 Hello, thank you for joining me. I'm at the National Rail Museum in York today and as you can see we're traveling on the main demonstration line. We're traveling behind H Trough number one. She was built in 1946, so just a short ride on standard gage today. This is the opportunity. If you look out there, that track there is narrow gage, but we're heading for the miniature railway over there. We're going to do the South Garden miniature railway. It's today's episode of miniature railway. As soon as this was running and it's a winning local for me, I couldn't resist starting our adventure to the National Rail Museum's miniature railway on a standard railway. I'll let you see the arrival after a little while. So the miniature railway runs just over there behind this building here. So what we're going to do, we're going to go and have a ride on that. We're going to go around their system and see what else we can think of that. We've just got to wait for the guard to come and let us off. So I'll just show you in the guards van while we wait. This is the interior of the guard. So this would have kept the guard warm when traveling on good trains on long winter nights. We're now going to get off the train as soon as the door or the gate is open. We'll have a look at the local and we'll go over to the miniature railway. Thanks very much. So there we are. We've thank you had our ride on the standard gauge railway. I'll show you this. This is a works plate. So that's the loco's works number here with 1948 at Robert Stephen and Hawthorn's work. So that would have been in Newcastle, which is called Age Poff, number one. I'm going to look up here. We see the front of the loco. I appreciate the sun's very bright. There you go. Right now, let's go and find the miniature railway. We're going to have our ride. So they have got a section of narrow gauge which points out, but they're not actually running any trains or nothing. They never do that when there's a special event on here. But as far as a nice way to start the video with a bit of standard gauge, Stephen, as I said, it's a winning loco. So whenever a loco's a winning loco, then I will always have a ride on it. So I'm going to head this way. We're going to head in this direction to the miniature railway. It's just over here. So it's known as the South Yard on South Garden Miniature Railway. It's seven and a quarter inch. It's, I've been on it a few times. I remember when it used to be a lot shorter and then it was redeveloped into its shape now of like a figure of eight. And there's also a branch on this miniature railway that I've always been fascinated by. It goes off behind that building there, which I have done once as a child, but now they don't tend to run trains on them. I can hear the horn off the loco. So if we go through here, we should see how it's here. It's class four seven. It's going to run a bit. So you can see the train pass. And there we go. Class four seven. So that's on its inner loop. So it starts here from the station on the outer loop. It goes round as an inner loop. So it will come back from over there. There's no something else I'm going to have a look at before we go, before we get on the train. So we're going to have a look at that. So as I said about there being a branch, which perhaps we just don't get to travel on, goes from the shed off down there. So I've been on that once as a child. Now just noticed there is a steam locomotive here. It's not in steam. It's called Margaret, quite hunted, sitting there outside the shed. So what I'm going to do now, I'm going to hang around. I'm going to wait for the train to come back and take our ride on the South Garden Miniature Railway. So before we have a ride on the South Garden Miniature Railway, the reason I've brought you down here is because if you look out there and you can't see much, you see that bank of grass just at the very bottom of it is the end of that other branch of the Miniature Railway that's not currently in use. But that is where the track goes to. Now before we go through here, one other thing I wanted to show you. Remember the video where we went to Crew Heritage Centre? I said about how they had a railway that ran all around the works, a narrow gauge railway. Well here is one of the loco's. So these run all round through work. These aren't miniature, although they're small. They're narrow gauge. So this is the narrow gauge one. We're now going to walk on through the South Hall past the Roll Train. Let's just go and have a quick look at the Roll Trains or at least a loco. We'll have a quick look at Gladstone and some of the carriages. And then I'm going to go out to the South Garden. We're going to have our ride on the Miniature Railway. So here's Gladstone, London Brighton South Coast Railway locomotive. And there's some Roll Train carriages. I'm now going to go on out the back door and have a look at the South Garden Miniature Railway. So just a very enjoyable trip on the South Garden Miniature Railway. What happens here is you get off the train there and then the loco comes forward to here to the departures platform. So it has an arrival and departure platform. So that will probably happen. Well I'm not sure about when because I haven't turned the engine on but the 47 should come forward and it'll be ready to take the next lot of people for a journey around the South Garden. So we just had a trip on the South Garden Miniature Railway on the Miniature Class 47. Now here in the South Yard, the depot, we should see the real thing. So that's what we're going to do now. We're going to go and see the locomotive that the Class 47 we just travelled behind is a model officer. So as you come into here there's various items are rolling stock including one of the carriages probably pulled by one of the rockets when they're steaming. There's a DMU over there. There's a shunter here which was built in 1953 in Darlington. Admittedly that wasn't off the top of my head. I read it just there. Anyway the loco we just travelled on here is the real thing. It's Prince William. It's Class 47. One of the royal Class 47s. So before the Royal Family had the Class 67s, they had two Class 47s. Prince William and Prince Harry. And Prince William. Okay, it's Prince William. It's here in this instance. It's 47, 798. So not often you can have a loco miniature and then come and see the real thing. Just a stone's throw from where the miniature loco is running. One steam's past us. I think that concludes my visit to the South Yard for standards and miniature. And not we had arrived in it but we can also say narrow gauge. So I hope you enjoyed this video. Thank you very much for watching. Thank you to the National Railway Museum for a great afternoon and please do feel free to like and subscribe and tell your friends and tell your next-door neighbour etc. Tell anyone you think might like my videos. Thank you very much for watching from National Rail Museum. Goodbye.