This is one of my favourite Only Fools And Horses episodes its the Friday The 14th episode. The episode is called Friday The 14th and I think the episode is really funny it is my most favourite episode. I watch it a lot and I use to watch it a lot of the time when I was younger to and I also use to watch it at my Grandmas old house a lot and I use to watch it at my Grandmas old house years ago when very young to. I use to watch it at home now and again when it was on the television to.
I use to love watching Home Fires when it was on the telly on itv I thought it was really good. The television series started on the 3rd May 2015 when I was twenty eight and finished the year after on the 8th May 2016 when I was twenty nine when I was younger. That is how long the series went on for it was for a year just for that one year.
I am looking forward to watching this weeks episode of the new series of Peaky Blinders from Sunday night this past Sunday and I love watching it. I am going to catch up with the episode later on tonight and watch it tonight. It is only on for an hour and it is still really good and I am still watching all the series on Netflix and catching up with those episodes from Netflix to.
I love watching the stand up comedian Kevin Bridges when he is on the telly I think he is really funny he is just so funny everytime. He is a Scottish comedian from Scotland and he is so popular and lots of people go and see him loads of people sit in the theatre all night and watch him because he is so good he really is that good at what he dose he is brilliant and he is really funny when he is up on stage doing his stand up comedy.
This my other favourite Home Alone film it is the movie Home Alone 3 1997 it came out and was released on the 19th December 97 when I was eleven years old when I was in my last year at Glebe School when I was younger. The film is on for just under 2 hours it is on for 1 hour 42 minutes nearly a couple of hours and it is on for that long not long at all.
With the Train Sim World 2 Harlem Line coming soon, we take a further look at this remarkable and bustling Metro-North route.
The Harlem Line: It is one of Metro-North Commuter Railroad’s interlinked “Big Three” routes. Along with MNCR’s Hudson and New Haven Lines, the Harlem Line serves the pulsing urban areas north and east of New York City. Second only to the New Haven Line, the Harlem Line is Metro-North’s busiest commuter artery, alive with the hustle and bustle of Big Apple railroading!
And soon, the Harlem Line: Grand Central Terminal – North White Plains route is coming to Train Sim World 2, so let’s take a closer look at this busy and historic commuter railroad line.
The route:
As created for Train Sim World 2, the upcoming Harlem Line: Grand Central Terminal – North White Plains route extends from New York City to North White Plains, New York. The line begins at the bumper posts of legendary Grand Central Terminal (located at 42nd Street in Manhattan), then passes through the Park Avenue Tunnel until, at 97th Street, it bursts into the open air and rides atop the Park Avenue Viaduct to Harlem 125th Street Station.
Once past 125th Street, the route crosses the towering “DB” moveable bridge over the Harlem River to reach Mott Haven (milepost 5.4) in the Bronx. Between GCT and Mott Haven, Metro-North’s busy Hudson, Harlem, and New Haven lines all share common trackage. Then, at Mott Haven, the MNCR Hudson Line diverges (the upcoming Train Sim World 2 route will also include a short stretch of the Hudson Line extending to Yankees 153rd Street Station). Running largely in open air but below the surrounding street level, the four-track route extends through the Bronx with station stops such as noted Botanical Gardens (home to the famed Bronx Zoo). At Woodlawn Junction (milepost 11.8), the Metro-North Harlem and New Haven lines separate, and the Harlem Line begins a journey, much of it along the Bronx River, through a patchwork of urban and suburban territory to White Plains (milepost 22.4) and North White Plains (milepost 23.9), the latter of which is host to a large staging yard.
Electrified throughout via third-rail D. C. power, the multi-track Harlem Line: Grand Central Terminal – North White Plains route will include 18 stations, of which Grand Central Terminal, Harlem 125th Street, and White Plains are the busiest, and the line will offer a captivating and challenging mix of express, semi-express, and local commuter runs that are brought alive in five scenarios and more than 260 timetables services.
The Equipment:
The upcoming Train Sim World 2 Harlem Line: Grand Central Terminal – North White Plains will feature two generations of notable Metro-North electric-multiple-unit (EMU) trains, the venerable Budd-constructed M3A and modern Bombardier-built M7A.
Metro-North’s Harlem and Hudson Lines were long owned and operated by the great New York Central. During the NYC (and later, Penn Central) years, the Harlem Line was host to NYC’s own EMUs, the last of which were the railroad’s Pullman-Standard 85-foot-long 4600- and 4700-series cars which arrived in the early- to mid-1960s and then served into the Metro North era. In assuming control of the line, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) and later Metro-North inherited the challenges of replacing the aging ex-NYC equipment. That process began in 1968 with the purchase from the Budd Company of 770 EMUs for use on the Long Island Railroad, which was followed in 1971 with a purchase of 178 similar M1A cars for use on the Harlem and Hudson lines of what is today Metro-North. In the early 1980s, more new equipment acquisitions followed, including the M3 for LIRR and M3A for Metro-North. The M3As were quite similar to the earlier M1As, and MNCR received 142 8000-series, silver-and-blue-clad M3As in 1984-85. The M3A were constructed in married pairs and train lengths on the Harlem Line are typically up to eight cars in length. While the M3As will eventually be replaced by MNCR’s newest M9 cars, the veteran M3As are expected to remain in service for some time.
Today’s workhorse EMU on the Harlem Line is the flat-faced Bombardier-built M7A. Like its predecessors, the M7A is a kindred spirit to Long Island Rail Road equipment, in this case the LIRR M7. Long Island M7s began arriving in 2002 and M7As made their appearance on Metro-North in 2004. Eighty-five feet in length and with a capacity of up to 110 passengers per car, the M7As are equipped with 265-horsepower traction motors on each axle of their four axles. A total of 336 M7As entered MNCR service by 2006. Also configured in married pairs and authorized for 80 mph operations on MNCR, the M7As serve both the Harlem and Hudson lines.
With a masterfully created and highly detailed route and two generations of EMUs which will offer authentic controls and realistic operating characteristics, together with a bevy of timetabled services and scenarios, the upcoming Train Sim World 2 Harlem Line: Grand Central Terminal – North White Plains route will deliver the full and varied experiences of American commuter railroading around the “Big Apple” – and it’s coming soon to Train Sim World 2!
This is me and Simon with our awards from Maths English Preparing for Further Learning or Employment. We got them yesterday Jill gave them to me Simon and everyone else on the course yesterday afternoon before we all went home.
This is another photo of me with my awards from Jill’s courses that. I done two years ago and last year on zoom a couple of years ago in 2020 and last year in 2021. These are my Entry 2 and Entry 3 awards from English Maths Preparing for Further Learning or Employment.
Me and Simon Schofield with our certificates from our courses we did last year and the year before in 2020 it is the awards from English Maths and Preparing for Further Learning or Employment.