PJD
Well-Known Member
Love the photo. Where is the location? Is this in your home country, or are you travelling?
Love the photo. Where is the location? Is this in your home country, or are you travelling?
The "SOUTHERN PACIFIC 4449" locomotive, decorated for the holidays, inside the train "barn" today at the ORHC. More to come ...For Pete_W: Fingers crossed (if I can find a place to park), later today I hope to get photos of the "Holiday Express" steam locomotive as it departs Portland's Oregon Rail Heritage Center. It's been raining a LOT this morning, but the weather is supposed to clear up before 4PM PT departure time. I'm not riding the train today, just taking photos from the street. Stay tuned ...
Looks awesome! Thanks Peter! And what a pristine looking shed that it's parked in!The "SOUTHERN PACIFIC 4449" locomotive, decorated for the holidays, inside the train "barn" today at the ORHC. More to come ...
Loving the photos Peter!The "POLSON #2" steam locomotive in the rail yard at the ORHC today. Click the link to read about its history. More to come ...
This is my city where I live. (Russia, Volgograd) The reconstructed Volgograd Arena stadium is in the background.Love the photo. Where is the location? Is this in your home country, or are you travelling?
Thanks, I would love to visit. I used to travel to the US for work in my past two jobs but have never been to Maryland. My current job only requires occasional interstate travel here in Australia and I've not left the country since before covid! Maybe one day!Hey @Pete_W...
If you ever make it over here to the US, beyond the edge of the civilized world, be sure to spend a day at the B&O (for"Baltimore & Ohio") Railroad Museum, located oddly enough in central Baltimore, Maryland. There's some truly astounding rolling stock to see and occasionally ride on there, including a mile or two of some of the first railroad track laid in North America.
To keep this on-topic: Photo ops abound.
Trains here in Australia are not fast either. Politicians have been arguing for decades over building fast trains between cities but unfortunately most of them seem to have been captured by the road freight industry, so they don't spend money on new and straighter rail lines.
I wonder what would happen if you tried to take a photo like the first one in this thread of a high speed train: would the camera’s autofocus be able to keep up?
My sister lives in France, and I’ve been on the TGV (Trains à Grande Vitesse) that can go up to 320kmph / 199mph a couple of times: they’re so quiet and smooth that you don’t realise how fast they’re going until you try to look at anything close to the track: it’s gone before your eyes have had a chance to recognise what’s there.
The cow couldn't look up - too much tasty green stuff!I was trying to get something like this but with the cow peering into the lens, cows being the inquisitive creatures they are lol, above was the best I could manage. The old saying about working with animals and children rings true
The iPhone photos look great. I love the way that the forum software is so precise with the aperture - ƒ/1.77999997139 !!For comparison, the photos below were shot using my iPhone 16 Pro using its Apple RAW [DNG] format.
A short 2-minute, 4K video shot with my S5iiX in 6K HEVC h265 mode.The