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Thanks to other OGR members posting about the "Tricked Out Trains" airing tonight, 11/16, at 9:00 p.m. EST, I set my recorder.

 

Just checked the ATT-Uverse channel guide (Travel Channel is 254 and 1254 on Uverse) and "Tricked Out Trains" is showing three programs starting at 9:00 p.m. tonight and running until midnight.  The three hour long shows then repeat at midnight; again, according to the Uverse channel guide.  Based on their descriptions in the guide, there appear to be three different programs.

 

I've never watched this program, but I have set the DVR to record the series.

 

If you have the Travel Channel on your cable or dish system, post the channel information for other OGR'ers use.

 

Carl

 

Edit:  Direct TV channel 277; Dish 196; ATT-Uverse channels 254 and 1254; Blue Ridge Cable on Channel 51.

 

 

Last edited by Pingman
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Originally Posted by John Meixel:

I watched it for 10 minutes and had to turn it off.  The information is good but the extremely quick editing was making me nauseous.

AMEN!

 

I often wonder if the idiots that produce these shows ever actually sit down and WATCH them. How are you supposed to appreciate the lavish interior of an old railcar when the producer has decided that he will not show a scene longer than a half-second!

 

Absolutely horrible and totally unwatchable. I would fire the entire crew.

It was nice to see all the passenger cars that have been saved.

 The cars are beautiful and well preserve. Nice to see them still used.

 Wish I had the money to save some of the old cars I see on the web for sale to restore.

  I Have the skills to do it but not the cash to do it. It is nice to dream about doing that.

   Great show love the NYC 20th century limited and the story behind saving it.

 

 

The editing criticisms are well taken......but it was still interesting and informative.

 

It would have been better if done in the manner Rich suggested, but it did take me into several cars that I would have never had access to or ridden in/on. 

 

Something of a good thing is better than nothing of a good thing, so to speak.  Not all of us enjoy the type of access to these "things" that others do so this may be as close we ever get.

Last edited by Berkshire President

There were numerous segments that I enjoyed for various reasons.

 

Until recently, I'd never heard of the Skytop lounge on the Hiawatha.  I had seen a similar car made for TCA when looking for a smooth-sided, 15" observation car on ebay about a month ago and, due to its unique windows, thought it was a fantasy car.  Then I saw photos of the prototype in "Streamliners" and understood the TCA car wasn't completely fantasy.

 

Getting to see the interior of the prototype was very interesting and, but for this program, I doubt I would have seen it otherwise.  I'm old enough to remember using a slide rule, so learning they were used for designing the flat window arrangement of the rear was something of a flashback.

 

Glad I recorded all three episodes and hope they to see more.

 

 

Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:
Originally Posted by John Meixel:

I watched it for 10 minutes and had to turn it off.  The information is good but the extremely quick editing was making me nauseous.

AMEN!

 

I often wonder if the idiots that produce these shows ever actually sit down and WATCH them.

To be honest , I found three-hours of pre-recorded, HEE-HAW on RFD-TV more entertaining .

 

God's Blessings,

"Pappy"

Gentlemen,

    Although I wish they showed the cars longer and did more history on each car, at least they made a tricked out train show.  The problem is they did the show for modern people who have no attention span, when their audience happens to be a well educated bunch of train nuts.  I wanted to strangle the producers for not staying longer on each incredible privately owned car.  My father worked for the Union Switch and Signal, some of the guys who owned and restored these cars had him travel with them as the cars were brought on line, his last trip was to see me in Slidell, La where I lived building the NASA Space Shuttle External tank, he and my mom had their own private double drawing room aboard one of these incredible private cars, what a way to live and travel!  All you need is the money!  As my father taught me, really rich people in the USA never fly very much, they own their own rail cars which are like their moving home.   I do wish they would have done a better production job on the show, there is so much to actually see in each of those restored cars.

PCRR/Dave

Last edited by Pine Creek Railroad

 "Although I wish they showed the cars longer and did more history on each car, at least they made a tricked out train show.  The problem is they did the show for modern people who have no attention span, when their audience happens to be a well educated bunch of train nuts. "

Dave

I agree. The non train enthusiast ( on commercial channels ) expects hype versus content. I still remember "Extreme Trains" as a awful hyperbolic distortion of reality, thanks to a Hollywood type director. The hapless host was made to sound over caffeinated while the train crews he was with were seen chuckling under their breath or just tolerated the film crew. Cest La Vie.

Bruce

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