View Full Version : UP wuses out!
Maxwell Plant
April 20th, 2000, 09:38 AM
It seems the 110MPH speed limits have been put on hold for awhile between Dwight and Springfield, IL. Since the terrible grade crossing accident at McLean, IL., UP wants to wait to boost the speeds. I guess they think it will make them look better by showing "concern" for the general publics "safety". They are in a Lawsuit that is going to cost them millions of bucks. The grade crossing lights and gates were not reactivated after a maintainance test. There are also BARRIER GATES that the Illinois Department of Transportation is testing at this crossing, but were shut down for road construction. Two teenage boys were killed due to the mistake made by the UP signalworker. http://www.trainboard.com/frown.gif As tragic as a grade crossing accident is, I'd like to know the difference between getting mauled at 79MPH and 110MPH. At either speed, the cars passengers are dead. The only difference I see is the distance they'll be dragged by the train. UP and Amtrak have a hard enough time getting along. Now it looks like UP wants to "share the blame" with Amtrak over this one by not letting them go faster. You could look at it this way, IF the Amtrak train was allowed to go 110MPH, they would have already been through the crossing BEFORE the car was on the tracks. And if UP had trained their signal crews better, the lights would have flashed, the bell would have rung and the gates would have come down. Thus the accident would have NEVER accured. Just my opinion...
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RAILROADING-TO-THE-MAX, Burlington Northern/Santa Fe Style!
Brent Tidaback
throttlejock
April 20th, 2000, 05:00 PM
Max,
What track or sub division are you talking about going to 110mph. This would be real news. Not knowing what the facts are I don't want to step on toes, But. For a train to do over 49mph or 59mph passgr it must have some kind of signal system(I think). To do over 79mph it must have automatic train stop and that only gets you up to 90mph. So I imagine to get over 91mph there are several other hurdles to jump through. So outside the NEC and some stretchs of the former ATSF no train goes legaly over 79mph that I know of. If the UP is doing it that would be news to me and I would really like to know where and what they did to get there.
Maxwell Plant
April 20th, 2000, 06:50 PM
There is no ATS on the old Alton/GM&O. This is the line between Chicago and St. Louis VIA Springfield, IL. It was always fast track, before ICG. The GM&O ran trains at 100+ MPH up untill the IC merger, then things went down hill. We even had the Turbo Train for awhile, until ICG let the track go to hell. Things got better once IC sold the track to the Chicago Missouri & Western, which went Bankrupt after one year, and then SP took over. SP laid welded rail and reballasted the whole line. the train speeds went up from 40 freight-55 passenger to 60 freight-79 passenger. This is what it was when Amtrak first started running trains here. Now they want to make it a High-Speed Passenger line, eventually raising the speed to NEC standards. 110MPH was the first step, double tracking is in the future for this line, like it was before ICG, and a totally new signal system with fiber-optic. They currently use the original B&O three position/color aspect signals for most of the line through my area, but some of the "bonnet" three color lights are in place around the Pontiac-Joilet area. (or so I'm told.)
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RAILROADING-TO-THE-MAX, Burlington Northern/Santa Fe Style!
Brent Tidaback
throttlejock
April 20th, 2000, 09:00 PM
Max,
Just because they use to run at 100+ mph doesn't mean they can do it now. Laws and Federal regulations have changed. There are several places that have been proposed targets of Hi-speed corridors but there would have to be many upgrades like I eluded before. All I can say is forget how it used to be like because the railroad industry has changed so much and continues to change daily. Today it is you can't go over 79mph with out automatic train stop and over 90 with even more features unkown to me.
Maxwell Plant
April 21st, 2000, 04:47 AM
I'm just tellin' it like it is. The Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) released this information to the Public late Febuary, stating that "Amtrak would be authurised to run at 110 MPH between Dwight and Springfield, IL. starting in early March." That's what they said and that's what isn't happening due to UP wanting to put it on hold for now. Yes, I'm fully aware of ATS being required for trains to run over 90 MPH, but IDOT seemed to have waived this requirement because there is no ATS on this line. I'm also aware of your expertise as you are an Amtrak Locomotive Engineer, but again, there has been no mention of lack of ATS being the problem here. It's UP trying to save face.
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RAILROADING-TO-THE-MAX, Burlington Northern/Santa Fe Style!
Brent Tidaback
throttlejock
April 21st, 2000, 06:24 AM
My my Max,
is this g) or h) http://www.trainboard.com/biggrin.gif
It would be very interseting to see if the state of Ill. can overule Fed regulations. They want to up the psgr speeds here between Sea & Pdx and the last I heard from the amtrak officials were they figured to install ATS since that would be the cheapest but that would only get them to 90. They must be doing some heavy upgrades. In the literature you've read do they say anything of upgrades and or doing it in phases? I can't find my reg book but I'll dig some more.
BC Rail King
April 21st, 2000, 06:26 AM
Oh throttlejack, that is the first thing I have read on this board that made me burst out laughing!!!
Dane N.
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TAMR2860-AKA BC Rail King
TAMR2860@hotmail.com
BC Rail King
April 21st, 2000, 06:27 AM
Oh throttlejack, that is the first thing I have read on this board that made me burst out laughing!!!
Dane N.
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TAMR2860-AKA BC Rail King
TAMR2860@hotmail.com
LarryOrr
April 21st, 2000, 07:27 AM
The line with the 110 MPH is the Chicago to Detroit line and an article was written on it just recently in Trains magazine. Can't remember the exact issue at this time and I also can't find the damm thing either.
Alan
April 21st, 2000, 08:04 PM
Larry, the 'Trains' Magazine article was is the November 1999 issue. Plenty of information in there.
Of course, this all seems a bit 'retro' for us Brits., as our mainlines are 125 mph anyway http://www.trainboard.com/rolleyes.gif
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Alan
The perfect combination - BNSF and N Scale!
www.ac-models.com (http://www.ac-models.com)
http://Andersley.homestead.com
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[This message has been edited by Alan (edited 21 April 2000).]
Maxwell Plant
April 22nd, 2000, 12:15 AM
I think it's G! HA! I'm not in an uproar, it's all cool. http://www.trainboard.com/cool.gif This is the only thing I don't like about the written word over the spoken word. Getting back to the subject: The artical was in our local paper this Febuary and it was about the Chicago to St. Louis line, not Chicago to Detroit. It was a news release from IDOT via Copley Press (the Publisher). I think I may still have the artical, if I do, I'll post the whole thing here as a quote from Copley Press.
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RAILROADING-TO-THE-MAX, Burlington Northern/Santa Fe Style!
Brent Tidaback
Maxwell Plant
April 24th, 2000, 05:42 AM
One thing I might add, there isn't an Amtrak train in Illinois that doesn't go less than 79 MPH top speed. We've got some really great track to run trains on here. The old IC Iowa Division is even seeing Amtrak trains again! YEEEEE! HAAAAA! http://www.trainboard.com/biggrin.gif I still haven't found the artical, but I'm still looking.
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RAILROADING-TO-THE-MAX, Burlington Northern/Santa Fe Style!
Brent Tidaback
LittleGiant
April 24th, 2000, 02:02 PM
Maxwell,
What's the scoop on Amtrak service on the old Illinois Central Iowa Division? If you mean the Chicago-Des Moines service, that will operate over the I&M (Milw/Soo) Chicago to the Quad Cities and the Iowa Interstate on to Des Moines.:confused
I haven't heard or read about any proposed Amtrak service over the Illinois Central (Chicago Central) line West from Chicago to Rockford, Freeport, Dubuque, Waterloo, etc.
Fill me in. I know the folks in Rockford are upset that the new service uses Davis Junction as the Rockford Stop. That's about 15 miles south of the City.
Little Giant
TrainTech
April 24th, 2000, 07:17 PM
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by Maxwell Plant:
They are in a Lawsuit that is going to cost them millions of bucks. The grade crossing lights and gates were not reactivated after a maintainance test. There are also BARRIER GATES that the Illinois Department of Transportation is testing at this crossing, but were shut down for road construction. Two teenage boys were killed due to the mistake made by the UP signalworker. http://www.trainboard.com/frown.gif As tragic as a grade crossing accident is... (some info removed)
(more info removed) ...if UP had trained their signal crews better, the lights would have flashed, the bell would have rung and the gates would have come down. Thus the accident would have NEVER accured. Just my opinion...
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
Actually the accident would not have occured if the driver of the vehicle would have had enough sense to SLOW DOWN, STOP, LOOK AND LISTEN when approaching ANY RAILROAD CROSSING! Wether the crossing has lights, bells, gates, et al, these DO MALFUNCTION from time to time. Nothing is foolproof and I've seen these things activate on their own, not work at times. Therefore I have enough sense to STOP, LOOK and LISTEN before I cross any tracks that I can not see clearly down them in either direction.
Unfortunately most teenagers and some stupid adults play their damn radios so loud they couldn't hear a diesel horn or steam whistle if there life depended on it, WHICH IT DOES!
Can't even count the number of times I've laid on the horn when someone starts changing lanes right into the side of my car, why didn't they hear the horn? Damn radio playing so loud they couldn't hear emergency vehicles, horns or anything else.
In my opinion radios in automobiles need to have a set volume level so that you can't "crank" the volume up so loud you can not hear the outside surroundings. And car manufacturers need to quit making auto's where the outside noise is almost non-existant as well.
All of this stuff leads to death and major accidents due to one not being able to hear what's going on outside. And as long as radios keep blaring at ridiculous decibels and car makers keep making the outside noises that need to be heard from coming in, I personally think train, car and truck accidents will start to go on the uprise.
Of course there is exception to everything and I've seen some of those too, like the jackass that drives around downed crossing gates. I have no empathy or sorrow for any idiot that would drive around a downed crossing gate or through it. Just seen a truck driver bust a gate the other day to haul ass across the tracks before the train got there. He just *barely* made it!
So don't blame it all on the signal operators, partial responsibility lies within the driver of the automobile.
When near any RR Crossing just use some common sense, slow down, turn down the radio, put the damn cell phone down and LISTEN! It could very well save your life and any passengers lives that may be riding with you!
Sorry for the long-winded dissertation, but I just feel using common sense when approaching a RR Crossing is a smart way to handle it. Even if the crossing is marked with automated signals and gates.
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Clay/TrainTech
http://www.trainweb.org/fcen-rr
http://members.tripod.com/~White_Kitty
[This message has been edited by TrainTech (edited 24 April 2000).]
Maxwell Plant
April 25th, 2000, 04:46 PM
Harry,
I think that southern route is the one I'm thinking of, I was under the impression it was the Rockford line, I guess not.
TrainTech,
I felt the same way you do until I knew all the facts. The young men who lost their lives did not have their "Damn Radio" turned up to loud. They couldn't of heard the train anyway, two to three blocks away, the town of Mclean was having a Tractor pull in conjuntion with a festival. Witnesses say you couldn't hear the train horns due to the
un-muffled tractors. They didn't just "speed across" the tracks either. They were doing less than 30 mph (posted speed is 35) when they were hit. If they were going faster and not paying any attention to the posted limit, they may have made it and got the hell scared out of them instead. The signalman in question is no longer a UP employee due to his actions, his supervisor is gone too. The NTSB has put the blame soley on UP and the signalman. Amtrak, IDOT and these young men are not to blame. If you could see all the "bells and whistles" they have on this crossing, you would understand why the average person may not be as cautious as you or I at this particular crossing. Someone didn't do their job and because of it two young boys died. Right place at the wrong time. And that's the facts...
aomhs
April 27th, 2000, 04:00 AM
I agree that we need to increase grade crossong awareness, but your assertion that "MOST" teens walk with radios loud on train tracks isn't correct. Sure, I see some students using the commuter rail line in my town as a shortcut, but compared to the size of the teen population of my community, it's really an insignificant amount.
Going back to the original conversation, I've had enough of Uncle Pete's Gotta-slow-Amtrak-to-hurt-ridership-so-Amtrak-will-discontinue-service mentality. I'd like to see 110, but I believe it will be ineffective in gaining significant numbers of riders UNLESS it is extended over AT LEAST half of the line. Maybe all areas except restricted zones (the parts currently good for 79) between Joliet and Alton should be concidered. That would bring about the faster than driving times that will make trains popular and the costs more effective.
If it is grade crossings that are the problem, new technology, educations, and signage should all be considered. Not one more life should end.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by TrainTech:
Actually the accident would not have occured if the driver of the vehicle would have had enough sense to SLOW DOWN, STOP, LOOK AND LISTEN when approaching ANY RAILROAD CROSSING! Wether the crossing has lights, bells, gates, et al, these DO MALFUNCTION from time to time. Nothing is foolproof and I've seen these things activate on their own, not work at times. Therefore I have enough sense to STOP, LOOK and LISTEN before I cross any tracks that I can not see clearly down them in either direction.
Unfortunately most teenagers and some stupid adults play their damn radios so loud they couldn't hear a diesel horn or steam whistle if there life depended on it, WHICH IT DOES!
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
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AO :)
http://www.trainweb.org/midtown
AFN
April 27th, 2000, 04:54 AM
Expect a train on any track, at any time, in any direction. Its in our rule books. Perhaps it should be pounded into the public mind as well. I agree STOP LOOK and LISTEN should be enough but the sad fact is some people just dont take my train seriously, or have little regard for personal safety.
Maxwell Plant
April 27th, 2000, 04:00 PM
It's in Amtrak's and The State of Illinois plan to have this corridor developed into another High Speed Corridor, just like out east. The projected date was 2003 the last time I heard. The plan calls for the current trains to run at 110 MPH with D/Electrics, other "express" trains will run at 130(?) MPH with "Juice Jacks". The electrics will stop at limited stations while the D/E's will stop at all the regulary scheduled places. The placement of the 110 MPH limits, between Dwight and Springfield, was to be the first of many steps towards this goal. People are just as likely to get hit at grade if the trains are doing 79 MPH or 110+ MPH, so what's the hold up? It's not like it's cutting into UP's "capacity" on this line, they barely run anything on it now and that's mostly at night after all the Amtrak traffic is done for the day.
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RAILROADING-TO-THE-MAX, Burlington Northern/Santa Fe Style!
Brent Tidaback
TrainTech
May 5th, 2000, 07:16 AM
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by AFN:
Expect a train on any track, at any time, in any direction. Its in our rule books. Perhaps it should be pounded into the public mind as well. I agree STOP LOOK and LISTEN should be enough but the sad fact is some people just dont take my train seriously, or have little regard for personal safety.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
I agree with you AFN. I regulary railfan around CSX and "leased" Amtrak Tracks and I can no longer keep count on my fingers or toes how many times I have seen people drive around downed crossing gates or blatantly run right across the tracks where crossing gates may not be in use (like a lot of small country roads just have the flasher lights).
I'm probably going to start an IDIOT'S HALL OF FAME page on my website dedicated to these same idiots that "just barely made it" as the train approached. Just got to see how many pix I've actually got of some of the ones I've caught doing this.
Public Awareness of trains does need to be stressed. I actually talked to one person that was "late to catch the train" so they ran around the gates to get to the "depot on time" and I aksed them, if that train had hit you how far do you think it would be before it could stop? The answer I got was amazing, and I quote (southern accented), "Why shore son, that train could stop within a few feet, very little damage would have been done to my car or anyone in it."
I'm sure the look on my face was total bewilderment, this guy really believed that train travelling at about 25-30 mph could stop short and no one would be hurt.
I said, well let me tell you, that loco would not have stopped in a few feet, it would take hundreds of feet and by the time your car was rolled over by the loco, chances are if you didn't get bumped off to the side, your chance of surving it aren't as rosey as you believe. Chances are you and every person in your vehicle may have been maimed for life or worse, killed outright. Trains DO NOT have rubber tires, they are bare metal wheels operating on metal rails, and whenever a loco has to slam on its airbrakes to do an emergency slow down to try and lessen the impact, that loco could sustain severe damage such as flat spots on the wheels, passenger cars, train could also be derailed by pieces of your car going underneath the train and getting caught in the wheels. You could have even killed the train crew operating that train, not to mention some of the passengers!
His repsone to all that was: "I ah nev'r gave it much thought. But I still believe no severe damage would have been done."
I should have asked him his name so I can watch the obits for it and see if he died because of getting rammed by a train.
I don't work for any railroads (but I will be going to conductor school in a few months to become one and get a job on the rails here in Florida) and this person and his mentality scare the hell out of me!
Unfortunately I think there are many more like him out there behind the wheel of semi-trucks, automobiles, etc. Really scary thought isn't it? Shudder
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Clay/TrainTech
http://www.trainweb.org/fcen-rr
http://members.tripod.com/~White_Kitty
[This message has been edited by TrainTech (edited 05 May 2000).]
E-Lack & N-Trak
May 8th, 2000, 06:39 AM
Max, did I hear someone say eew, pee wants to sell their tracks through Central IL?
If the McLean crossing barriers are/were part of an IDOT/FRA test, then the accident is a costly lesson. However, comments about grade crossing carelessness by motorists are still valid. The Amtrak vs. truck accident last March is another example of a driver with a load on the trailer, but light from the neck up.
I have sons near the age of the boys who were killed at McLean. They recall the boy who died about two years ago, while walking to school on the tracks with his headphones on; his Walkman turned up.
With black humor, their peer group asks what the kid was listening to while a northbound Amtrak came up behind him, sounding the horn and braking hard?
I'm a transplanted Buckeye, wondering if there's something in the water to make folks in Illinois appear so dumb.
I'd love to see high speed rail travel in the Midwest Corridor. When motorists outnumber rail passengers a gazillion to one, it's a tough sell.
Ask a farmer who uses an unprotected gravel crossing to get from one field to another; or the soccer mom having to go six blocks out of her way at 30MPH so a lounge cafe full of fans can get to the Cubs-Cardinals game at 110MPH.
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You can always tell a model railroader; you just can't tell him much.
Maxwell Plant
May 10th, 2000, 01:28 AM
I've heard rumors, but nothing set in stone. I know UP want's to get out of the line, but hasn't had any takers...yet. As you well know, it is a well kept line, but with CN/IC controling the North Access to it at Joilet, it would be a hard sell to anyone EXCEPT CN/IC, or someother railway that is real chummy with CN/IC. (I wonder who that would be?) Now, about your comment on the crossing. The IDOT experimental barrier gates were NOT in operation due to the road construction taking place during the time of the accident (and I stress ACCIDENT). The standard RR crossing gates were disabled for a test by the UP signalman and WERE NOT RE-ACTIVATED. Thus, this "accident" IS the fault of the UP employee, not the young men that were killed. I feel for you, and your worry over what could happen to your boy if he doesn't watch for all the signs of an approching train. But if we were to rely on only staying vigilant at all train crossings, then the already high crossing accident rate would be astrnomical. Yes, there are some people that just don't care and are willing to gamble at the "already down gates", I have NO sympathy for them. But these young men were snuffed out by a careless UP employee and some of you, at least it seems to me, think that's "OK" because these were silly, loud music playing, reckless, not a care in the world youths. Sorry guys, that just don't flush! Should we all pay more attention at rail crossings and around railway property? YES! Will we be perfect and ALWAYS do that. NO! We're human folks and we make mistakes, some of them cost us our lives or the lives of others.
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RAILROADING-TO-THE-MAX, Burlington Northern/Santa Fe Style!
Brent Tidaback, Member #234
TrainTech
May 11th, 2000, 04:34 PM
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by aomhs:
I agree that we need to increase grade crossong awareness, but your assertion that "MOST" teens walk with radios loud on train tracks isn't correct<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
I didn't say most "walk", HOWEVER, I did say "MOST DRIVE with their radios blaring at extremely loud volume levels" http://www.trainboard.com/rolleyes.gif and I don't know about your area, but 9 out of every 10 cars here in Central Florida that has a "teen driver", the damn radio is so loud and 4 of 10 with the BASS so hard that it can be felt two car lengths away. http://www.trainboard.com/mad.gif
And THAT it is annoying and I know they can't even hear emeency vehicles because they never pull over when one is trying to get around them. http://www.trainboard.com/mad.gif They can't hear anything inside the vehicle because they have their radios on so damn loud and the windows up!
If you can't hear a fire truck horn blaring directly behind you, you sure aren't going to hear a diesel horn or steam whistle at a rail crossing that could or may be malfunctioning.
Of course there are just some drivers that are just too stupid to know to get out of the way of emergency vehicles and I've seen my share of these idiots too. Probably the same ones that drive around downed crossing gates.
TT
[This message has been edited by TrainTech (edited 11 May 2000).]
E-8
May 11th, 2000, 04:59 PM
You make some good points TrainTech. The other day I was driving down the main artery in the town I live in and I heard a ambulance coming. I pulled to the right curb and stopped at once. The cars in front of me kept going and the cars behind me passed me and they all looked at me as they went around me like "What's wrong with you?" I was the only car that stopped for the ambulance.
On car stereos, I had a loud one about 15 years or so ago when I was younger. Of course, that wasn't as loud as they play them today. I live about 3 blocks off the main street in the town I live in and at night when I am in bed with all of the windows closed I can still hear cars going up and down the main street and sometimes the bass shakes the windows in the house - 3 blocks away!
When I lived in Kansas I worked at a radio station with extremely sound-proof studios. We built two six inch thick walls seperated by 4 inches of air - all soundproofed and two solid doors to go through to get in. We tested them by having a person stand right outside the studio and SCREAM as loud as they could. We never heard them inside the studio. The only external noise I ever heard in there was when someone would drive by with a car stereo that would shake the ground. You couls literally hear it and feel it inside there. It was actually pretty wierd.
I am not familiar with the case being discussed here in this thread but if people get hit by a train for having their stereo too loud it would not surprise me. I remember when I was young and had mine, I got into the music and didn't pay attention as well as I should have and I couldn't hear anything else.
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Ship It On The FRISCO! (http://www.frisco.org)
Maxwell Plant
May 12th, 2000, 06:21 PM
Wait a minute, wait just a god-darn minute!The issue with this case is not a Stereo playing to loud! I hate those darn BOOM cars too, but that's not even an issue with this case! These kids couldn't hear the train because (and I'm only going to say this ONE LAST TIME!) a TRACTOR PULL (that's a VERY LOUD compatition) WAS IN PROGRESS AT THE TIME OF THE COLLISION! NO ONE COULD HEAR THE TRAIN, NOT ONE WITNESS! A lady in the car in front of the victims saw the collision in her rear view mirror. She didn't hear the train and was almost in the crash herself. The main reason these boys were killed was the inproper actions of the UP signal crew (caught on film) at the crossing just minutes before the crash. THAT'S THE FACTS FOLKS! The only real action UP has taken was to fire the crew (DUH!) and now make it look like keeping the Amtrak trains speeds at 79 MPH is going to save lives at grade crossings. That's total BUNK! Dead at 79 and dead at 110 is DEAD!
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RAILROADING-TO-THE-MAX, Burlington Northern/Santa Fe Style!
Brent Tidaback, Member #234
TrainTech
May 13th, 2000, 10:39 AM
Maxwell,
The last points being made about the loud radio playing was not in reflection to the teens that got killed on the tracks.
After reading about the "tractor pull" I can understand that, but then maybe the relatives of these teens that were killed ought to also bring charges against having a tractor pull so close to the RR tracks that it made the crossing unsafe due to the excessive noise. Sure, the gates were not working because of someones incompetence, but doesn't that incompetence also reflect on those that would hold an extremely "LOUD" event right next to an operating and active railroad?
There are other factors to consider as you have said, and these oher factors should also include the person or persons responsible for the tractor pull that made the crossing unsafe, even if the gates were in working order, there is always a possibilty of gate/crossing light malfunction. I have seen gates work for one train, go up and then another train come through and the same gates malfunction and not work, no lights or gates and then start working again, sometimes even work when no train is anywhere near them! So I would not only go after the UP worker that screwed up, I'd be damn well going after the idiots that also put an excessively loud tractor pull event next to "active" railroad tracks. That just wasn't too smart either!
Anytime we have "tractor pulls" or such events they are miles away from any railroad tracks. So I guess the state in which those teens were killed have some pretty incompetent people setting events up where they shouldn't be held at all.
These type of events belong out in the country areas, away from any and all railroad tracks and hopefully away from folks residences!
Regards,
TT
[This message has been edited by TrainTech (edited 13 May 2000).]
Maxwell Plant
May 15th, 2000, 03:06 AM
http://www.trainboard.com/confused.gifTT,
You are again stearing the blame to someone else other than the signal crew. McLean, Il. is a very small town and is virtually "out in the country" already. I'm sorry, you can't possibly fault the community activities for any of this. The gavel has already fallen on the signal crew. They are at fault, no one else. The original subject has somehow been swept under the rug, just like UP is trying to do with the blame for this collision. It's their track, their signal crew and THEIR RESPONSABLITY! Now they are trying (and evidently succeding with you and others) to shift the blame to someone else. "It was the trains speed, it was the tractor pull, it was the road construction, it was the kids not paying attention." No my friends, it was UP and their signal crew. Not allowing Amtrak to run at 110 MPH is not going to stop people from getting hit at any of the crossings on this line. The train speed through McLean wouldn't change, the NTSB, FRA, DOT or IDOT wouldn't allow them to run that fast through a town anyway. It's all smoke and mirrors to make UP look like the good-guy and it's not fooling me at all. Don't let it fool you!
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RAILROADING-TO-THE-MAX, Burlington Northern/Santa Fe Style!
Brent Tidaback, Member #234
TrainTech
May 20th, 2000, 06:41 PM
Maxwell, you are misunderstanding my point.
I am not blaming the town entirely here.
I agree, it is the fault of UP, but if this town is as small as you claim, I feel that tractor pulls that create "excessive noise" should also be banned. I still say, that if that "noisey tractor pull" had not been in operation, the teens WOULD HAVE heard that diesels horn blaring and would probably be alive today wether or not there were any type of automated or basic wooden crossbucks marking the tracks.
I would say UP is 90% at fault here for not making sure the automated gates and lights were working as they should have been, However, I still regard the person, persons or organization(s) involved in inititating the tractor pull are at least 10% to blame, if not a bit higher for the teens death. And if I were their parent(s) I'd be going after *BOTH* "UP" and "THE ORGANIZERS" of the tractor pull. Nor would I ever allow another such event in a town that is so small the event could be overheard over the entire town. Too me that is just downright ludicrous.
TT
[This message has been edited by TrainTech (edited 21 May 2000).]
Maxwell Plant
May 22nd, 2000, 02:14 AM
AHH! Ok, I'm with ya' now. I haven't heard anything about the Town getting sued over the noise issue, but I'll keep an ear open.
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RAILROADING-TO-THE-MAX, Burlington Northern/Santa Fe Style!
Brent Tidaback, Member #234
BannonVIA
May 30th, 2000, 03:06 PM
Some of you know me, some dont, for those who don't, My name is Bannon, Im in the Safety, Health and Environment Department at VIA Rail Canada Inc., I have been following this forum closely and I have to agree with some things, and disagree with others...
As far as that accident, wether UP is responsible or not, you can't take away the fact that the driver was too ignorant to Look, Listen and Live, but on the same side, UP should have had that semaphore working properly. I would like you to do something.
Stand at a crossing, when you see the train coming, listen for the horn, then listen to where you cant hear the horn anymore, maybe its different from frieghts, but when our loco's come at a crossing, you can hear the horm maybe up until 100 meters away, then you cant hear it until maybe 100 meters after the train has passed, Ive tested this theory due to a headache caused by a Parent Teacher Association tryin to get rid of whistles at crossings ,at the sametime, do not get me wrong ,I think it would be stupid to get rid of horns and whistles but the fact is, if you dont look, listen, chances are you wont live.
Our trains run at 100mph (155kph), we want 125mph/ ubt not until there are no grade crossings, we look at the altrenatives but frankly, they are not in our budget, the swedish have the best crossing barriers, but at 150,000 a pop, its highly unlikely we will see those considering there are 1000 grade crossings in our "corridor" (Quebec City to Windsor), or we can build a bridge, ya right, who's gonna pay for that? The city? hahahaha, not in a million years.
I feel people need to keep an eye on locomotives, in 1998 the survival rate at a grade level accident was 11 percent. That tells me 89% of people who are involved in a grade level crossing DIE.
But, with al this discussion, our trains arent goin any faster, and safety is hardly improving, maybe some minister or government cabinet member will read this and realize what the f*%$ is going on. Or maybe not and us railroaders will be left to converse about topics such as these.
Thanks guys for letting me preach and ramble on.
Any questions feel free to ask.
Bannon
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Bannon C Woods Jr
VIA Rail Canada
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