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In reply to the discussion: Quebec train set too few brakes, engineer “under police control” [View all]TheBlackAdder
(29,981 posts)10. Correct me if I'm wrong...
1) There was ONLY 1 operator for a 72-car train?
2) The operator was expected to leave the engine unattended, while it was running to maintain the air brakes, while he walked the mile or so to manually set each car's handbrakes and then walk back the mile to the engine again?
3) When he's ready to leave, he'd need to re-walk the mile of cars, while the engine is running unattended, while he unsets the manual brakes?
4) With the bunch of train buffs and other nuts in this world... doesn't it seem unsafe to leave a fully laden train unattended?
===
It sure does sound like PATSY ACQUIRED!
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"rail operators are given considerable leeway"---the regs remind me of oil & gas industry regs
wordpix
Jul 2013
#2
The average railcar is 75 feet long, plus hookups. 80 feet x 75 cars = 6,000 feet. Over 1 mile. nt
TheBlackAdder
Jul 2013
#17
75' too long. 50 or 60 might be about right. And your right, my mental math went south.
HooptieWagon
Jul 2013
#19
Varies, but most seem to be 60-63 feet long, thus about 2 football fields short of a mile
happyslug
Jul 2013
#35
Were they unionized? Seems to me this would be an issue a union would have plenty to say about.
silvershadow
Jul 2013
#12
Until the engineer admits fault or facts show he is responsible, what the comapny says is pure crap.
snagglepuss
Jul 2013
#21
EVEN IF he made a mistake the working conditions made it not only possible, but likely.
AtheistCrusader
Jul 2013
#32
I'm pretty sure we'll see some significant regulatory changes as a result of this. nt
GliderGuider
Jul 2013
#27
(I posted this on another thread) The Proceeding would not have happend in the U.S.A.
mrdmk
Jul 2013
#38
The train was left on the incline because it was crippled, it was parked there so the
snagglepuss
Jul 2013
#40
More on the track incline, union representation and the single-operator issue.
GliderGuider
Jul 2013
#23