@@17denbyI miss leapfrog bro it was literally the only thing I played when I was 5, also random question you watched that alphabet movie with leapfrog so nostalgic
@@Pyromain3650 But its as bloody accurate as an assault rifle or even a sniper, if you played the game you know how fun it is to mow down peeps with it
Number 4472 ( originally 1472 and now 60103 ) was built in 1923 at Doncaster works and was the second LnER a1 built and is persevered today as a LnER a3
The last build looks like a place where i would grow attached to a group of characters and would also grow an unimaginable hatred for a character named Adam
That train that you mentioned was the Flying Scotsman LNER Class A3 4472 Flying Scotsman is a 4-6-2 "Pacific" steam locomotive built in 1923 for the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) at Doncaster Works to a design of Nigel Gresley. It was employed on long-distance express passenger trains on the East Coast Main Line by LNER and its successors, British Railways' Eastern and North Eastern Regions, notably on The Flying Scotsman service between London King's Cross and Edinburgh Waverley after which it was named.
No You said the passenger train in the video was the Flying Scotsman, the steam engine otherwise known as LNER 4472 or 1472. It is in its LNER state but with two tenders, as it was in its pre-USA run state. In 1947, it was rebuilt into the A3 after previously being the A1. It had been numbered 502, and then it was renumbered to 103 one year later when it joined British Railways. It also became BR 60103. Nothing important happened after that until the year 1969 when it went to the USA/Canada for three years. In 1988, it went to Australia for one year. In the early 2000s, it was taken out of service until 2016 when it was rebuilt and put back into service, where it still operates today.
You've just run into a display that is most commonly known from a RU-vid or called bricks 101 or nightly news at 9 if you remembut it's nice to see that his stuff is still being used to this day