Into the Allegheny Range Volume III (DVD)
Cumberland, Maryland to Grafton, West Virginia
The West End has been called the toughest mountain railroad in the Eastern United States. This legendary route crosses the eastern Continental Divide from Cumberland, Maryland to Grafton, West Virginia. Four steep grades of up to 2.8 percent make helper engines necessary over an incredible 66 mile district. Once the domain of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, the West End, also known as the Mountain Subdivision, is now owned by CSX Transportation.
Travel along all 101 miles of the Mountain Subdivision with Iron Horse America. You'll see nonstop freight action from trackside and in the cab from Cumberland to Grafton. Coal trains and mixed freights look fantastic battling the grades of the Allegheny Mountains in late fall and early spring, but the highlight of the show is incredible winter footage. You'll see winter railroading at its toughest as CSX keeps freight moving in spite of heavy blizzards.
The two-tape set, which was shot in cooperation with CSX, brings you the fantastic sights and sounds of Allegheny Mountain railroading - long, heavy trains grinding towards the summits, helper engines at full throttle, and twisting mountain curves.
Any word on when Vol.3 and 4 will be released on DVD? My VHS tapes have worn out and would like to get the DVDs! I do have the first two volumes on DVD but Vols 3 and 4 are the best!
fourlakes 1 month ago
Hi folks, I look forward to the release of this 1990's classic video onto DVD. We have shot some all new footage for the special features section too!
It will be released by Iron Horse America...stay tuned for an update later this year.
IronHorseAmerica 10 months ago
I love all of the fallen flag engines appearing in this series. This would be a great time period to model.
wildfire19861987 1 year ago
@ronthecyborg 80's, my bad.
ronthecyborg 1 year ago
1:22 - I've never seen so much Conrail blue. It's exciting! Ah, to relive the 90's...
ronthecyborg 1 year ago
Are these videos made back in the 1990's?
mbta1000 1 year ago