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"Getting Off on the Right Foot" -- Railroad Safety Film circa 1972 

R.J. McKay
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GETTING OFF ON THE RIGHT FOOT by the Union Pacific Railroad, is by far and away THE BEST railroad safety film I have ever watched . . . in my opinion. This is the film that was shown when I hired out braking for the Santa Fe in January 1976 -- the film was just a few years old then. I don't know if the Archie Bunker looking switchman (ALL IN THE FAMILY was a popular TV show about the same time) was an actual old head switchman, or a professional Hollywood stunt man, but if he was the latter, he picked up the ways and mannerisms of a real switchman fast!!!
I had great appreciation for the handling of deadly serious matters in a humorous way. This film was so effective that I swear I remembered every frame 30 years later and not only did ALL the info it conveyed stick with me, but when it came my turn to train new railroaders, this film made me realize the importance and effectiveness of using HUMOR to get the point across in training. New employees are overwhelmed with the amount of things they have to learn, so much from books and even more importantly, the tons of things they have to learn and know that doesn't appear in writing. Humor always seems to "make it stick" -- their attention is held when they are instructed, and the vivid pictures and stories stay with them for a lifetime. If you don't believe that humor is effective, just think about some of the most dimwitted people you have met in your life. They could be dumber than a stump, but they seem to recall every joke they have ever heard and can recite them all day long. Anything else they don't understand or can't seem to remember for five minutes. That is why I think this film was so effective. I sure wanted to use it when I trained others, particularly on shortlines, but I never could find it.
A few years ago I searched the Internet, thinking surely someone had posted it on RU-vid or elsewhere. No such luck. Finally a friend of mine came across a VHS tape of it and had me make several copies. I decided that this film was so important, that as a public service more than anything else, that I should digitize it and make it available to working railroaders, wannabe railroaders and others who would benefit by seeing this old film, even if many of the accepted practices shown here are no longer acceptable. The hazards remain the same regardless.
I have a real disdain for referring to approved work practices as "safety rules" or even "safe work practices" when I teach them. What it is, is "RISK MANAGEMENT" -- the risk the Carriers are willing to accept to get the job done. Risk is inherent in everything we do as railroaders, so it is a matter of assessing it, then finding what seems to be an acceptable level, where even if things go wrong, the damage is at least minimized. What was considered as the "safe" way back then when this film was made is now considered UNSAFE -- so unsafe that some of the things have become "cardinal sins" and will result in immediate dismissal from service if you are caught doing them. Even though some of the things shown in this old film as the safe work practice, by 1975 when I hired out, they had become taboo. Others lived on for many more years, with seemingly the early 90s bringing about the biggest changes. Even now, some railroads will still allow getting off and on moving equipment, where others have forbidden it except in case of emergencies. Other things that WERE taboo long ago, like setting and releasing handbrakes from the ground, are now permissible -- apparently the risk assessment was made and it was decided that getting up and on the car (especially in inclement weather) to set or release the handbrake and then getting back down, with all the hand hold and footwork changes, may actually introduce MORE chance of a slip and fall, etc., than doing the same job from the ground. There are ALWAYS tradeoffs and there are dozens more examples of rules being changed to allow a former "unsafe" practice to be done as a SAFE practice. There are other rules and practices that still remain to be changed for the better. Some rules get changed and then changed back several times -- I can't tell you how many times the procedure for riding TANK CARS has been changed on just the BNSF just in the last 10 years or so!!! It gets confusing at times, and a bit frustrating as one may do something that was acceptable yesterday that will get them fired today or vice-versa.
Anyway, enjoy the old film, have a few laughs and most importantly, WORK SAFE and BE SAFE!!!

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29 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 1,1 тыс.   
@rcanterb7126
@rcanterb7126 4 года назад
“A little bit careless, that’s like being a little bit pregnant.” Best quote ever.
@dickJohnsonpeter
@dickJohnsonpeter 4 года назад
He stuck his hand in there. Sometime last Tuesday. Just so you know.
@ActionNewsNetwork
@ActionNewsNetwork 4 года назад
the good old days lol
@1978garfield
@1978garfield 4 года назад
Was anyone else concerned after he said that he said "Come on" and then there is a pause... Is he going to attempt to impregnate the new hires?
@The_Conspiracy_Analyst
@The_Conspiracy_Analyst 4 года назад
but you CAN be a little bit pregant. You can be 1 week pregnant. That's different than being 8 months pregnant, no?
@dsandoval9396
@dsandoval9396 4 года назад
@@The_Conspiracy_Analyst no.
@flounder48
@flounder48 10 лет назад
Mr. Roper was most definitely a Union Pacific Employee. He conducted my student trips (training classes) when I hired on in 1967. Among other things, he walked the class around the entire East [Los Angeles] Yard and named every track from memory. We had to learn them all as part of our training. Years later, after I had left the railroad, he graciously met with me at the East L.A. office (now long gone), rolled out the ink-on-linen plan of the yard, and named all the tracks again so I could take notes. I was just a railfan by then, hoping someday to build a layout based on the yard. The man was exceptional.
@chrisaceglav6579
@chrisaceglav6579 5 лет назад
No
@redrock717
@redrock717 5 лет назад
How come you left the job if I may ask?
@adksherm
@adksherm 5 лет назад
No? Yes! Reminds me of mother's bush!
@yellowpole9651
@yellowpole9651 4 года назад
😢😌
@sab0nes
@sab0nes 3 года назад
That was when the tracks were ok n the streets in Los Angeles? I remember they even had a train track straight into the central USPS office
@Tony511utu
@Tony511utu 4 года назад
You couldn't make a training film like this now. When I was hired in 77 we still did everything they do in this film except ride the tops of the cars. Now, they can't get on or off moving equipment. Retired last year and glad.
@Don-et3yp
@Don-et3yp 4 года назад
I have been gone from UP for nearly 15 years now. When I left no getting on or off moving equipment. All of us old heads were retiring and they were sending the kiddies to school to learn how to run locomotive on he ground. Turned them loose just as soon as they marked up for work. There wasn’t a lot of work that got done with two new hires working the same job. The so called school did not teach them any kind of short cuts to make the work easier and faster. An most of the new hires thought they knew it all anyway, after all they just went to school for six weeks to learn how to play train. I was a safety man and I can tell you one thing about the UP railroad, if they needed something done in a hurry you could break every one of the rules in the book if you got the job done for them and didn’t tear anything up, and no one got hurt and nothing would be said. Oh and they would come to an old head crew to get the job done in a hurry.
@Bohica-tq3ps
@Bohica-tq3ps 4 года назад
Congrats to you two guys on retirement, I pulled the pin in 2009 with 43 years. Started with the Santa Fe as a switchman and finished with BNSF as a conductor. I never walked the top of cars either, but I rode the footboards on engines. Years before I retired they stopped us from getting on or off moving equipment. If the company had done that sooner my back and knees might not hurt so much.
@Syclone0044
@Syclone0044 4 года назад
Wow, from a safety standpoint right away it stuck out to me how they would board relatively fast moving equipment. Can’t say I’m too surprised they’ve ended that practice. I wonder how many total human lives and limbs were lost up to that point? I bet it’s in 5 or 6 digits.
@michlo3393
@michlo3393 3 года назад
Yay for you. Thanks for the 1985 National Agreement too. 👍 You guys single-handedly FUCKED everybody who'd come on after you. And people call US selfish. And for the whole "back in my day" shit, well it must have been nice with your little 4,000-foot train with a full crew to do the work! wow! and a rule book the size of a Denny's menu, how tough.
@jsccs1
@jsccs1 3 года назад
Got four years on myself. In the time I've been on the job they've gotten rid of getting on/off moving equipment, kicking unless stated as allowed in special instructions, gravity drops, and running switch moves. They've also created these... route indicating boxes for switches, which in practice makes it so we can no longer run semi autos.
@rjohnson1690
@rjohnson1690 9 лет назад
"Gravity with all the the horsepower of the Earth is now the engine!"
@SouthernRailPhotography
@SouthernRailPhotography 9 лет назад
+R Johnson OH NO STOP GRAVITY STOP GRAVITY STOP OH NO MOVE GUY MOVE BOXCARS THE GRAVITY TRAIN IS COMING!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@eliotvideos2009
@eliotvideos2009 6 лет назад
R Johnson I think that part got the message across to the viewers lol
@kellypenrod2979
@kellypenrod2979 5 лет назад
An that ain't no joke brothers!! Don't matter if it's a consist of car's, a semi truck, or a dozer, gravity rules!!
@AFriendlyTheo
@AFriendlyTheo 4 года назад
​@@kellypenrod2979 "set yourself in a sled and go down a steep hill- the power of the earth will quickly become apparent to you"- Grandpa Wayne, rest in peace.
@kellypenrod2979
@kellypenrod2979 4 года назад
I will give you a much scarier example Theo, LOOSE your brakes in a semi on a 9% grade with a 125000 lbs!! I am VERY well acquainted with the power of gravity! And like I said, IT AIN'T NO JOKE!!
@ottoroth3066
@ottoroth3066 2 года назад
I am not a rail employee, but am glad there are radios for engine and conductor!
@robertbowman3406
@robertbowman3406 5 лет назад
I was taught on the Great Northern way back in 1966 to never wear 5 finger gloves. If one finger gets hung up on a burr of metal on a rail car you can lose a finger. Instead I was told to go and buy a pair of leather mittens so if you got hung up the mitten would come off all at once. It makes a lot of sense.
@25mfd
@25mfd 5 лет назад
so true... I worked for the Chicago and northwestern... we called those leather mitts "choppers"... I wore them in lew of the 5 finger gloves... they were more spacious
@seththomas9105
@seththomas9105 4 года назад
When I hired on in the 90's most of the old heads wore mitts. Nobody does now.
@Marauder92V
@Marauder92V Год назад
Your reply brought back some memories. My Dad and his father were both PRR. My Dad lost 2 fingers on his left hand from a crushing injury caused by a load shift on a gondola car while he was holding onto the top of it. This was back in the early 1960s. I remember him telling me about the early 1900s when his father started working for the railroad. It was a pretty dangerous time and a lot of men were injured or killed.
@jamesfalker2947
@jamesfalker2947 5 лет назад
guys at the time this was shown may not admit it, but his antics prevented a lot of injuries. my compliments.
@notmuch_23
@notmuch_23 4 года назад
Now on Class 1 railroads, nobody gets on or off equipment unless that equipment is _stationary;_ my dad was a conductor and my sister is an engineer.
@RailroadScannerMan15
@RailroadScannerMan15 Год назад
Not true on all. NS and most shortlines still practice getting on and off moving equipment.
@notmuch_23
@notmuch_23 Год назад
@@RailroadScannerMan15 It is with BNSF though...
@RailroadScannerMan15
@RailroadScannerMan15 Год назад
@@notmuch_23 Yep. Cn too. I’m a conductor for CN and most of this in the video is banned.
@Blazeww
@Blazeww 2 года назад
Props to that guy for doing it for real. Those rocks probably hurt.
@kablammy7
@kablammy7 2 года назад
I was a switchman at Southern Railroad starting in the late ' 70 ' s . Preface : On the midnight shift we would sometimes get our tasks done about and hour early and a lot of times we would head the engine towards the shop ( which takes us right by the yard office ) . Sometimes we would stop there and sometimes we would ease on to the shop and then go home . However, sometimes as we were approaching the yard office and the lead to the engine shop, we would get a call on the radio from the yardmaster ... ( and of course that would mean he had another task for us to do ... ) In the early ' 80 ' s, I used a cassette tape recorder to record the yardmaster calling our conductor . One morning at about 6 AM, we were pulling some cars into the yard and I dropped off the engine so I could line the switch for the engine to pull the cars into a yard track and then line the switch back after the cars cleared the straight track . I went to my truck and got the cassette tape recorder and as the engine came back up towards the yard office, I played the tape over the radio " Southern Simpson Yard Yardmaster Sloan calling job 41 Conductor Black over " . Well, the conductor was a nervous and anxious type of person and he was already on the back of the engine anticipating being able to drop off and go ( as usual ) . He answered rapidly " This is Conductor Black over " . Then I played it again " Southern Simpson Yard Yardmaster Sloan calling job 41 Conductor Black over " . At this point the engine was near the yard office and Conductor Black bounded off the engine and was headed into the yard office . At the same time, I went into the side door of the clerk's office which adjoined the yard office and as I arrived in the presence of the yard master and Mr. Black, I played the tape for them . Pretty funny stuff . Also, about that time was when we first started getting computer printouts for our switch lists . ( Previously EVERYTHING was hand written ) . That was the same time when I had a Radio Shack Color Computer and I learned BASIC computer language . I then made a program that created a random switch list that looked identical to the ones we would get from the clerks or from the remote printers that were out near the tracks in little air conditioned housings . So, one day I had my 3 fake switch lists, hidden in my overalls, and when the time came to get a new switch list, I volunteered to go get it . When I walked up to my two crewmen, I handed them the fake lists . They looked at it for a minute and were totally dumbfounded as the list looked genuine but had no correlating information that related to what we had in the yard ... ( back then all dot matrix printer output looked the same lol )
@pmshanahan100
@pmshanahan100 4 года назад
I worked as a switchman for ATSF in Chicago Corwith Yards mid '60.. Back then training was 3 student trips (unpaid) and those guys signed your card and sent you home. They didn't want you to see them stealing, playing cards, or drinking. When I took over I knew nothing. Worked 4 years on the ground and 3 as an engineer in a defense plant. I agree with most of this video but dispute a few things he showed...This was all before radio's for the guys on the ground.
@menslady125eif2590
@menslady125eif2590 3 года назад
May be an old video, but these are still good things to remember if you want to work for the railroad.
@ibrennan
@ibrennan 4 года назад
Thank you sharing, I learned a ton about a job I didn't know existed in this capacity. I wish I could have known Mr Glen Roper, he seems awesome!
@brentboswell1294
@brentboswell1294 4 года назад
Wow, back when railroads cared about their public image and kept the rolling stock looking sharp. Also back before the UP absorbed half of these railroads ...
@goaway7105
@goaway7105 3 года назад
cheers to the lad who actually hurt himself to show us what not to do
@timothyxv171mmmpertinentgamer
@timothyxv171mmmpertinentgamer 3 года назад
Thanks for Video Mr. McKay my friend that dummy was Something he reminded me of O'connor Fantastic stars
@passiton3801
@passiton3801 4 года назад
This kinda "fool around, tongue in cheek" film, has a very an important side lesson, that could save someone's life an prevent serious injury or even death!
@50centgotshot9times
@50centgotshot9times 4 года назад
He does everything so gracefully and perfectly. What a great man.
@Txepsiyu
@Txepsiyu 4 года назад
The sad music for the mistakes is awesome.
@renedescartes4112
@renedescartes4112 4 года назад
I don`t even work at the railway......but after watching this, I am shure, that I could.
@ownerfate
@ownerfate 4 года назад
9:20 "The car only has to move a couple of inches to giva ya a hell of a squeeze " Reminds me of that video where the railroad worker was trying to back the train in, and got pinned between the steam engine, and car... edit: i finally found it after hunting through my history ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Btr1wsEwTkE.html
@Syclone0044
@Syclone0044 4 года назад
Can you give any context or keyword clues I can use in a hunt?
@daniellong2543
@daniellong2543 4 года назад
Great to see an old safety video that was dangerous to make!
@djb7116
@djb7116 2 года назад
Sheesh he could've severed his ankle in that little stunt. OSHA would have a field day with this.
@gtafan2006
@gtafan2006 3 года назад
Getting off on the right foot... the dan Schneider story...
@junkequation
@junkequation 4 года назад
great video description there, and cool video! Thanks for the upload.
@tomservo5347
@tomservo5347 4 года назад
These old school linemen were a breed all their own.
@playstation1homeentertainm981
@playstation1homeentertainm981 3 года назад
Shake hands with danger- Whoops wrong one
@rwallace1625
@rwallace1625 4 года назад
Hanging on a moving train while puffing on a smoke....that's when men where men!
@billconserva1461
@billconserva1461 4 года назад
He did a good job!
@visiongt3944
@visiongt3944 4 года назад
7:29 *SNAPPP!!*
@scottpool4777
@scottpool4777 4 года назад
Yes that was pretty good very good thank you.
@robot_spider
@robot_spider 3 года назад
"Safety film" in which a 60 year old man collides with real obstacles, trips in front of actual train wheels, and hangs from a car in motion while smoking. Wow.
@brendanwilliams7291
@brendanwilliams7291 3 месяца назад
I don't think he had a wooden leg, that's probably one that was built up for demonstration. Nonetheless the main rule is that safety first is vital for working on the railway.
@cpufreak101
@cpufreak101 6 лет назад
Gotta feel bad for mr. Roper, he really beat himself up here
@maxnikolenko2302
@maxnikolenko2302 2 года назад
Where did they find a 75 year old daredevil?
@scottprendergast2680
@scottprendergast2680 4 года назад
He looks like he was in the BIG ONE- W W 2!! Battle of the BULGE- (By the looks of His Midsection He’s still active engaged in THAT BATTLE..)
@thewestpointrouteguy8611
@thewestpointrouteguy8611 4 года назад
Archie Bunker in the flesh....where's Edith ?
@Kevedsa4esan
@Kevedsa4esan 3 года назад
Why am i watching this at 4 am
@stevehomeier8368
@stevehomeier8368 4 года назад
These demonstrations are insane, being 3 fingered Joe is the least of his worries, Timbertoe or Squashed Joe most likely
@mikeznel6048
@mikeznel6048 3 года назад
This is real men stuff. Its a shame "men" couldn't even think about doing something even close to this. Us hard working, wise, knowledgeable, skilled, callous handed dirty work boot and jeans wearing type are a dying breed...
@mnshp7548
@mnshp7548 3 года назад
everything wants to hurt you on the tracks as it seems
@videobruceb8879
@videobruceb8879 2 года назад
They were going for a 'quit'.
@PlasmaCoolantLeak
@PlasmaCoolantLeak Год назад
This begs for the MST3K treatment.
@Dr_Won_Hung_Lo
@Dr_Won_Hung_Lo 3 года назад
Look like Carroll O'Connor
@colemasse7177
@colemasse7177 3 года назад
" you could be killed or worst waste company time" or something like that
@rapturebound197
@rapturebound197 2 года назад
Guy looks like Archie Bunker.
@joelvale3887
@joelvale3887 3 года назад
I thought he was Archi Bunker
@lfakerson7703
@lfakerson7703 4 года назад
I feel bad they made the old guy fall
@ademwest934
@ademwest934 4 года назад
stop bullying the old man.......he's been through enough
@edwardgray154
@edwardgray154 Год назад
i recall when they took off all the footboards on off engines guess someone fell off and got killed.
@MrPeterbilt1971
@MrPeterbilt1971 4 года назад
A great insight to a very dangerous career. Very informative.
@radioactivewraith
@radioactivewraith 4 года назад
This dude legit put his life on the line to make this video
@benjaminmarks8765
@benjaminmarks8765 3 года назад
He put his life on the line every day
@ridgec5670
@ridgec5670 3 года назад
I know! How many times in the video when we was showing the wrong way did he almost get his feet under the wheels.
@2H80vids
@2H80vids 3 года назад
Must have been black and blue when they finished filming.😁
@getmeoutofsanfrancisco9917
@getmeoutofsanfrancisco9917 3 года назад
@Isaacstuff I was curious how old he was. RIP
@Tbolt881
@Tbolt881 3 года назад
This dude is my hero.
@Wutzdegleinitz1630
@Wutzdegleinitz1630 10 лет назад
The man in this film Is Mr. Glen Roper. He worked on the Union Pacific railroad in many capacities over the years. He had done some stunt work in movies (I don't know which ones) and had also on occasion performed as a professional wrestler as the "Masked Marvel". I met Mr. Roper in Los Angeles when I went to inquire about employment on the U.P. and he was in the personnel office at that time (Oct.1973) and I hired out as a laborer in Maintenance of Way. In 1974 I went into engine service and Mr. Roper was giving the rules classes to us. He had worked in train service for many years. He was very knowledgeable of many aspects of railroading. Those old heads from that generation were a bunch of tough , hard working people. They were an interesting bunch and I was glad to have had the opportunity to learn from them.
@littletrainguy
@littletrainguy 7 лет назад
good job I did not know that
@BossSpringsteen69
@BossSpringsteen69 7 лет назад
If six of the managers where i work saw some of the no longer allowed work processes that this guy is performing, they would crap their pants, trip over each other, and get a case of the shakes just trying to write this guy up.
@sdkfz2512
@sdkfz2512 5 лет назад
James Krause Wow, my dad was born in 1972. Lol
@blueringedoctopus4778
@blueringedoctopus4778 5 лет назад
James Krause it was in the credits
@flipflopsguy8868
@flipflopsguy8868 4 года назад
Wow great information, I was happy when I recognized old downtown Los Ageless in the background and was trying to figure out if the gentleman was an actual railroad training man or a stuntman when realized it was the rail yard along the Los Angeles river and not somewhere in middle America. Now with your great information I know who he was and where it was and I add I was born in Los Angeles and my grandfather was a big fan of wrestling and roller derby and went every chance he could to The Olympic Auditorium and he would take me along sometimes but I was a tv kid and watched mostly at home on our ten inch black and white, 72 was twelve years old. 😊
@Elodea
@Elodea 11 лет назад
I can't imagine a modern safety production team even allowing and actor or stuntman to do some of the "examples" this guy demonstrated. OSHA inspectors would go nuts!
@eugenetswong
@eugenetswong 4 года назад
Yeah, some of it looked painful.
@caseD5150
@caseD5150 4 года назад
OSHA is a buncha cunts
@frank6842
@frank6842 4 года назад
@@caseD5150 until they keep you from dying because a company is too cheap to invest in safety equipment
@ryansaunders65
@ryansaunders65 4 года назад
But that's the problem. These examples will literally save your life. So much red tape oversight makes people overlook why it was made in the first place... To save your butt.
@joeybickley4877
@joeybickley4877 4 года назад
Elodea first of all, OSHA has nothing to do with RR operations, the FRA does. This guy was actually in marketing but, before working for UP, he was a professional wrestler he knew how to fall. He passed away in 2004. I’m a retired operating instructor for UP.
@staticr1055
@staticr1055 4 года назад
This old man giving me a heart attacks just watching this video.
@spiffster05
@spiffster05 4 года назад
OMG I totally agree, the suspense has me constantly on edge. I honestly don't know if I can watch the whole thing!
@scottprendergast2680
@scottprendergast2680 4 года назад
Static R old man? OLD MAN?! TAKE CARE WITH YOUR WORDS AS He can probably Out Walk, Out run as well as Out fight You- take note: he’s built Like A bear, deceptively fast and probably healthy as An ox- take note : This “Old Man” did all his O W N S T U N T S....
@thelasthallow
@thelasthallow 4 года назад
he had probably been doing this job for like 40 years, he was probably the best man the company had on staff and thats how he got on this safety video.
@briankoski2532
@briankoski2532 4 года назад
Badass El Camino at 20:00. Yeah, this dude's a badass too!
@andeoo
@andeoo 4 года назад
I couldnt say exactly how scary it was to watch his foot get that close to the wheels
@JawTooth
@JawTooth 4 года назад
I love these old productions
@canadianpacificstudios5835
@canadianpacificstudios5835 3 года назад
Heyyyy jawtooth big fan!
@user-dh9oz9um2w
@user-dh9oz9um2w 3 года назад
Same
@aperfectspongebobpopsicle2221
@aperfectspongebobpopsicle2221 3 года назад
@Joaquin Spragley wth
@timothyxv171mmmpertinentgamer
@timothyxv171mmmpertinentgamer 3 года назад
My friend love this Video how Awesome
@metro-northrailroadproduct5043
@metro-northrailroadproduct5043 3 года назад
I'ma big Jaw Tooth fan Jaw Tooth
@TheRantingCabbie
@TheRantingCabbie 4 года назад
I couldn't help but laugh at $3K to clean up that derailment. But this is close to 50 years ago.
@David-cy5zu
@David-cy5zu 4 года назад
Its not because of inflation. Rather it was made by company itself.
@DKrueger1994
@DKrueger1994 4 года назад
Now these day, it would be a lot more than $3,000 for a derail cleanup
@CosbyTheCaterpillar
@CosbyTheCaterpillar 4 года назад
$3,000 in 1972 is about $18,000 today.
@JohnSmith-lw2bm
@JohnSmith-lw2bm 4 года назад
Probably 3 million today.
@DKrueger1994
@DKrueger1994 4 года назад
@@JohnSmith-lw2bm that, plus a full scale investigation by the State's Department of Transportation, National Transportation Safety Board, and either County Sheriff or State Police
@HappyHands.
@HappyHands. 4 года назад
2:44 "Cushion?? Nah, just trow a couple blankets on the ground"
@SDCustoms
@SDCustoms 4 года назад
And women were too.
@skiney
@skiney 3 года назад
@@RVD2448 so that means you are not a man.
@spottySTC
@spottySTC 3 года назад
2 years ago, while returning back home at a evening, i took a nasty fall. Somebody left a wire across the road, i couldn't notice it because of darkness, and i almost broke my arm on an impact. I really wish there was at least a blanket like in the video there in front of me that day.
@HappyHands.
@HappyHands. 3 года назад
@@spottySTC motorbiking?
@spottySTC
@spottySTC 3 года назад
@@HappyHands. Nah, just bike :)
@peterfleming4431
@peterfleming4431 4 года назад
You have two arms, two legs, two eyes, etc. You only have one back, one brain...be mindful of the the things you only have one of! Goddamn the oldschool guys were tough, but insane, SOB's.
@mha53
@mha53 4 года назад
peter fleming oh .. I understood pack instead of back hahahah
@TheNemosdaddy
@TheNemosdaddy 3 года назад
they weren't tough, they were stupid. A lot of them got killed and derailments were through the roof. If you ever looked at the statistics from the 1950's-1980 you'd been blown away at how bad things really were.
@thetransportationguy7930
@thetransportationguy7930 2 года назад
Back then when you lost a finger the doctor would say, “it’ll grow back.”
@verdun7390
@verdun7390 2 года назад
@@TheNemosdaddy people still get killed because of complacency. I see you have coined the 1950's-1980 whereas that's when the trucking industry took over the market share. Now those fatalities hit the interstates. I wonder what the statistics of moving freight by truck has on people being killed.
@justforever96
@justforever96 2 года назад
Personally I dont know that I value either of my legs or arms any the less just because I have two of them. Better to lose one of those than my back, certainly, but I would rather be careful of all of them.
@gusmc2220
@gusmc2220 8 лет назад
dang! hats off to the guy doing the demonstration of getting on and off moving equipment! he took some CRAZY risks and hard hits especially at the 05:50 mark.so many modern rules broken! lol
@bored.in.california2111
@bored.in.california2111 8 лет назад
+Gus Mc People back then knew how to take hits and punches. You wouldn't mess with an old guy in those days.
@tommytruth7595
@tommytruth7595 8 лет назад
+Gus Mc Not really. That guy was a Hollywood stunt man.
@gusmc2220
@gusmc2220 8 лет назад
well seeing as how a guy I personally know and have worked with multiple times who has nearly 30 years of experience broke his ankle not that long ago getting off a car, and another gal who works not 100 miles from me was balled up and killed when she was pinned between two cars, I still think he was taking some crazy risks.
@lokomac8
@lokomac8 8 лет назад
+Tommy Truth -- actually, he WAS a switchman. I think someone posted here earlier that knew him.
@eliotvideos2009
@eliotvideos2009 6 лет назад
Gus Mc and the switch thing looked painful
@CathodeULT
@CathodeULT 4 года назад
I hope they gave him a helluva bonus for making this.
@teresapyeatt3698
@teresapyeatt3698 3 года назад
He worked for the railroad and worked as a stunt man on the side. So, right up his alley.
@uuuultra
@uuuultra 5 месяцев назад
probably didn't
@chooch1995
@chooch1995 4 года назад
I hired on in the mid 90's & this was one of the first things we learned during our yard training. Seems pretty simple to most, it would be banned as the company began hiring what I'd call 'less than qualified' individuals en masse which couldn't grasp the concept. What comes around, goes around as they say...the method was recently re-introduced as being acceptable as pressures from Precision Scheduled Railroading prevailed! When the big wigs rolled out PSR, we tried to explain to them that their own rule book & dimwitted 'managers' were going to be like oil & water as compared to blending PSR concepts. They laughed it off, initially....but what do you know! Gobs of rules were cast away in an effort to move trains!
@verdun7390
@verdun7390 2 года назад
Not being able to get on and off moving equipment is asinine. Waiting until the slack runs out and equipment not moving doesn't apply to tank cars. No one ever said you "Have to do anything" Riding cars is an option. I am a huge proponent of off and on. Its definitely not for everyone. Most Switchman know their limitations. The savings in fuel alone could save jobs if allocated correctly.
@pennsyr1
@pennsyr1 9 лет назад
Of all the railroad educational and instructional videos I've seen, this was definitely the most entertaining! You're certainly right that the elements of humor help to hold one's attention and make the subject matter stick. Thank you for sharing this bit of railroad history with the rest of us!
@crapper1
@crapper1 11 лет назад
Wow he almost lost a leg more than once doing this
@antoy384
@antoy384 4 года назад
john leininger “We broke our leg so you don’t have to break yours!”
@anniebellemiller2986
@anniebellemiller2986 4 года назад
And an arm.
@ocsrc
@ocsrc 4 года назад
OMG, he really hit that switch stand. That really hurt. He must have been black and blue for week
@jonmacdonald5345
@jonmacdonald5345 4 года назад
Actually they had to replace the switch stand after being hit by his enormous Balls!
@B-and-O-Operator-Fairmont
@B-and-O-Operator-Fairmont 3 года назад
That is where "acting" comes into play. He knew "how" to hit it so it looked violent but without risk of injury. While it is true stuntmen can be injured, they know how to minimize the risks. Otherwise, no one would take the job.
@plushnpuppetshenanigans5948
@plushnpuppetshenanigans5948 6 лет назад
New dance move. The "I put my foot on the wrong side of the stirrup"
@Max_R_MaMint
@Max_R_MaMint 4 года назад
To get your left foot in take your right foot out To get your left foot in you have to hop and bounce Jam your left foot in Where you took the right one out Thats what its all about
@uuuultra
@uuuultra 5 месяцев назад
dad humor
@timeforbeans
@timeforbeans 5 лет назад
Gotta respect an old head like this. He knows what hes talking about
@armchairrocketscientist4934
@armchairrocketscientist4934 4 года назад
My Grandpa hopped on and off steam locomotives back in the 50s. He even fired the 844.
@Surfliner450
@Surfliner450 4 года назад
That’s amazing!
@kingbenjamin22
@kingbenjamin22 2 года назад
Who knew Archie Bunker was so knowledgeable about train safety?
@captainkeyboard1007
@captainkeyboard1007 3 месяца назад
The real Archie Bunker may have been only Carroll O'Connor.
@Carstuff111
@Carstuff111 11 месяцев назад
I have said this before, and it still applies here too. This was back when men, were men. And at this point, at least someone cared enough to make a film to (hopefully) step safety up. I remember seeing this film back in the 1990s, as on an actual film projector. I can not for the life of me remember where or why, but I was hooked and it is still great to watch all these years later.
@ushelushel1
@ushelushel1 3 года назад
Anyone else now binge watching old safety videos that popped up in your recommended after you watched shake hands with danger
@Rena152
@Rena152 3 года назад
* guitar riff *
@uuuultra
@uuuultra 5 месяцев назад
🇺🇸
@zachbrenner9959
@zachbrenner9959 4 года назад
"A car only has to move a couple inches to give you a hell of a squeeze." Remember folks, don't stick your fingie where you wouldn't stick your dinkie
@jersyflame8952
@jersyflame8952 2 года назад
At 25 years I'm an old head now. I've never gotten on moving equipment faster than 2 mph. Mad respect for this guy and all the railroaders of the past.
@Komodofq8
@Komodofq8 Год назад
At CP we can do 4mph... but I often do it at 7 or 8 🤫
@m1sterhockey
@m1sterhockey 4 года назад
This guy is my hero. You'd think the guy they would have do this video would be like 30. Instead they get a 65 year old. Great stuff!!!
@uhlijohn
@uhlijohn 4 года назад
I watched this film when I was in brakeman's school for the CNW at Proviso in May 1974 shortly after I hired out. I spent 40 years on the RR. CNW from 1974 to 1995 and the UPRR from 1995 to 2013. It was a great job and wish I was still working. I've been retired for nearly 6 years now....:-(
@HazeGreyAndUnderway
@HazeGreyAndUnderway 4 года назад
Can you provide any advice for someone looking to get into a rr these days? I don't necessarily have any specific schooling that I think would directly apply, but I have manual labor experience and a history of intensive safety training already.
@TheChoochooboy99
@TheChoochooboy99 4 года назад
I used to run a transfer train out of the NS Ashland Ave yard to Proviso. It was always a crap shoot as to which yard I would end up in. Usually it was either Yard Two or Yard Nine. I always loved that run. I was always guaranteed the twelve and then at least two hours waiting for PTI to grab us and take us back to Ashland. I kinda miss doing that but don’t at the same time.
@thejmc4074
@thejmc4074 4 года назад
Aldo Raine don't. That's the advice. You'll get laid ofd
@thejmc4074
@thejmc4074 4 года назад
Enjoy your retirement
@billduncan6786
@billduncan6786 2 месяца назад
So, who is this? I probably worked with you. I'm still here, an Engineer now out of Proviso.
@bootloops888
@bootloops888 5 лет назад
as someone who has been through more training programs then I can keep count ( oilfeild, railroad, and trucking) I would give my left nut to be trained by an old hand like mr glen then anyone with a sheepskin and a open book you will learn way more about the actual inner workings of anything you are studding for and it will actually stick with you over cram study a paper test and get shoved into a fire.
@royreynolds108
@royreynolds108 4 года назад
You are absolutely correct.
@1956tmo
@1956tmo 8 лет назад
That Guy resembles Carol O Conner from all in the Family
@christianbeard7001
@christianbeard7001 5 лет назад
Exactly, that's who I thought it was.
@rrbone
@rrbone 5 лет назад
Boy the way Glen Miller played.
@paulramsey8187
@paulramsey8187 4 года назад
Gee our old lasalle ran great....
@catlady8324
@catlady8324 4 года назад
You meat head, you!
@johncholmes643
@johncholmes643 4 года назад
Chief Gillespie
@mrgrinch35iswise62
@mrgrinch35iswise62 4 года назад
THIS needs to be required viewing for today's yard workers.
@ghostchips170
@ghostchips170 5 лет назад
‘A little bit careless, that’s like being a little bit pregnant.’ Iconique™️
@Tomh821
@Tomh821 3 года назад
Railroad work is insanely dangerous. It is what started our labor laws. A guy lost his leg on the railroad, in 1890 they would carry him home in a bloody sheet and drop him at the doorstep. That was it.
@turbo1438
@turbo1438 5 лет назад
4:40 damn, that looks painful! This fella is tougher than woodpecker lips!
@aaprcob
@aaprcob 4 года назад
when his foot slipped though the step and started rubbing the axle i nearly doodoo’d myself
@lokomac8
@lokomac8 4 года назад
I had that exact thing happen to me ONCE early in my career in the yard at Winslow, Arizona. It further emphasized the importance of having a GOOD HAND HOLD ON THE GRAB IRONS!
@aaprcob
@aaprcob 4 года назад
R.J. McKay it’s almost happened to me on a flatcar. We were doing a switch testing run and they took off.
@lande18072
@lande18072 9 лет назад
43 years later and it all still applies today
@priority6885
@priority6885 7 лет назад
Eli Wilson Train Videos Not all, but most
@arcnova1982
@arcnova1982 5 лет назад
Getting on and off moving equipment is a thing of the past sadly. Wish it wasnt.
@jrrailroad7631
@jrrailroad7631 5 лет назад
arcnova1982 nova they still let us do it at KCS, but I think we are one of the last.
@arcnova1982
@arcnova1982 5 лет назад
@@jrrailroad7631 damn u guys are lucky. Makes switching a whole lot faster.
@robertjennings397
@robertjennings397 4 года назад
Eli Wi now.
@Reefdevil
@Reefdevil 5 лет назад
" A little bit careless; that's like being a little bit pregnant, ya stupid meathead no-nuttin' empty-headed stifle yourself good for nuttin'...." Actually, this guy really took one for the team when he filmed this. Very impressed.
@dsandoval9396
@dsandoval9396 4 года назад
ONE!? It looks like there were a couple of times he took one for the team!
@brentboswell1294
@brentboswell1294 4 года назад
Still have my grandpa's railroad lantern, he passed away when I was 1 year old...freight conductor on the SP.
@splithoof9567
@splithoof9567 4 года назад
This is a great film! The body mechanics of how to do something without injury are amazing. I could see how everything he presents nearly fifty years ago applies today. I don't work in the rail Industry, and don't know what procedures are used now, but what he demonstrated made 100% sense to me.
@acehandler1530
@acehandler1530 2 года назад
We had an instructor (1977) that had to wear special shoes, he took his right shoe off to show us, his heel was about 1" further back than it should have been - from getting off the train when it was going a 'bit too fast' for many years he told us. Also had 3 vertebrae fused in his neck from a collision when he was riding in the engine - and he was slammed bent over into the front bulkhead! What a trooper!
@bluehand9631
@bluehand9631 4 года назад
Hired on the Penn Central in 1969. Didn't get all this training if I remember right. Lots of others hazards to watch out for too. Materials hanging off gondola cars, kids throwing rocks at the way car and engine, snow and ice etc.. Working the hump yard at night was probably the most dangerous. Never knew when those cars would move while you were hooking up air lines. I was actually on a train that got robbed. Taking a drag from one yard to another, they dumped the air and set the brakes. Then cut the seal on a car full of new tires. Tires rolled out into the ghetto and disappeared. I grabbed a brake handle and started out of the engine when the engineer grabbed me and sat me down. He said " kid those aren't our tires, you stay put and let the railroad cops handle it". That went on for years until they finally caught the inside man. It was a car checker that marked the hit car.Back in the day before air brakes, thousands of brakemen were killed yearly. Sometimes they wouldn't bother retrieving the body. I didn't stay on but about a year. Had other fish to fry I guess. Good memories of my time on the rails.
@Leland45028
@Leland45028 4 года назад
Let me guess ? uncle sam sent you a letter.
@juans6639
@juans6639 4 года назад
Brings back memories of me and the neighborhood kids in the 1950's early 1960's when we used to hop on the cars like this man was doing. At present, I am now too old to do that....LOL. Great instructional film.
@veronicadaugherty3760
@veronicadaugherty3760 3 года назад
Hats off to this man for risking limb and life to teach the rookies
@James_Knott
@James_Knott 2 года назад
Many years ago, I was a technician with CN Telecommunications, the telecom arm of CN Rail. Back in the mid 70's, when I worked in Northern Ontario, I often rode freights, in either the engine or caboose (van as they called it). Because the engineers didn't like stopping if they didn't have to, this meant I often had to hop on or off a moving train. Incidentally, that section on properly setting the brakes reminded me of a disaster that happened in Lac-Mégantic, Quebec, back in 2013. To save money, the railway was running trains with only one crew member. When he left the train, he hadn't set enough brakes. During the night, the locomotive providing air for the brakes caught fire and was shut down. As a result, with inadequate brakes, the train rolled into town and derailed, with it's load of oil exploding and destroying much of the town and killing 47 people!
@Bretyllium
@Bretyllium 2 года назад
One of the greatest railroad safety videos ever made. The sheer audacity of some of the things the actor did was shocking and awesome examples of real life applications. Getting himself hit by a switch stand sign while riding a car was amazingly bad and I don't know if he was a stuntman but he seemed to understand railroading in the way he moved.
@calcutt4
@calcutt4 Год назад
He was a railway employee
@evanforst7272
@evanforst7272 Год назад
The one that got me was the “impaired clearance” one.
@contextspecific
@contextspecific Год назад
Glen Roper what a legend
@MrWolfTickets
@MrWolfTickets 4 года назад
3:40 the tension of watching this guy doing his own stunts is only tempered by his delightful arm wave as he gets off the right way
@DavidCurrey4
@DavidCurrey4 6 лет назад
This is a really entertaining and excellent educational video. I wish they had shown it during my brakeman school when I hired out on the Missouri Pacific in 1979, but by then some of the safety rules were even more strict than in this video. For instance, we were taught not to ride on the stirrups on the rear of a car except for the rear car in a cut. The reason was because if you missed the stirrup on stepping up, you might fall between the cars. Also, footboards were outlawed by the time I hired on. I believe walking on the roof walk of cars was also against the rules by the time I hired on, but I did it one time anyway, because I wanted the experience. I was tasked with releasing the handbrake on an old boxcar that still had its roofwalk with a high brake wheel. I climbed up the ladder on the non-brake-wheel end, and carefully walked the length of the roof walk. One thing emphasized to us was never to place your foot underneath the coupler when opening a knuckle. I'm sure they had that rule when the video was made, too. If the knuckle is missing its pin, that 60-pound thing (four times the weight of a bowling ball) can fall out and crush your foot. Of great interest was the difference in the “go away from me” signal compared to how we did the signal in south Texas. Our signal was the exact reverse of the “come to me” signal. The top part of our “go away from me” signal was moving away from the body, whereas the top part of the “come to me” signal was moving towards the body. I don't think I ever saw anybody give the signal the way it was done in the video, but if I had seen it done so by a boomer, I would have known what it meant, as the meaning was obvious.
@25mfd
@25mfd 5 лет назад
what you said about "...your foot underneath the coupler when opening a knuckle"... I had a close call with that... stepped in to open the knuckle, pulled it open and it kept opening further and further and then came all the way out... BOOM... just missed my foot...learned something that day
@DavidCurrey4
@DavidCurrey4 3 года назад
@@25mfd Wow! My worst accident was stepping up onto the leading step of a locomotive coming at me and somehow my foot missed the step. My hands slid down to the bottom of the handrail, but I kept holding on like we were taught. The engineer got stopped after dragging me at least a dozen feet. I was badly bruised, but otherwise okay, but it took me ten minutes sitting in the locomotive cab to determine that.
@25mfd
@25mfd 3 года назад
@@DavidCurrey4 WOW!!!!! and it's a good thing you held on... natural inclination is to let go but no telling where you'll roll and tumble, your hands and feet flailing around could end up caught in a really bad place... after a few sobering incidents i learned quickly to keep my wits about me... this stuff is unforgiving
@plumbingstuffinoregon2471
@plumbingstuffinoregon2471 3 года назад
This guy was seriously scaring me with some of those stunts! Also, good rule I like to follow around trains and other equipment: Don't put your fingers where you wouldn't put your pecker!
@BLACKTHUMB01
@BLACKTHUMB01 11 лет назад
Archie Bunker at the switchyard
@leehuff2330
@leehuff2330 6 лет назад
A couple places I could just hear Archie Bunker, especially the "ah, Jeez"! 😆
@flipflopsguy8868
@flipflopsguy8868 4 года назад
Probably because Television City where they were filming All in the family was down the tracks on La Brea in Hollywood.
@evanfinch4987
@evanfinch4987 4 года назад
LOL
@owboky102050
@owboky102050 4 года назад
1971 I started on the Indiana harbor belt railroad there were no films they just handed me a lantern and it was like good luck and you watched everyone else and taught yourself
@byronnelson2549
@byronnelson2549 3 года назад
Memories with Southern Pacific in Dalhart Texas in 1995. This guy is incredible. I can believe he was a stuntman and railroad employee. They were tough old heads back then. At present OSHA would faint at this video. I do miss the rail and a high ball 🚆 Train
@bluecollardadventures2338
@bluecollardadventures2338 3 года назад
16:13 i cant even imagine being allowed to walk on top of cars much less hop from car to car! wow
@larryhostetler3887
@larryhostetler3887 11 лет назад
this guy is a badass...
@xygomorphic44
@xygomorphic44 4 года назад
Anyone get this suddenly recommended to them in Dec 2019?
@erikgag
@erikgag 4 года назад
Me
@bryceforsyth8521
@bryceforsyth8521 4 года назад
Yep.
@briankoski2532
@briankoski2532 4 года назад
I don't get it.. What's up?
@handfuloftrains4781
@handfuloftrains4781 4 года назад
I did. Don't know why, but it's fascinating.
@briankoski2532
@briankoski2532 4 года назад
@@handfuloftrains4781 What I mean, is this something work related? 'Required' viewing for your job?? Safety 1st !
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