.

  • @Wizarth
    @Wizarth5 ай бұрын

    I'm amused that you had to tell him to break it. Any crew I've worked in, it'd be: "We've been given X hours to test it, to make sure it doesn't *emphasis* break. If it *emphasis* breaks, they can't won't release it." "Oh, yes, we need to be sure it won't *emphasis* break, gotcha boss, I'll test it REAL thoroughly."

  • @TheLonelyCowboy1958
    @TheLonelyCowboy19585 ай бұрын

    I love how you mentioned the whole cylinder assembly stuff with the big diesel engines. Some of the older two stroke detroit diesels, you can almost do the same thing. it has cylinder liners. you take the head off, take off the oil pan, take out the pistons, and then the cylinder liners, and, you put new rings on the pistons, put the piston in the new liner assembly (thats how i watched a detroit guy build up a 4-53 detroit) and you slide the assembly into the block (any Detroit guys, correct me if i am wrong) I think cylinder liners are awesome as hell. Thanks for the amazing content as always Hyce.

  • @Grigori423
    @Grigori4235 ай бұрын

    Fun fact: a friend of mine who is working with me on electrical maintenance only for 3 months in our company (pretty skiled guy, he know the drill, he is mounting automatic gates for houses in his free time) have seen today electro-pneumatic valve (pretty small, no more than 6 bars of pressure and small dimensions of the piping) that overheats due to shortcut on the coil to the point that it blew off. It never happened to me for like 5 years straight, and other older guys also never has seen this before. So some valves can work years, other ones- not so much. It was fine, part was changed quickly and the machine is working again, but Mark relased the video in perfect day 😁

  • @wilfstor3078
    @wilfstor30784 ай бұрын

    Surprisingly, some EMD 710s were able to somehow meet Tier 2, CPKCs GP-20C-ECOs are examples of this (although they went with T0+ to cut costs) EMD have also apparently, somehow got the 710G to meet Tier 4 for use in marine applications

  • @Kraigthecanadian
    @Kraigthecanadian5 ай бұрын

    Another way to look at it is it was a good way to see just how far things can go and hold together cause you never truly know till you find it and it helps confidence in parts

  • @Darthalamus
    @Darthalamus5 ай бұрын

    These broken loco pics need to go in a 321 go meme

  • @sylumgand
    @sylumgand5 ай бұрын

    I cant imagine dropping a valve while under load is not gonna cause A LOT more damage than just one power assembly. I don't see the turbo surviving as its almost guaranteed to send metal out the wide open exhaust ports. I'd also be curious if the piston could stay intact after smashing valves into the head a few dozen times every second it continues to rotate.

  • @hoosierfarmkid

    @hoosierfarmkid

    5 ай бұрын

    Not sure for turbo stuff but in terms of the piston no one at that level cares. That’s a machine shops problem if the piston and/or head dies as it all gets replaced simultaneously with how those engines are built.

  • @danielmkubacki
    @danielmkubacki5 ай бұрын

    The Locomotive was like I "You shall not pass!"

  • @drewbarker8504
    @drewbarker85045 ай бұрын

    An excellent case of “the principle of the matter” haha. One inane shop story for me is when I was working as a welder at a restoration shop, we had one project with an argumentative customer who wanted us to cut up a pristine ‘50 Chevy fleetline coupe to put the good metal into his Swiss cheese fleetline of the same year-including cutting off the entire top of the hood car and swapping it onto the rusty rotten car. (And was painfully slow to pay.)

  • @Hyce777

    @Hyce777

    5 ай бұрын

    ... Just, why? Lol. That must've been heartbreaking.

  • @drewbarker8504

    @drewbarker8504

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Hyce777 sentimentality I believe. (Didn’t want to swap the internals into the “new” chassis.) It was his dad’s only car from new. Granola bar rust. Frame bent like a V. Literally filled up a whole shop vac vacuuming up the floor, since welding to rust is hard haha.

  • @44R0Ndin
    @44R0Ndin3 ай бұрын

    Gotta say, love the new camera! It is indeed a marked improvement to the old one, however as I only watch videos here on KZread I am not privy to any of the "glitches" you speak of. I can easily believe they happen, older webcams of a few brands are NOTORIOUS for it, but I'm just saying that I have no evidence that I have seen with my own two eyes.

  • @HylianDefender
    @HylianDefender5 ай бұрын

    "Mr. Smiley, run this choo choo like it's in the ES&DT"

  • @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis
    @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis4 ай бұрын

    No wonder no one ordered any more of the BL2s, the only practical option to do maintenance if something would be to take at least part of the roof off!

  • @YourLocalRailfan
    @YourLocalRailfan2 ай бұрын

    I need more stories from the shop videos

  • @shimesu443
    @shimesu4435 ай бұрын

    Some say that 3155 is still out there, looking for Mr. Smiley.... He tried to break her. Ohhhh, he tried so hard, but she wouldn't be broken. And now, she wants her vengeance! Or her assemblies swapped out again. That's fine too.

  • @fitzayadventures
    @fitzayadventures5 ай бұрын

    It's the mentality of bosses like that has trains stalling out on the side off mountains forcing conductors to tie down 50 60 cars and every train to need dog caught but as long as so and so has good numbers who cares right.

  • @Damien.D
    @Damien.D5 ай бұрын

    In fact it was a pretty clever move to do such an heavy stress test. If it fails, it fails, but it didn't, more confidently proving that it could go back to work.

  • @kastenolsen9577
    @kastenolsen95775 ай бұрын

    My Grandfather was jr vp for emd rebuild division in Chicago and I heard stories and saw pictures of some incredible things. Some of the pics looked like King Kong grabbed a gp 20 and twisted it like warm taffy. Ever see an sd 25 bent into a u shape. Thats what happens when lift cables break.

  • @billyrueckert5113
    @billyrueckert51134 ай бұрын

    Can't wait to buy some merch when the new stuff comes out. The camera was an excellent choice, too!

  • @fsj197811
    @fsj197811Ай бұрын

    Great story!!! Thanks for sharing. :-) :-) 🙂 My dad was a lead man for TWA airlines and this reminds me of some of the stories he's told me.

  • @herpderp264
    @herpderp2645 ай бұрын

    Happy Sunday Hyce!

  • @mafarnz
    @mafarnz5 ай бұрын

    The thing that made the 50 series need special power assembles is electronic fuel injection.

  • @Hyce777

    @Hyce777

    5 ай бұрын

    no? they still had a governor and mechanical rack

  • @mafarnz

    @mafarnz

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Hyce777 maybe I’m wrong but I could’ve sworn that was the 645 variant that had the EFI? Maybe that’s not it then. My bad.

  • @Marten_Zeug
    @Marten_Zeug5 ай бұрын

    How Hyce lit up, when he was playing as the mechaic that was allowed to break the coco. It brithented my day absolutetly!

  • @ColtonRMagby
    @ColtonRMagby5 ай бұрын

    Now, THAT'S a tough choo-choo!

  • @bradleymorgan8223
    @bradleymorgan82234 ай бұрын

    You have 5 hours, BREAK THE CHOO CHOO!

  • @SeanJAnimations
    @SeanJAnimations5 ай бұрын

    Damn the camera quality on this is just delightful. Im excited for this story. :)

  • @jonterrell6395
    @jonterrell63955 ай бұрын

    Love these stories

  • @cyborgsheep6077
    @cyborgsheep60775 ай бұрын

    That moment when making things explode becomes part of the job. BEST MOMENT EVER! never experienced it personally but can`t wait till it happens.

  • @Not_Loading
    @Not_Loading5 ай бұрын

    These stories are always fun because it relates so much to my work. I build locomotive pod generators, we have the same stresses working on these as Hyce did. Sometimes we just have to rush them trying to get them built and through testing because a customer has a locomotive down.

  • @Satchmoeddie
    @Satchmoeddie2 ай бұрын

    I think the GP40X became the GP50. The wheel slip control was a doppler RADAR pointed at the ground and a comparator that compared the RADAR speed to the wheel speed. In the late 1970s it was "cutting edge" for the ATSF. Doppler RADAR is not all that accurate and the whole system was kind of janky anyway.

  • @CDROM-lq9iz
    @CDROM-lq9iz5 ай бұрын

    Hey so I have a question, when you guys would change PAs, did you always change them as a head, liner, piston, and the conn rod? I'm curious because where I work, we usually change PAs as "minis" (meaning without the rod). We only do "maxis" (with the rod) when there's been damage to the rod.

  • @Hyce777

    @Hyce777

    5 ай бұрын

    You know; I'm not sure if they took the rod with or not... been too long.

  • @CDROM-lq9iz

    @CDROM-lq9iz

    5 ай бұрын

    @Hyce777 I see. I can somewhat imagine both ways being beneficial. Pulling the snap ring out from under the piston carrier (and even more so getting it back in) can be a next level pain in the butt so it might save some man hours to just pull the rod too and call it a day. But the flipside of that would have to be that, in order to pull a blade rod, you'd then have to pull the basket rod side first, so now you'd have to do twice the work.

  • @bluescrew3124
    @bluescrew31245 ай бұрын

    Stories from the shop is my favorite

  • @brandonmiller7466
    @brandonmiller74665 ай бұрын

    Diesels in tractors and heavy trucks are the same way of being able to replace sleeve and all

  • @michaelhayes1678
    @michaelhayes16785 ай бұрын

    Really neat story, sir! Thanks for sharing it! :D

  • @Gunny426HemiPlymouth
    @Gunny426HemiPlymouth5 ай бұрын

    Great stuff like always hyce.

  • @kfcgaming4891
    @kfcgaming48915 ай бұрын

    Love the story hyce I hope you tell more story and love the new goPro

  • @Halfstep2024
    @Halfstep20245 ай бұрын

    Dude I LOVE that Baldwin boiler plate! I’ve been hunting one forever but everyone knows how cool and pricey they are lol

  • @taylorstout2067
    @taylorstout20675 ай бұрын

    I love the stories from the shop

  • @patricksheary2219
    @patricksheary22195 ай бұрын

    Mark the fates were playing, if you didn’t want it to break guess what?! 😂 That was a fun story. Also liked your instructional description of the valves and all that. Not knowing much about diesel choo choos I really appreciated this. The new web cam is fab echo a shout out thanks to Chris Gill! Also liking the new T shirt can’t wait to get one and seeing the new store! As always many thanks Professor for sharing your shop stories-you’re an awesome storyteller. As always cheers to you my friend!

  • @Dan_Gyros
    @Dan_Gyros5 ай бұрын

    Did quality control for a summer job back in highschool, and the best days were always the "break the **** outta this" days!

  • @morofry
    @morofry5 ай бұрын

    Anything is a smoke machine if you use it wrong enough. Mr. Smiley just didn't use it wrong enough.

  • @Madge110
    @Madge1105 ай бұрын

    I didn't get a chance to see this the day it came out but I'm glade I'd didn't. Now I have several videos I can watch while recovering for wisdom tooth surgery

  • @Hyce777

    @Hyce777

    5 ай бұрын

    Oof! I've always heard that's a tough one. Hope you're healing fine :)

  • @Madge110

    @Madge110

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Hyce777 it's definitely been tough healing pretty slow. But I'll be alright. 😊

  • @teamrose2134
    @teamrose21345 ай бұрын

    Mr Smily couldn’t make the engine go ping

  • @bluescrew3124
    @bluescrew31245 ай бұрын

    New webcam looks great

  • @JrFlexing909
    @JrFlexing9095 ай бұрын

    LoL Its like walking up to someone. "HHeeeeeeyyyyyy, how you doing" Tom you like breaking stuff XD break that train do what ever it takes. LoL I laughing so hard at that.

  • @michaelimbesi2314
    @michaelimbesi23145 ай бұрын

    New camera looks good

  • @CN_2992
    @CN_29925 ай бұрын

    This is my favorite series 14:44 *casually pulls out M1A2 abrams*

  • @MrJeep75
    @MrJeep755 ай бұрын

    Great story

  • @Vincent5482
    @Vincent54825 ай бұрын

    YEESSSSSS new shirts

  • @SteamfanScott
    @SteamfanScott5 ай бұрын

    Love the shop stories! Always entertaining and just imagining the smile and joy of the machinist getting to spend his whole day trying his hardest to break the Choo Choo. I bet he had that ol diesel singin! 🎶 My luck though, I’d have thrown a rod out the side of the block, lol.

  • @maverick4045
    @maverick40455 ай бұрын

    Sometime this year with RGS 41 restored, you guys should bring RGS 20 to Durango and double head the two. Would be like the olden days.😊

  • @Hyce777

    @Hyce777

    5 ай бұрын

    RGS 41 is back at Knotts Berry Farm in California.

  • @maverick4045

    @maverick4045

    5 ай бұрын

    @Hyce777 oh I didn't know it was just visiting durango

  • @pootispiker2866
    @pootispiker28665 ай бұрын

    I want to hear every story about this mechanic

  • @COASTERFAN-sw9hj
    @COASTERFAN-sw9hj5 ай бұрын

    there are also now 1010J prime movers in the new SD70AH-T4!

  • @A_person473
    @A_person4735 ай бұрын

    Very funny how he would light up at breaking a choo choo.

  • @ryano.5149
    @ryano.51495 ай бұрын

    I mean, clearly the locomotive heard you tell Mr. Smiley, and it was just gonna hang in there out of nothing but all the pure, unadulterated spite an EMD product can muster... lol

  • @garysprandel1817
    @garysprandel18175 ай бұрын

    Of course had you just gone ah what are the odds and just released it the loco would have grenaded the prime mover moving it to the ready track. Remember hearing about the issues with the SD and GP50s. Remember when the GP50s were point on just about every hot train and then they weren't. Funny thing was last year or the year before post from Illinois Railway Museum pops up on my Facebook feed announcing their acquisition of a CNW SD50. In my head I'm thinking that can't be because museums are supposed to have locomotives that were out of service or obsolete before my birth or running out their last revenue miles as a teen not the new locomotives me and my crew chased in our mid and late 20s.

  • @gameshistory5644
    @gameshistory56445 ай бұрын

    15:15 on, American engineering at it's best lol

  • @Alawo-
    @Alawo-5 ай бұрын

    Chris gill is a real one

  • @seankaiser2505
    @seankaiser25055 ай бұрын

    Would love to hear if there are any stories about the SD75s which have come to call the Everett - Longview Junction runs home

  • @matthewmiller6068
    @matthewmiller60685 ай бұрын

    Seems reasonable... Stress test as hard as you have means because you can only do so much to try and ensure that it's in good operating condition when you don't have the right parts. At least then if it goes back and blows up you did the best and you told people the risk.

  • @brenthinshaw8391
    @brenthinshaw83915 ай бұрын

    Running it off the end of track counts as breaking it

  • @Dannyedelman4231
    @Dannyedelman42315 ай бұрын

    SD50/25 are the USS Nevada of locomotives

  • @dab20shorts21
    @dab20shorts213 ай бұрын

    Hello hyce

  • @mightyocelot
    @mightyocelot5 ай бұрын

    Hmm, yes, hammer…

  • @patrickmcneilly4293
    @patrickmcneilly42935 ай бұрын

    "Weird differences" So, every locomotive is basically how every Corvette owner describes his Corvette?

  • @Hyce777

    @Hyce777

    5 ай бұрын

    lol pretty much

  • @carstrainsandcrossings8639
    @carstrainsandcrossings86395 ай бұрын

    Gen set

  • @grantthomas5501
    @grantthomas55015 ай бұрын

    Can’t beat an EMD 2 stroke diesel

  • @trevorhaddox6884
    @trevorhaddox68845 ай бұрын

    Task unsuccessfully failed.

  • @YourLocalRailfan
    @YourLocalRailfan21 күн бұрын

    Big choo choo

  • @michaelbrennan5409
    @michaelbrennan54095 ай бұрын

    When I saw that the title said “SFS” I thought it was about space flight simulator lol

  • @robertbalazslorincz8218
    @robertbalazslorincz82185 ай бұрын

    EMDs being f*cking *invincible:*

  • @kevwebb2637
    @kevwebb26374 ай бұрын

    How many times have you came across a GE Engine after a blown turbo? Since GE locomotives are being known to blowing their turbos.

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