The eastbound California Zephyr, Amtrak train #6(25), has hit a vehicle between Albia and Ottumwa, Iowa. Not a lot of details right now, but it has been reported that there were no injuries on the train.
The eastbound California Zephyr, Amtrak train #6(25), has hit a vehicle between Albia and Ottumwa, Iowa. Not a lot of details right now, but it has been reported that there were no injuries on the train.
Sounds like the plan right now is for a BNSF train to drop off an engine to be #6's new leader.
Do these grade crossing accidents happen way more frequently in this country than almost anywhere else? One sure gets such an impression. I wonder what the number of incidents per train mile are like in various countries.
Do these grade crossing accidents happen way more frequently in this country than almost anywhere else? One sure gets such an impression. I wonder what the number of incidents per train mile are like in various countries.
Just shows to prove how knowledgeable and reliable they are.A neighbor witness stated that a Eastbound Amtrak train is rare at that crossing, Westbound happens more often. I don’t understand that.
It was in a rural area, no guard rail? No lights. Just a wooden crossing sign. A neighbor witness stated that a Eastbound Amtrak train is rare at that crossing, Westbound happens more often. I don’t understand that.
Looks like they put #6's engines in the power plant's track.
Unprotected ones probably so. But countries like India, Russia and China have numerous crossings, and orders of magnitude more passenger trains.I mean….the answer is likely yes because we probably have more crossings here than any other country.
From where the train stopped it looks like it was barely moving when it hit the truck. Wonder if the truck was stuck on the grade crossing and the engineer went into emergency far enough out to almost stop before the crossing. Or the train was slowing already - how close was it to the next station?
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https://railroads.dot.gov/accident-...crossing-incidents/highwayrail-grade-crossingI mean….the answer is likely yes because we probably have more crossings here than any other country.
That's some interesting statistics, but it would be more useful if they normalized the data by dividing the number of accidents by the number of grade crossings in the county.
Hey it's a government website wouldn't expect it to make common sense. Nothing is "normalized" there.That's some interesting statistics, but it would be more useful if they normalized the data by dividing the number of accidents by the number of grade crossings in the county.
It makes sense, though that Cook County, IL (i.e. Chicago) has such a large number of accidents, being that it's a rail center, and, heck, even the L trains have grade crossings, as we found out riding the Pink Line at the Gathering.
I think a title of "comedian" would suit you better than the current "engineer".Americans feel they have the right to be free to try to outrun trains, I suppose.
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