George Harris
Engineer
I don't remember there being sound with the video. Even if he blew the horn, blowing the horn would have done nothing toward preventing the collision. After throwing the brake into emergency, the engineer was probably too busy getting himself down and protected from things coming through the windshield, and possibly being thrown around if the train derailed.Wonder why the engineer wasn’t on the horn for the crossing.... it doesn’t appear to be a private crossing, nor in an area where you’d expect a quiet zone.
Drivers of oversize loads and low center vehicles are supposed to learn where these high spots are located and avoid them. Learning about the phone numbers on the crossing signs should also be part of any professional driver, and for that matter any driver. Is this info included in Driver's Ed classes? It ought to be.
A couple years back the Silver Star did derail from hitting an oversize load that high centered at a crossing. In this case the load was, if I recall correctly, a large transformer, which is like hitting a solid block of steel.
There is a relatively newly built grade crossing not far from where I live that looks like the pavement was ramped up to a top of rail elevation higher than the road profile intended. I have a suspicion when the road profile was established they aimed for the top of tie elevation which is what would show up on the ground topo, forgetting that their target elevation should be top of rail which would be somewhere in the 0.6 to 0.7 feet higher.