cirdan
Engineer
- Joined
- Mar 30, 2011
- Messages
- 3,849
I once did an internship with a European company who were doing heavy engineering and repair work on locomotives of different types. They had a short private test track in the factory grounds and I got plenty of cab time there and even got to drive when there weren't any managers around.
Even more interesting than that though was that when the work was finished we had to do a test rn with the customer out on the real railroad. There had to be one guy from the customer and one guy from us on the locomotive (as well as the driver) to witness that all the tests were done and passed correctly and sign off the reports. Actually only senior staff were allowed to do that but after the first couple of locomotives were accepted they were sufficiently confident that the rest would pass as well. And they never had time (and for some reason hated test runs) so many a time I represented the company on those runs and signed off a good many tests. There must be a good many documents in the archives somewhere with my name on them. At the end of those runs the locomotive was handed over to the customer so we ended up in a big old shed with lots of other locomotives and when the guys had time they showed me around and I got to ride inside locomotives of other types too.
One series of test runs was done on an old little railroad line that was virtually disused. There was a nice little restaurant next to a level crossing. Before becoming a restaurant it had been a factory of some sort and the tracks running into it were still there. We could throw a switch and actually reverse the locomotive onto the parking lot. At first the waitress wouldn't believe us when we told her that was our car.
I'm pretty sure that broke some rules but it was fun and nobody seemed to care.
Even more interesting than that though was that when the work was finished we had to do a test rn with the customer out on the real railroad. There had to be one guy from the customer and one guy from us on the locomotive (as well as the driver) to witness that all the tests were done and passed correctly and sign off the reports. Actually only senior staff were allowed to do that but after the first couple of locomotives were accepted they were sufficiently confident that the rest would pass as well. And they never had time (and for some reason hated test runs) so many a time I represented the company on those runs and signed off a good many tests. There must be a good many documents in the archives somewhere with my name on them. At the end of those runs the locomotive was handed over to the customer so we ended up in a big old shed with lots of other locomotives and when the guys had time they showed me around and I got to ride inside locomotives of other types too.
One series of test runs was done on an old little railroad line that was virtually disused. There was a nice little restaurant next to a level crossing. Before becoming a restaurant it had been a factory of some sort and the tracks running into it were still there. We could throw a switch and actually reverse the locomotive onto the parking lot. At first the waitress wouldn't believe us when we told her that was our car.
I'm pretty sure that broke some rules but it was fun and nobody seemed to care.
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