13 hours on One of the LAST SLEEPER train from the SOVIET UNION - Romania to Moldova

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
  • Buna ziua
    Welcome to this new night train adventure onboard the one of the last sleeper train from the Soviet era - the train "Prietenia"' ("Friendship" between the two countries)
    This train was something folks!
    Enjoy, and don't forget to like/leave a comment to help the channel :-)
    - TRIP INFORMATION -
    Date : September 2023
    Railway company: CFM (Calea Ferată din Moldova) and CFR (Căile Ferate Române)
    From: Bucharest Gara de Nord - Chişinău
    Price: 241,96 LEI - 48,66€
    LINK TO THE NEW CHANNEL : Minitrak by Simply Railway / @minitrakbysimplyrailw...
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    LINK FOR MY BOOK ABOUT NIGHT TRAINS!
    - BOOK IN 🇫🇷 : www.fnac.com/a16082670/THIBAU...
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    Massive thanks to my following Patreon for their help :
    Claudio Bickel ; Martin Haynes ; D Austin Horowitz ; Thomas Alfred Roell ; Captain Ginyu ; Andreas Konrad ; Christopher Style ; Dick DeBartolo ; Nicholas Torres ; Nick Reed ; Philippe Branco ; Tom Van Baren ; Ian Earle ; Robin Roemisch ; Michael Romero ; Fin Ross Russell ; Frederic R Merchant ; RAH ; Robyn Jackson ; William George ; John Michael Dornoff ; Trevor Key ; Fabricio ; Linda Vainomae-Hoffmann ; Jeffrey Williams ; Shane Edmonds ; Dave Ferrell ; Bea Dan ; clearingrubble ; Charlie Myers ; Bill ; jpjh ; David Bonet ; Eric Schmidt ; John S Baldyga ; Will Ho ; Sam Couch ; Dennis Field ; Raging_lemons ; Daniel De Marta ; Shawn Morse ; Benny Wong ; Jason Rabinowitz ; Szeming Lau ; Peter ; Dining Car ; Robert Badgett ; Paul Hurst ; Leonard McCants ; Garl Boyd Latham ; TravelBlogger.com ; Jaymar7456 ; Nick Russo ; RJ B ; Parigino 48 ; Magikarp ; James O'Donnell ; Danny Anderson ; Marc van der Lee ; Pierre Bourry ; Mark Schutter ; Jennifer M Zukawski ; Pierre Chevalier ; Caracole ; Tommy Penner ; ursus arctos ; Joe Grubbs ; Matthew Edwards ; Peter Harrison ; Arthur Sievers ; Geogast ; Mind K ; Warren Avis ; Jun Plas ; Per Ove Persson ; Robert Mersereau ; Manuel Sauleda ; Christian Emde ; Nicole ; Bart Nadeau ; Michèle ; Rick ; Mary Ann Bernard ; Surina Brewer ; Patrick J Knapp Jr ; Tom Barton ; George Dover ; Cornelis Kater ; Louis P Sauve ; Kraisorn Sapp ; Lois Johnson ; Raymond Dubois ; Stephen Repetski ; Adam Wickens & Hazel Smith ; David Novak ; Dirk Schultz ; Peter Kelly ; Roy. Parker ; William E Gray ; Tom Graham ; Matias ; The Foxyb ; Killergen ; Fernão Gondin ; Dennis Mabrey ; Mr Maurice ; Ben Owen ;
    Michael S Wilhelm ; David Hoyt ; Terry Patterson ; Spencer Brownlee ; m kirby ; Stephane Thienel ; Virginie ; Manuel Guedes-Vieira ; Mats ; Allan Waldron ; Michael Joost ; Edwin Coates ; Hugh Johnson ; Gregoire P ; Severin Durand ; Jay Newman ; Calvin Mangubat ; Orion ; MacLean ; Fred M ; Andrew Oliva ; Myles Freborg ; Maxime Hurtrel ; Sol Miranda Weiner ; Dr Buckton ; Richard Rieben ;
    BenG ; Brendan D ; Bradley Seeman ; Nikola M
    00:00 : Intro
    01:08 : Gara de Nord
    01:33 : The Friendship train
    01:45 : Chilling in a museum
    02:34 : Arrival of the train
    03:16 : Boarding
    03:44 : Departure
    04:03 : Compartement review
    05:57 : Walkthrough
    08:15 : A chill evening
    08:48 : Bed time
    09:43 : Border control (x2)
    10:14 : Mid roll ads
    10:47 : Bogies change
    14:48 : Morning from Moldova
    15:00 : Toilets Time
    15:32 : I've seen better network
    16:20 : Arrival / Conclusion
    16:45 : Outro

Komentáře • 255

  • @SimplyRailway
    @SimplyRailway  Před 8 měsíci +30

    Okay folks, before watching this video, I invite you to watch this video first : czcams.com/video/bGNT5Uh-WKw/video.html
    Enjoy the video :-)

    • @Eurobazz
      @Eurobazz Před 8 měsíci +1

      Surely it would be quicker for the passengers to change trains at the border. The bogey changing exercise is so labour-intensive and takes place early in the morning when you've already had your sleep disrupted by customs and immigration in both countries. The best solution is for Moldova to join the EU, the permanent way converted to 1,435mm and both Romania and Moldova (plus Bulgaria), to join the Schengen area. Oh yes! I'd also get rid of those stupid brass buckets holding plastic flowers.

    • @markoobid2005
      @markoobid2005 Před 8 měsíci +3

      So, you found the train's anthem already :)

    • @NikTolkunov
      @NikTolkunov Před 8 měsíci +1

      Pls, fix title - moldOva

    • @Eurobazz
      @Eurobazz Před 8 měsíci

      @@NikTolkunov I agree entirely.

    • @TaronTT
      @TaronTT Před 8 měsíci +2

      I already knew this song, but it's still great!

  • @Damir_abyi
    @Damir_abyi Před 8 měsíci +97

    These cars were built in DDR, Ammendorf factory between 1970x-1980x.

    • @SH-ly1uy
      @SH-ly1uy Před 8 měsíci +8

      For the USSR

    • @Damir_abyi
      @Damir_abyi Před 8 měsíci +4

      Yes

    • @digimaks
      @digimaks Před 7 měsíci +10

      Actually there were several production lines. Ammendorfs were before 1970's. Yet around 80's the production was expanded to Soviet city Kaluga or Tagil - where newer variant of passenger cars were built. Ammendorfs are older variant.

    • @RussianSevereWeatherVideos
      @RussianSevereWeatherVideos Před 7 měsíci +2

      And they remain the best in my opinion. Such beautiful carriages!

    • @Damir_abyi
      @Damir_abyi Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@RussianSevereWeatherVideos поддерживаю

  • @senorsoupe
    @senorsoupe Před 8 měsíci +29

    The styling of the train can best be described as "Babushka-Chic" lol

  • @isondu1968
    @isondu1968 Před 8 měsíci +29

    Ugly or ancient? It's the most elegant and beautiful interior of a carriage I could find among non-luxury trains, it's simply cute, not old but vintage, not demodé but Classic. Thank you for showing it!!😊

    • @alanmalan3819
      @alanmalan3819 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Do you ever think about that ? Why Moldova still use soviet trains after this long time after european integration and Russia use more modern local produced train nowadays ?

    • @vovixs.567
      @vovixs.567 Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@alanmalan3819 because russia is a cleptocratic empire

    • @strangelylookingperson
      @strangelylookingperson Před 7 měsíci +3

      ​@@vovixs.567Russia by itself is not cleptocratic, some people are. And you definitely can steal more money not building anything, including trains. So most of us, Russians, are honest folk.
      Second, Russia isn't an Empire. No more, at least then the US, China, Turkey or India.

    • @vovixs.567
      @vovixs.567 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@strangelylookingperson if it's not an empire, then why it doesn't just GTFO of Ukraine?

    • @strangelylookingperson
      @strangelylookingperson Před 7 měsíci

      @@vovixs.567 Why Israel just will not GTFO from Golan Heights, UK from Malvinas Islands, Azerbaijan from Karabach? Do you think only empire have territorial issues with other countries? This conflict is post imperial conflict, almost every country who were part of the empire had similar conflict. India-Pakistan, Tajikistan-Kyrgyzstan, Georgia-Abkhazia, Russia-Checnya, Russia-Ukraine.
      And considering that the land of Crimea, Donbass were given to Ukraine by communist dictators, Russia has my sympathies. F communism.

  • @GeoSonstHarmlos
    @GeoSonstHarmlos Před 8 měsíci +38

    Traveled from Berlin to St. Petersburg (36 hours) on a similar train back in 1997. We also went through Belarus. Change of bogies at the Poland-Belarus border.

    • @Eurobazz
      @Eurobazz Před 8 měsíci +7

      At Brest.

    • @benediktmorak4409
      @benediktmorak4409 Před 7 měsíci

      i went from Moscow to Vienna by train 3x.
      The first time,during the wheel change, we still were allowed off the train and excursions to the - Fortress Brest -, from WW2- were offered.
      Second time, no more.
      Only off onto the platform and the duty free shop.
      NO local access there though.
      And the third time we had to sit in the coaches. The first two coaches were then later added to another train that went to Vienna. In Warsaw. - Our - train went then further on to Berlin.
      AND the Austrians did not want to have those coal fired Water Boilers and heating system.
      Spoils their beautiful city...So it was all electric. And of course, for 4 hours no electricity, no hot water, only freezing cold...@@Eurobazz

  • @H0Simone
    @H0Simone Před 8 měsíci +6

    The swinging flower pots on the windows, the curtains, the carpet, the bed sheets....
    I love this "Grandma-Style"! ❤👍👍❤
    So cozy, lovely und adorable.
    Great review, thanks for sharing!

  • @malcolmprice3654
    @malcolmprice3654 Před 8 měsíci +36

    At 77 I love being able to experience these things vicariously. Great video. I have clear memories of my first sleeper journey in the USSR some 40 years ago with my wife and very small daughter. There were stops involving floodlights, armed soldiers and a lot of shouting. Really dystopian. Keep up your excellent work.

    • @rridderbusch518
      @rridderbusch518 Před 8 měsíci +10

      1981 USSR sleeper train for me. The soldiers were a real hoot with their rifles jabbing out the ceiling tiles looking for "contraband". They confiscated two copies of *Good Housekeeping magazine!* Ha ha!

    • @youssef16844
      @youssef16844 Před 8 měsíci +5

      ​@@rridderbusch518And you would've gotten away with it too if it weren't for those pesky border patrol soldiers!

    • @malcolmprice3654
      @malcolmprice3654 Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@rridderbusch518 Ironically, the guy who was allotted the fourth bunk in our compartment had been arrested on arrival in Leningrad as it was then because he had bibles in his luggage which were confiscated (apparently he was a Baptist missionary) but he was released to travel on to Moscow. We were quizzed because we had felt tipped pens, tights and crayons which we had been told would be very acceptable gratuities!

    • @rridderbusch518
      @rridderbusch518 Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@malcolmprice3654 My trip to the USSR was a one-credit class in college. We had 6 weeks of classes with a professor who had done this before. He warned us about the bibles. I brought pantyhose for the hotel guard ladies, cleaned out my jewelry box of junk (they loved it!) Chewing gum, etc.. A different professor of mine had a relative who was also a professor in St. Petersburg, so I delivered a full denim suit to his secretary (he wasn't in,) and her jaw nearly hit the floor! :-D

    • @johnlenin830
      @johnlenin830 Před 7 měsíci

      No bears and balalaikas?

  • @Z20900
    @Z20900 Před 8 měsíci +12

    Amazing trip report! Lots of respect to the CFM staff on keeping this train in the best state they can; it's obvious that a lot of items/decorations are clearly not made to be used in a train, but to me it shows how much they try to make the best out of it and to make passengers feel at ease.
    I've always thoroughly enjoyed any trips on those Ammendorf coaches throughout the former USSR. They're so spacious and I find them comfy to sleep in. Surprisingly, quite some of those old Ammendorfers have some sort of slow AC that functions as long as the train is in motion, probably same technology as the AC of the old SNCF MU sleeper cars. Thing is that it only works as long as the windows and doors are closed. Not sure if the Moldovan ones are equipped with it though; I know quite some Ukrainians are and tix are also sold as AC car in the online module.

  • @Lonaticus
    @Lonaticus Před 8 měsíci +6

    It's really cheap all things considered, at around 250 RON. A trip by car would take 8 hrs of non-stop driving and cost you almost the same in benzine/petrol.
    So it makes sense why it's full. It's definitely a better alternative to going by car.

  • @scottyerkes1867
    @scottyerkes1867 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Very interesting video. A look inside a Soviet train. Thanks Thibault👌💚

  • @tylerbailey8839
    @tylerbailey8839 Před 8 měsíci +7

    I rode this train in 2016! Such an incredible experience in my opinion!

  • @barrywood2806
    @barrywood2806 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Thanks for the memory. I rode one of these from Hook of Holland to Moscow in 1970, in the Iron Curtain days. And then from Moscow to Helsinki. We had the same bogie change as we passed from Poland into the USSR. Back then, you couldn't choose your hotel in Moscow and were assigned one, and each floor had a woman sitting at a desk by the lifts. Not sure what their role was. I was on the train for two nights and could still feel the movement during my first night in my hotel bed.

    • @digimaks
      @digimaks Před 7 měsíci +1

      The woman with the desk near the lift - were the floor attendant/housekeeping. Large Soviet hotels had this as a standard, so they could quickly service the room or help out foreigner with questions.

    • @barrywood2806
      @barrywood2806 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@digimaks Thanks. That makes sense.

  • @davidrennicke9852
    @davidrennicke9852 Před 8 měsíci +4

    9:02 The "sheets" look like curtains in Grandma house. 1970s vibe.😅😮

  • @maestromecanico597
    @maestromecanico597 Před 8 měsíci +1

    This is worlds away literally and figuratively from me. Yet this is the first video of yours that takes me back to my childhood. Thank you. And that beard is not fooling anyone, we know it's you.

  • @karenspade4494
    @karenspade4494 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Wow! That’s so interesting! Also the colored fabric on the train. I loved it. Thanks for sharing.

  • @Selena_Sirb
    @Selena_Sirb Před 7 měsíci +1

    Я тожет так ездила) 664 молд лея в одну сторону. В обычном купе. был только один сосед.

  • @zaciagajacy-warszawiak
    @zaciagajacy-warszawiak Před 8 měsíci +10

    I took international sleeper trains between Poland and Ukraine many times in my life, with similar cars and bogie change. I really love the vibe of Eastern European railroads, it's like connection between time travel and nice adventure, I miss such trips so much!
    15:44 clacking track with concrete railbed is very common in ex-USSR states, concrete then was very cheap and mass produced, while track technology wasn't well developed and it remained like that :)

  • @user-oh8ld7ln6s
    @user-oh8ld7ln6s Před 7 měsíci +1

    This is a great treveling.Hello from Belarus🇧🇾

  • @trainlagged
    @trainlagged Před 8 měsíci +5

    As always fantastic video 🤩 it’s a train I’ve always wanted to ride, hopefully one day!

  • @richardg8651
    @richardg8651 Před 8 měsíci +10

    Great video . That's a crazy amount of work to change the bogies ! Plus it looks very dangerous for the workers .

    • @digimaks
      @digimaks Před 7 měsíci +4

      Nah, it's a very common procedure, worked out for several decades.

    • @u1zha
      @u1zha Před měsícem

      @@digimaks Spain has had automated gauge changers for decades.
      My nah against your nah.
      :D
      Plenty of procedures have been common and have been "worked out", such as doing laundry by hand etc
      Usually people tend to agree that it's crazy amount of work in modern world and are happy to climb to higher levels of productivity and comfort, but of course noone can forbid people from saying "nah" and sticking with the low wages they receive

  • @Je_Existe
    @Je_Existe Před 8 měsíci +2

    I love it! Its literally my taste of interior. Lots of brown wood 😍😍. And the bedsheets are amazing what a beautiful sleeper! Would love the ride it one day!

  • @joebleasdale5557
    @joebleasdale5557 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Hey ho, let’s go
    Folklore and rock n roll
    Join the train, be our guest
    CHISINAU TO BUCHAREST!!!
    🚂

  • @user-fu9bv4ss2p
    @user-fu9bv4ss2p Před 6 měsíci

    I'm a techie by nature. I love tech ( engineering and all. Big and small). This is the strangest tech I ever saw. I've loved trains since childhood. Never drove. This bogies is outstanding. You do worldclass videos.

  • @timnewman1172
    @timnewman1172 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Whatta ride... and I miss the smell of my Grandmother's home! Thanks Thibault!!!

  • @johnericneil2455
    @johnericneil2455 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Hey ho, let's go .... something, something, rock n roll.

  • @theobrattinga500
    @theobrattinga500 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Great video !!

  • @happydmitry
    @happydmitry Před 2 měsíci

    8:18 opinel knife, very good btw 😂

  • @Andrew-jv7tc
    @Andrew-jv7tc Před 8 měsíci +2

    Hey ho, let’s go!

    • @JW46312
      @JW46312 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Folklore and rock and roll. Ride the train be our guest!

  • @chaps1312
    @chaps1312 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Fun fact: one of the beer commercials you had has a train themed commercial as well

  • @serge9808
    @serge9808 Před 7 měsíci

    Simply lovely

  • @tedcoates402
    @tedcoates402 Před 8 měsíci

    very good as usual!

  • @A-NEO-ns4hs
    @A-NEO-ns4hs Před 8 měsíci +2

    The most iconic train for Romanians trains spotters !
    Traiasca Romania si Moldova !

  • @rsconrado
    @rsconrado Před 6 měsíci

    Great material. Great trip 👍

  • @conceyullena
    @conceyullena Před 8 měsíci +1

    Like 64 beautiful video, greetings 🚂👍🔔

  • @LaneC-zh8fj
    @LaneC-zh8fj Před 7 měsíci

    great video as usual. plan on doing this in May

  • @stasostergelj869
    @stasostergelj869 Před 2 měsíci

    I like this route 💙

  • @andybenson1161
    @andybenson1161 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Don't know if it still runs, but when I was in Moldova in 2017 there was another internal sleeper there, though it wasn't advertised on timetable as such. There was one scheduled train a day between Basarabeasca and Chisinau, the return service leaving Basarabeasca. about 10 past 2 in the morning. I was expecting usual Ganz DR1 unit, but it was a single TE10M with two hard class sleeping cars, the main part of turnaround being restocking with logs for the wood fired heating!! No reservation, just grab a bed! Really characterful train, thoroughly enjoyed trip.

  • @hervechaptois4343
    @hervechaptois4343 Před 7 měsíci

    Very nice video and very charming train and I do love the bed sheets too 😊

  • @AndrewG1989
    @AndrewG1989 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Must of been quite an epic train ride in that part of the world. With so much history in it. But still quite an amazing journey.

  • @Delta-pantages
    @Delta-pantages Před 8 měsíci +3

    That is a seriously retro train complete with Soviet style furnishings. Fascinating! By the way, your beard makes you look so much older! 😉

    • @digimaks
      @digimaks Před 7 měsíci +3

      Except Soviet era train did not have those hanging plants on the windows. This is Romanian addition. Also the two bunk rooms were made later. Commonly the Soviet era passenger trains had 4 bunks in the compartment, and your ticket only reserved one. SO it was very common that you will have 3 accquaintances to meet for the trip, that may come and go on the intermediate stations. From my childhood experience, it was OK, sicne I traveled with mom and dad, so we took 3 bunks from the room, with less annoyance. However one time we had an annoying chubby woman on top bunk, which used the table to climb up to her top bunk, instead of using the side laders designated for this. In result- the table latch broke, and she landed on the floor ! stooopiiiid.... 😄

    • @user-lj2ip9lb3e
      @user-lj2ip9lb3e Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@digimaks Дополню\поправлю ))
      В европейских купе RIC 3 спальные полки на одной стене - в длительном путешествии это очень неудобно! Или все сидят, или все лежат.
      В Союзе и России подход другой, поездка может быть 7-8 суток, поэтому схема 4 полки, по 2 на стене. Вообще классификация такая:
      18 мест спальный вагон (как на видео) - 2 места в купе
      36 мест - классическое купе 4 места
      54 места - плацкартный вагон (купе не отделены от прохода - общее пространство), 4 места в открытом купе + 2 места напротив через проход вагона, т.е. в одном горизонтальном отсеке 6 мест. Также над верхними полками есть ещё 3 ярус для хранения вещей и матрасов. Иногда там и люди ездят )))

  • @ggreg2258
    @ggreg2258 Před 8 měsíci

    Fascinating. I would do it!! Thanks.

  • @adnyc82
    @adnyc82 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I took the Soviet-era sleeper train from Tbilisi to Yerevan in late 2019, before they replaced the cars with newer ones, and it looked just like this.

  • @flk1331
    @flk1331 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Used to ride this train back and forth a lot in the early 2000s. Always loved watching the scenery go by and the bogies being changed.
    Also, at 15:47, the clickety clack is the normal railroad sound for me. Having been on trains in countries with better investments in their infrastructure, the smooth, near-silent rides were very weird to me 😂

  • @darleytransportandtravel6353

    Absolutely beautiful! I wish we had sleeper trains like this, today in England.

  • @vladimirassalukas6726
    @vladimirassalukas6726 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Super cool ride in Bosnia. Sarajevo - Mostar if you have not been. Astonishing views.

  • @ZengoMay
    @ZengoMay Před 8 měsíci

    Bogie change very impressive. Great video

  • @lovelyheiferdev
    @lovelyheiferdev Před 8 měsíci +1

    Good lord that's a LOT of work for one hour 😮

  • @tranmere292
    @tranmere292 Před 3 měsíci

    I've just watched this video and find it fascination - the sleeping cars that are so retro and the bogie exchange. I hope you will find time to visit Australia some day, where we have three! gauges, although I don't know of any bogie exchanges on operating passenger trains.

  • @rezaalan3991
    @rezaalan3991 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Great trip. Ah yes P42 and Velaro. I think this is first time taking a train with manual gauge changing like this, unlike previous one which automatic.

  • @barbanousse
    @barbanousse Před 7 měsíci

    The bogie change brings back memories of going between Moscow and Prague in the 80s... I also traveled from Moscow to Georgia, no bogie changes but it was a few days on a sleeper like that one, those were the days... (for train travel, not so much other stuff hehe)

  • @user-fi9bh8pw6l
    @user-fi9bh8pw6l Před 7 měsíci +1

    В таких поездах я с детства ездил и билеты стоили копейки, не так дорого как сейчас! Ностальгия

  • @user-fu9bv4ss2p
    @user-fu9bv4ss2p Před 6 měsíci

    Oh. I saw that : Moldova. I own clothes made in Moldova. And used to have tablecloths from Moldova. Wow!

  • @ZeroAxis
    @ZeroAxis Před měsícem

    These old sleeper trains have that luxury the modern world cannot give for less than $200 sometimes.

  • @user-od4ck1xq2k
    @user-od4ck1xq2k Před 7 měsíci

    8:16 Opinel knife spotted! Quelle tricolore!

  • @slava6071
    @slava6071 Před 8 měsíci +8

    Oh, wow, we don’t have that old bed cover in Ukraine. In Ukraine it’s look more modern. It’s really look like grandma bed🙃😄

    • @Otto_M
      @Otto_M Před 7 měsíci +1

      На Украине

    • @slava6071
      @slava6071 Před 7 měsíci

      @@Otto_M can you write it in English, I can’t understand you 😛

    • @Otto_M
      @Otto_M Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@slava6071используйте переводчик в ютуб

    • @Mastakilla91
      @Mastakilla91 Před 6 měsíci

      @@slava6071 Ask your babushka.

    • @slava6071
      @slava6071 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Mastakilla91 Ok😄

  • @val91201
    @val91201 Před 8 měsíci +2

    It looks pretty decent, all it's missing is a samovar in every compartment

    • @digimaks
      @digimaks Před 7 měsíci

      Samovar is too unique of an item. However in the Russian trains the conductor's additional job is a complimentary tea service!

  • @u1zha
    @u1zha Před měsícem

    I think I had not seen any other rail travel video about the bogie change (though I had heard of this weird mode of crossing from Soviet to normal gauge... Cheap labor haha, no need to invent any automation right)
    The curtains in the train swinging in the breeze from the open windows, great mood indeed

  • @GojiMet86
    @GojiMet86 Před 8 měsíci +6

    I wonder if they keep track of the bogies for the return trip, or if they end up using whatever bogie is available, even if it came from a freight car.

    • @SimstraTimas
      @SimstraTimas Před 8 měsíci +5

      The bogies of Russian gauge cars are always waiting for their original car. On the European gauge, these cars use any available bogies corresponding to the type of car. In addition, one of the bogies of the passenger car is connected to the drive of the undercar generator, since these cars cannot receive power from the locomotive.
      The bogies of passenger and freight cars are incompatible with each other, as they have different designs and sizes.

  • @geoedov2964
    @geoedov2964 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Wow..What a blast from the past. Thanks for sharing.

  • @czechmatebro
    @czechmatebro Před 8 měsíci

    8:40 so you also like climate town :D. Great video btw

  • @fuochirossi1747
    @fuochirossi1747 Před 8 měsíci +1

    6:26 how could I not know, when I’m a huge Eurovision fan?

  • @Esperantisto
    @Esperantisto Před 8 měsíci +2

    Chişinău-Bucureșt!

  • @dimanimatedtakes
    @dimanimatedtakes Před 7 měsíci

    I love videos like this showing Soviet era trains, maybe it's because of the old style trains in Russia (before some were phased out, if not all, for the newer style ones with 2 floors) that I rode on/in when I was growing up.
    I am very interested in the Sofia or the Istanbul bound trains you mentioned -- do you have any videos on those?

  • @michaelkushnir2640
    @michaelkushnir2640 Před 8 měsíci

    That CFM logo 🤩🤩🤩

  • @markolysynchuk5264
    @markolysynchuk5264 Před 7 měsíci +2

    The livery of these carriages looks exactly like that of the Ukrainian railways, so I assume these have been sold to Moldova by Ukraine after they were replaced with newer carriages. It's either that, or they just use the same livery.

  • @EpicThe112
    @EpicThe112 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Excellent Video and if you are wondering who made the carriages it's VEB Volkseigeiner Betrieb Waggonbau Ammendorf, which itself is part of VEB Waggonbau Görlitz. It would say German Democratic Republic (Deutschen Demokratischen Republik) which you spell as République Démocratique Allemand. If they have been modernized perhaps a Polish SUW 2000 Bogie fitted under them to speed up the change from 1.435 Romania to 1.520m former Soviet Union Moldova Finland

    • @Lokomowal
      @Lokomowal Před 8 měsíci +1

      It's still a Görlitz-type bogie

  • @PakaBubi
    @PakaBubi Před 8 měsíci +1

    God this train reminds me travelling to Moscow by train in the late 80's

  • @Luigi-uj5ml
    @Luigi-uj5ml Před 8 měsíci +3

    Replacement of railway carriage bogies: until a few years ago this also took place in Hendaye for what concerns sleeper carriages from Paris to Lisbon. They were released at Hendaye while the rest of the train continued to Irun (border station for the France - Spain direction). After the bogies were replaced, the sleeper cars (of the SNCF) were sent to Irun on the broad gauge track. Finally they were included in the composition of the legendary Sud Express (Sud-Express in francese, Surexpreso in spagnolo e Sud Expresso in portoghese).

    • @Luigi-uj5ml
      @Luigi-uj5ml Před 8 měsíci +2

      Sud-Express in French, Surexpreso in Spanish and Sud Expresso in Portuguese

    • @Eurobazz
      @Eurobazz Před 8 měsíci +2

      Thank God Spain is now the world's leader in gauge-changing technology.

    • @Luigi-uj5ml
      @Luigi-uj5ml Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@EurobazzHowever with Talgo type trains which do not require the replacement of bogies

    • @Eurobazz
      @Eurobazz Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@Luigi-uj5ml I know, that's my point exactly.

    • @EpicThe112
      @EpicThe112 Před 8 měsíci +2

      You are correct since that train uses a conventional Boogie which must have the carriage lifted in order to put the new bogie in. In the case of Talgo Variable gauge the axles contain both gauges and use a special track to change them. This used to be done between Poland and Belarus Spain to France currently the Spanish high-speed Network meeting conventional lines

  • @txemaua
    @txemaua Před 8 měsíci +1

    You're very brave to enter that toilet barefoot! :D

  • @user-zm3qx4if7p
    @user-zm3qx4if7p Před 7 měsíci

    Вагон Св и купейные производства ГДР. До сих пор ходят

  • @66vds
    @66vds Před 7 měsíci +1

    А кишиневский железнодорожный вокзал построен пленными немцами взамен прежнего, разрушенного ими же во время войны. Очень симпатичный вокзал получился.

  • @mikhail4504
    @mikhail4504 Před 7 měsíci

    There have been no such passenger wagons in Russia for more than 15 years. Even on seasonal summer trains, which are assembled from everything that can be found.

  • @natepicker436
    @natepicker436 Před 8 měsíci

    An Opinel knife...you packed well, my friend! I think I just saw the most dangerous job in the world: climbing under those lifted cars while they begin to descend onto those bogies!

    • @u1zha
      @u1zha Před měsícem

      Well if there's 6 lifting jacks then redundancy is kind of ok

  • @Janbaukeoelstra
    @Janbaukeoelstra Před 8 měsíci +5

    Those red trains you see on the station were formel Dutch trains from the eighties, back then they were yellow and blue nice to see formel Dutch NS trains there in Romania😅

  • @cyberi4a
    @cyberi4a Před 7 měsíci +1

    The whole train had an old creepy vibe to it. I thought how can he stand on that carpet barefoot, how clean can it be. Then when you went into the toilet barefoot, I lost it thinking how unclean that would be.....LOL

  • @apollosaturn5
    @apollosaturn5 Před 8 měsíci +4

    4:58 A P42DC engraved in that curtain? So, are they trying to say that this is a Soviet version of Amtrak????? Amtraksky?

    • @frunzaverde1
      @frunzaverde1 Před 8 měsíci

      That's (almost) exactly what it is - it's a GE Genesis derivative that the Moldovans call TE33A, and they've got 12 of them! That means the curtain can't be more than 2-3 years old.

    • @apollosaturn5
      @apollosaturn5 Před 8 měsíci

      Thanks. I looked up the TE33A locomotive and, after comparing it with the P42, I can say with complete confidence that the one portrayed in the curtain is a P42.@@frunzaverde1

    • @alexverdigris9939
      @alexverdigris9939 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Reminded me of Eurovision, when Moldova's voting results phone call was always someone calling from CHisinau but with the New York City skyline background, for a laugh.

  • @malcolmprice3654
    @malcolmprice3654 Před 8 měsíci

    Soulmates!

  • @rejeylola
    @rejeylola Před 8 měsíci +1

    1:24 the cfr jingle

  • @user-fu9bv4ss2p
    @user-fu9bv4ss2p Před 6 měsíci

    I surely did spot the curtains!!! I WANT THEM: 2 SETS: One to put in my window; the other to wear over my top half. Where were they designed?

  • @petrsovicka
    @petrsovicka Před 8 měsíci

    10:56 ČME3 engine Made in Czechoslovakia (ČKD Prague factory) - the both the country and the factory are history today...

  • @alexlapland
    @alexlapland Před 6 měsíci

    The experience of travelling in a Soviet carriage would be incomplete without fried chicken, boiled eggs and tomatoes.
    And salt in a matchbox.
    That's exactly what people travelled with on Soviet trains :)

  • @ronalddevine9587
    @ronalddevine9587 Před 8 měsíci

    Fascinating. I should think it would be more cost effective to just change the gauge of the rails.

    • @digimaks
      @digimaks Před 7 měsíci +1

      Not realy, since they are receiving the trains with large volume of cargo from Russia or Ukraine. It would cost not only to change rails, but also ALL bogies, including all bogies of the locomotives which is nearly impossible! And if they also have electrified track, they will have to replace the entire power grid and transformer stations, to accomodate the entire rail system to the European standard locomotives - which may be AC instead of DC or vise-versa, different voltage, different frequency. That's unrealistic.

  • @michelspievak
    @michelspievak Před 6 měsíci

    Bonjour 👋🇫🇷

  • @phronsiekeys
    @phronsiekeys Před 8 měsíci +1

    Fantastic! I love the cozy look of that compartment. So do you stay ON the train while the bogies are changed? I never thought about it before. If so, what is that like?

    • @zhetonio
      @zhetonio Před 8 měsíci +1

      It's typical practice, you stay inside the train during bogie change. Just a long stop and some noise and activity outside. Lifting is very slow and is not felt at all.

    • @digimaks
      @digimaks Před 7 měsíci +2

      The best is to be in a restarant/dinning car when that happens!
      When I was taking a trip Paris-Moscow, it was a torture to sit in our coach while bogies are being changed, while right across the work paltform there was our dinning car, with wonderful smell of roast chicken!!! 😝

  • @user-gl5bz5lz5s
    @user-gl5bz5lz5s Před 6 měsíci

    It also has double heating system, that can work on electricity or coal.

  • @emilkarpo
    @emilkarpo Před 8 měsíci +2

    Between 22013 and covid I rode the Prietenia once or twice a year either solo or traveling with Young Pioneer Tours. This train and the Moscow-Kishinev trains were probably my favorite old school Ammendorf equipment rides.
    Great trip report as usual!
    Zdob și Zdub should have won but Ukraine won because, of course.

  • @jfmezei
    @jfmezei Před 8 měsíci

    Bogie change was common on the Paris-Moscow and Berlin Moscow trains (which won't come back soon). As well as trains from Hungary and Poland to Ukraine.
    Also, train from China to kazakhstan, Russia and Mongolia involve bogie changes.
    I think changing trains has financial considerations because operator or train no longer has end to end revenues sicne he only gets pasengers to/from the border and another carrier handles passengers on the continuing train. And one would need to have bedrooms"beds that are numbered exactly the same etc.
    They should time the train so that border and bogie changes happen either late evening or early morning isntead of in middle of night.

  • @user-pm3dj1bd6t
    @user-pm3dj1bd6t Před 7 měsíci

    Поезд тоже и очень натурально как в Брест так и Чикаго, экспресс обычно на огороды а в охране вообще пистолеты выдали и вкрутили на сейшелы и прочую кубань, так что думайте когда св или общий вагон, чемодан, Чебоксары, чебурашка, короче всем кумыс продавали как туристы.

  • @tuvia4082
    @tuvia4082 Před 8 měsíci

    Super cool, thanks for sharing!

  • @che3221
    @che3221 Před 7 měsíci

    тю св, плацкарт вот это то что передает дух советских составов

  • @fatwalletboy2
    @fatwalletboy2 Před 7 měsíci +3

    That old soviet stock rides nicer than the latest caledonian sleeper mk5s!
    Also loved seeing the bogie swap ooeration but amazed they havent moved over to standard gauge by now.

    • @Otto_M
      @Otto_M Před 7 měsíci +2

      Пусть перейдут на стандарт 1520мм

  • @internationalrailfanner
    @internationalrailfanner Před 8 měsíci +2

    One of my dream trains to ride is most of either German trains, Austrian trains, or Swiss trains, as they consider having the Nightjet. The reviews sound pretty good.

  • @TypowyBydgoskiMiKol
    @TypowyBydgoskiMiKol Před 7 měsíci

    2:46 Uh-uh, nope. Poland does not use those cars anymore, if not over the last 15-20 years. We have our own sleeper cars, which are quiet and comfy. I suggest you trying a ride!

    • @SimplyRailway
      @SimplyRailway  Před 7 měsíci

      Read again the statement. That's not what I meant :)

    • @TypowyBydgoskiMiKol
      @TypowyBydgoskiMiKol Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@SimplyRailwayoh right, im dumb. You said LINKING poland, then you'd be right, this happens sometimes, but very rarely today.

  • @jzakary1
    @jzakary1 Před 8 měsíci +15

    I've been working in Ukraine for a humanitarian organization, and taking the Kyiv to Vienna sleeper train has been on my bucket list. 🥰

    • @josephr9551
      @josephr9551 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Thank you for your help to Ukraine.

    • @kensukefan47
      @kensukefan47 Před 8 měsíci

      Depparter Wiena heast oida schleich dich

    • @EpicThe112
      @EpicThe112 Před 8 měsíci

      Thank you for your help in Ukraine

  • @Finlandia464
    @Finlandia464 Před měsícem

    Oh Moldavian railways, Hungarians also travel there D1

  • @Mastakilla91
    @Mastakilla91 Před 6 měsíci

    Is that music playing at the Chisniau train station?

  • @feiryfella
    @feiryfella Před 7 měsíci

    I did the trans-Mongolian in 2004, we had the bogie change at the Russian border.I had to jump down cos I was busting for a pee lol.

  • @bumerangsydney
    @bumerangsydney Před 8 měsíci

    Romania was in the USSR too but standard gauge!

    • @claudiuster6243
      @claudiuster6243 Před 6 měsíci

      Romania, Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany were never in the USSR. Eastern Bloc and Soviet Union were not the same thing.

  • @Abnerbandanovotempoinscrito1mi
    @Abnerbandanovotempoinscrito1mi Před 8 měsíci +2

    Bom dia simplys trem cama trem tem ser revisado

  • @BronyMashinist
    @BronyMashinist Před 7 měsíci +1

    ооо классический поезд) не то что эти ваши скоростные электрички) родной зараза. и еще по приезду в Молдову на вокзале играла какая-то советская музыка.

    • @Anodum
      @Anodum Před 7 měsíci

      czcams.com/video/uIwMMjz-rKI/video.html

    • @BronyMashinist
      @BronyMashinist Před 4 měsíci

      Все таки узнал. Это Вальс из Фильма Мой ласковый и нежный зверь.