Google Sightseeing takes you on tour of the world as seen from satellite, using the free Google Earth program, or Google Maps in your web browser. Each weekday your guides James and Alex present new weird and wonderful sights as suggested by readers.

The editors: James & Alex

Incredibly Long Trains

Posted by Alex Turnbull, Monday, 23rd May 2005

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars

Looks like these trains are stopped at a level crossing on the Burlington Northern railroad track in Wyoming. The Northern one is chopped off by some low-res imagery, but scroll south to see just how incredibly long they are! Amazing.

Long Trains

Thanks: tamat

Update

In the comments, Eric Smith said:

These are unit coal trains, typically 100-115 cars long. These were probably going from/to the Powder River Basin in Wyoming, which is just north of the photo you found. Here is the loading loop, large enough to run one of these trains in a circle.

You can see that the image was taken just after the two ends of the train passed each other, as the black carts are fully loaded with coal.

Passing Train

14 Responses to 'Incredibly Long Trains'

  1. 1. Eric Smith says:

    These are unit coal trains, typically 100-115 cars long. These were probably going from/to the Powder River Basin in Wyoming, which is just north of the photo you found. Here is the loading loop, large enough to run one of these trains in a circle.

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  2. Google Sightseeing Admin
    2. Alex says:

    Eric that loading loop is super cool, and thanks for the info :-)

  3. 3. Twombly says:

    Hmmm - I also found a loading loop, not too far away to the south. Here there is a train in the loop, half loaded, and the mine is just to the west. These things are massive! I’ve probably spent most of my time on Google Maps looking at mines and massive land projects like these.

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  4. 4. JoXn Costello says:

    Too bad Google Maps doesn’t provide a scale bar — my biggest beef with them.

  5. 5. george says:

    If you are curious where some of those trains eventually wind up, Newport News and Norfolk VA have terminals such as Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth (piles of coal dumped from train cars, only a few train cars around) or Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth (coal laden train cars — huge depot of train cars full of coar) for loading coal. If you are ever stuck at a crossing when one of these trains go by, the length/enormity is an experience you won’t forget.. (and if it’s empty, on a return trip, the rattling of all the empty cars is deafening..

  6. Google Sightseeing Admin
    6. Alex says:

    Excellent stuff Twombly! Although it [looks to me][1] like that is actually 2 trains in the loop, no?

    [1]: Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  7. 7. The Govinator says:

    Yeah looks like one train is almost full and a second one has come in to fill up good eyes alex

  8. 8. chris says:

    I work for Norfolk Southern and we’ve had trains with up to 190 coal hoppers, so imagine those trains again plus another 2/5’s length. Just hope you don’t have to pee if those ever come to your crossing !!!!!!

  9. 9. Jack says:

    Very cool! The southern train looks like it has a pusher engine on the southern end of the train.
    Of course, the northern end of the train is in the low resolution area to the north of this picture.

  10. 10. Jack says:

    I posted some thoughts on these two trains (including speculation on the locomotive paint schemes) and on the Bailey Yard.

  11. 11. Jim Thompson says:

    scroll south to see just how incredibly long they are!

    Congratulations, you’ve just written a Viagra ad!

  12. 12. CD says:

    I went through this area of Wyoming a couple of summers ago, my dad and myself to some extent are large train buffs and we saw quite a few trains of this size.

    At some points the mainline is 4 tracks wide, and at others has siding tracks on either side! We climbed up bridge and saw trains on all six tracks!!!

  13. 13. Alex Atkinson says:

    It’s cool. What are they for?

  14. 14. Tim says:

    ok, this topic’s about a year old, but has anyone noticed this yet?

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

Leave a Reply

This form will auto-link URLs or you can use simple HTML, <a href="http://googlesightseeing.com">Like this</a>.

Link to specific places either as a Google Maps page or a decimal latitude and longitude written like this: lat/lng:55.949400,-3.200000.

If you've found an unrelated sight that you think should be posted in its own entry then use the suggestion form!