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@Railrunnin posted:

Notice, metal was flying everywhere upon impact. Never stand close to where an impact is about to happen. Stuff goes everywhere and a piece of metal to the head will ruin your day. Take cover behind something substantial (tree / building / ) to protect yourself if you can't get away from the scene.

If I was that guy - I'd buy a lottery ticket.

Paul

Hi Paul: What you are saying about the impact and stuff going everywhere is true. Check out a different camera angle at frame 0:18 in this video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hg5Zi2AqTXE

Gary 🚂

@Railrunnin posted:

Notice, metal was flying everywhere upon impact. Never stand close to where an impact is about to happen. Stuff goes everywhere and a piece of metal to the head will ruin your day. Take cover behind something substantial (tree / building / ) to protect yourself if you can't get away from the scene.

If I was that guy - I'd buy a lottery ticket.

Paul

I saw another video shot from just past the crossing. Needless to say the guy shooting it almost became a casualty from flying debris.

Last edited by RSJB18

There are a multitude of web references that can be studied that have to do with the responsibilities of PSAP's and RR's to communicate whenever there is an incident involving a RR crossing.

How many times have we seen a RR vs highway collision that might have been avoided, had only someone called the RR and asked for any trains in the vicinity to slow down or stop. Of course, in a perfect world, those steps towards avoidance would need to be taken immediately upon learning of the collision potential, but even a few seconds or a minute might mean the difference between a near miss and a near hit.

In this example, we are not dealing with a small-town police department with limited training and facilities. A large department, upon receiving a call about a vehicle on the tracks, could certainly rely on established policies and procedures to contact the railroad dispatching center to begin the slowing down or stopping of any train potentially involved.

Here's some food for thought, as an example:

NENA 01-002 (ymaws.com)

Let the flames begin...

That guy either has a friend upstairs someplace or someone angry at them and is inept....survives a plane crash and a railroad crossing incident.

As far as being reported to have someone tell the train to stop, it doesn't sound like there was a lot of time to report it, it sounds like the plane crashed, cops responded and pulled the person out and the train almost immediately flattened it. Even assuming the cops had direct access to the train's dispatcher, and the dispatcher radio'ed the engineer to stop, he might have applied the brakes after it had already hit the plane.

The responders did the right thing in this case based on the description, they saw the plane was in danger and pulled the guy out, they made the right assumption, that the train could come at any minute and that would be that. A friend of mine and I many years ago (think late teen ie all impulse and no brains) pulled a person out of  a car that had crashed and was on fire, we were able to get him out of it.  Of course we got yelled at, because we didn't know if the gas tank had gone up yet, but the thing is had we not pulled him out and the tank blew, he would have likely died (and in a bit of comic relief in a serious situation, it was a Ford Pinto, believe it or not, something that hit us later on). Yes, had the tank blown they might have had 3 seriously injured or dead people, but to us the risk was worth it....(would I do it now? Only if they didn't have a NE Patriots bumper sticker or a white castle bumper sticker.....*evil grin*).

How many times have we seen a RR vs highway collision that might have been avoided, had only someone called the RR and asked for any trains in the vicinity to slow down or stop. Of course, in a perfect world, those steps towards avoidance would need to be taken immediately upon learning of the collision potential, but even a few seconds or a minute might mean the difference between a near miss and a near hit.

In this example, we are not dealing with a small-town police department with limited training and facilities. A large department, upon receiving a call about a vehicle on the tracks, could certainly rely on established policies and procedures to contact the railroad dispatching center to begin the slowing down or stopping of any train potentially involved.



Let the flames begin...

Arthur,

Just to be clear:  Are you assuming that the officers involved in this incident reacted too slowly, and worse yet didn't do the right thing?  (You know what happens when you assume ...).

Personally, for any reasonably large catastrophe one has to wait at least six months to get the real story, ideally from trusted media, reporting D.O.T. findings.  Although this isn't one of those situations, the circumstances of the dual crashes are quite unusual, so maybe the investigation-and-reporting sequence will actually occur, and afterward we can make a decision about the quality of any assumptions made today.

BTW -- I'm doing some assuming here too, about what you're assuming.  Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.

Mike

Last edited by Mellow Hudson Mike


How many times have we seen a RR vs highway collision that might have been avoided, had only someone called the RR and asked for any trains in the vicinity to slow down or stop.




Let the flames begin...

I dunno, looking at various collision video's, it seems by the time the call to the railroad would be answered and restrictions set in motion, the train has already gone through the immovable object.

Rusty

I've looked at the video several times. As a former private pilot (with a commercial license), I cannot imagine how he managed to crash-land it right on the railroad track, and on a fast-train commuter line as well.

Runway 12/30 at Whiteman Air Park in Pacoima runs parallel to the Southern Pacific tracks.  In fact, when I was taking pilot training there in the early 80s, I used to joke about landing on a moving boxcar... 

My late father's Ercoupe is still parked there, last I checked... 

https://www.airport-data.com/a...photo/001131339.html

Mitch

I used to fly the same type of aircraft (Cessna) from that same airfield in the early 1980s.  Whiteman Air Park, right next to the Southern Pacific line going through Pacoima.  Back then, it was freight-only; CalTrans commuter service came later.   Wonder if I knew the plane or the pilot...

Mitch

It's a 172H built the latter part of '67  The Pilot is the current owner, looks like he got it in 2009.

Yes, but still . . .   By the way, that Ercoupe is awesome! Haven't seen one of those in decades. Only, looks like the tires need to be inflated before takeoff. 😉

Yeah, I miss that old bird.  I plan to build one in 1:48 scale for the layout at some point. 

@EscapeRocks posted:

It's a 172H built the latter part of '67  The Pilot is the current owner, looks like he got it in 2009.

(nods) I learned in 152s, mid 70s vintage, as well as in the Coupe. Got a name for the chap? 

Mitch

Yeah, I miss that old bird.  I plan to build one in 1:48 scale for the layout at some point. 

(nods) I learned in 152s, mid 70s vintage, as well as in the Coupe. Got a name for the chap?

Mitch

Hey Mitch!

Got my private in a 152 in Colorado in 1985. Then moved onto Arrows for complex and my instrument, and eventually the Baron for my multi.   I still fly.

Is your email in your profile?   I don't want to post personal info for someone I don't know publicly

The weight relationship may be like running your car over a beer can, but looking at one of the still pictures at the beginning of one of the videos, showing the engine after the crash, obviously there's still risk for the engine crew. It appears the engineer's front window got smashed pretty good. Fortunately it appears that the object that hit the window didn't penetrate it, but it had to be pretty frightening.

Last edited by breezinup
@EscapeRocks posted:

As far as why he crashed on tracks.   He knew he was going down, and wanted to avoid the building in a few seconds he had left of controllable flight is how I see it

plane train

Yeah, looks like he was coming in hot* on Runway 12.  Looking at the crash footage, it looks like he didn't have full flaps down.  On a 1200 foot runway, that's a mistake, as I can attest.   I wound up julienning a traffic cone at that turnoff back in 1982 while practicing flaps up landings... 

Mitch

*possibly attempting a go-around? 

@wb47 posted:

I wonder if the RR is or could be on the police dispatch frequency given the location of the air strip in a congested area.

No. The FCC would never allow such confusing cross-chatter.

Most police have live radios attached to their shirts now.

Yes, but ONLY connected to each other and their dispatcher.

As a side note, did the local police call the PROPER railroad, i.e the passenger commuter RR or the host railroad (not being familiar with that operation, I don't know which operation actually dispatches the passenger trains)?

@wb47 posted:

I do not see how police dispatch to train dispatch would be that difficult to work out.

@wb47,

It isn't, and yet it is.

@Arthur P. Bloom embedded a very nice hint in his posting earlier in this thread.  I'll repost it here:

   NENA 01-002 (ymaws.com)

Thank you Arthur.

Read it, at least the the Executive Summary if you don't have time for the whole thing.  It's not a cakewalk, but it's quite possible, and the method has already been created after learning from many grade crossing accidents in the past.  Maybe it's even already in place in LA, and at the accident site?

Mike

Last edited by Mellow Hudson Mike

will the "new" train safety control system incorporate anything useful alone these lines?  I was thinking that it would have the ability to stop or slow a train if danger lurks.  Or Not?  Or maybe Kate Shelley running to flag a train is the best we can come up with.

Last edited by wb47

The ATC systems are keyed to GPS and signals to make sure signals are obeyed , they will not stop a train any faster than the engineer can. as far as the police were concerned getting the guy out was first priority then make a call. all crossings are required to have the dispatchers emergency number on them. A call to the dispatcher and him calling the train would have taken far longer than this whole event from start to finish. looking at the tracks the train came around a curve very close to the crossing , not much time to do anything other than go into emergency.

@wb47 posted:

will the "new" train safety control system incorporate anything useful alone these lines?

No, as the new PTC (Positive Train Control) is designed to keep trains fro colliding with each other. Thus, PTC would have no ability to know if a grade crossing was not clear.

  I was thinking that it would have the ability to stop or slow a train if danger lurks.

The current PTC system only monitors "danger" involving other trains being too close.

Or Not?  Or maybe Kate Shelley running to flag a train is the best we can come up with.

Sure.

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