OT - Trains :)

mgbreeze

All-Conference
Dec 16, 2004
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Train derailments are pretty common. I just googled it, they average like 1,700 a year.
 
Aug 4, 2019
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PSR. Cut thousands from the workforce who inspect, maintain and repair the tracks and equipment and it’s a recipe for disaster. This is driven to get to the lowest operating ratio and benefits the shareholders. Unfortunately it puts the public at risk.
 

dinglefritz

Heisman
Jan 14, 2011
51,387
12,801
78
I knew a guy in college who would supposedly lay iron on train rails when he was a kid to try to derail trains. Supposedly he was successful at least once. With all of the snow and temperature swings we’ve had I’m a little surprised we haven’t had more. The ground in our area is a mess with patches of thawed mush surrounded by piles of ice
 

Baxter48_rivals204143

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Sep 22, 2010
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I knew a guy in college who would supposedly lay iron on train rails when he was a kid to try to derail trains. Supposedly he was successful at least once. With all of the snow and temperature swings we’ve had I’m a little surprised we haven’t had more. The ground in our area is a mess with patches of thawed mush surrounded by piles of ice
The railroad will slow down the trains where the ground is saturated or when temperatures drop below zero. As for laying a iron on the tracks to derail a train is a little hard to believe, but I do know kids would do that about 50 yards down the line from a crossing with cross arms the rod would create a circuit to cause the cross arms to come down. Usually happened around Halloween
 
A

anon_umk0ifu6vj6zi

Guest
Sorry, I figured this was a post about that cop lady from a few weeks ago
 

Sinomatic

Senior
Nov 15, 2017
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Worked for a railroad 12 years.

Derailments happen a lot actually. Was part of a train derailment clean up with a pile of coal so big it made a track hoe look like a toy at the top.

Steel on the track would cause a track indication and stop signals in both directions, if on signaled track, long before a train arrives which would stop the train. With Positive Train Control implemented on roughly half of the nation's class 1 rail system it would stop the train automatically.

A large cottonwood tree stump would be a better choice to derail a train, not that I recommend it. Nuclear waste, military loads, massive quantities of all kinds of hazardous materials are moving around 60mph. So if you get caught you won't see the light of day for long long long time.

Salt in the crossings cause a short circuit in the island circuit which causes the gates to come down if you ever come across that at a crossing and no train is present.
 
Dec 30, 2003
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January train stories were so much more fun to talk about.

 

Tetonia

Sophomore
Jan 22, 2022
4,562
164
63
Why is this **** all over the news then, if it’s commonplace? I know nothing about trains. Just seems weird all the warehouses being set afire, and now this…
 

Sinomatic

Senior
Nov 15, 2017
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Why is this **** all over the news then, if it’s commonplace? I know nothing about trains. Just seems weird all the warehouses being set afire, and now this…
I wouldn't worry too much. It's a coal train.

Other.....kinds of trains... Like 80 tanker cars filled with anhydrous ammonia, worry about those ones when they hit the ground.

Interesting side note/rumor: I was told that if that load was insured that coal has to be buried. Insurance companies cover all losses and losses can't be distributed even if all it is is shoveling the coal back into new cars.

So, like if a train is hauling lots of Bugatti's and the train derails and the load is considered a loss....those cars are going in a hole somewhere, no refurbishment, no scraping parts, it's gone and no one gets it...so I was told.

Any insurance adjusters can chime in if they know different, I wouldn't mind knowing.
 

RedBaloneyPony

Redshirt
Nov 14, 2020
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I wouldn't worry too much. It's a coal train.

Other.....kinds of trains... Like 80 tanker cars filled with anhydrous ammonia, worry about those ones when they hit the ground.

Interesting side note/rumor: I was told that if that load was insured that coal has to be buried. Insurance companies cover all losses and losses can't be distributed even if all it is is shoveling the coal back into new cars.

So, like if a train is hauling lots of Bugatti's and the train derails and the load is considered a loss....those cars are going in a hole somewhere, no refurbishment, no scraping parts, it's gone and no one gets it...so I was told.

Any insurance adjusters can chime in if they know different, I wouldn't mind knowing.
No idea on this but not sure why the insurance company wouldn’t now own the coal and could sell it if they opted to clean it up and reload cars? For instance in a sale barn with cattle, if your animal gets banged up in the yard before it sells, sale barn insurance pays you market price then they sell the critter for the insurance company, usually at a very low price. Once saw a 700 pound steer with a broken nose sold for a dollar. Someone made there farm dog very happy that day!
 

steinek11

All-Conference
Apr 18, 2004
13,481
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113
I knew a guy in college who would supposedly lay iron on train rails when he was a kid to try to derail trains. Supposedly he was successful at least once. With all of the snow and temperature swings we’ve had I’m a little surprised we haven’t had more. The ground in our area is a mess with patches of thawed mush surrounded by piles of ice
We used to lay pennies on the track. Pretty sure we never derailed any trains though.
 

Dean Pope

All-Conference
Oct 11, 2001
13,288
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Why is this **** all over the news then, if it’s commonplace? I know nothing about trains. Just seems weird all the warehouses being set afire, and now this…
It's just the timing of it all. The nasty, life altering accident in Ohio has interest in derailments peaking right now. But I've heard it said many times that people don't realize the potential danger that passes threw their communities on some of those trains.
 
Aug 26, 2022
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I knew a guy in college who would supposedly lay iron on train rails when he was a kid to try to derail trains. Supposedly he was successful at least once. With all of the snow and temperature swings we’ve had I’m a little surprised we haven’t had more. The ground in our area is a mess with patches of thawed mush surrounded by piles of ice
Sounds like a psychopath who should never see the light of day.
Anyone who tries to derail a train should be thought of no better than someone setting a crowded night club on fire.
Little known fact that right outside Lincoln there was a purposely set derailment that murdered 11 people. There is a bike trail in the Southwest part of town that has a marker and relays some information.

 
Aug 27, 2006
27,799
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Worked for a railroad 12 years.

Derailments happen a lot actually. Was part of a train derailment clean up with a pile of coal so big it made a track hoe look like a toy at the top.

Steel on the track would cause a track indication and stop signals in both directions, if on signaled track, long before a train arrives which would stop the train. With Positive Train Control implemented on roughly half of the nation's class 1 rail system it would stop the train automatically.

A large cottonwood tree stump would be a better choice to derail a train, not that I recommend it. Nuclear waste, military loads, massive quantities of all kinds of hazardous materials are moving around 60mph. So if you get caught you won't see the light of day for long long long time.

Salt in the crossings cause a short circuit in the island circuit which causes the gates to come down if you ever come across that at a crossing and no train is present.


You mean this whole thing isn't scripted?
I wouldn't worry too much. It's a coal train.

Other.....kinds of trains... Like 80 tanker cars filled with anhydrous ammonia, worry about those ones when they hit the ground.

Interesting side note/rumor: I was told that if that load was insured that coal has to be buried. Insurance companies cover all losses and losses can't be distributed even if all it is is shoveling the coal back into new cars.

So, like if a train is hauling lots of Bugatti's and the train derails and the load is considered a loss....those cars are going in a hole somewhere, no refurbishment, no scraping parts, it's gone and no one gets it...so I was told.

Any insurance adjusters can chime in if they know different, I wouldn't mind knowing.

I is one.....and there is a disconnect here somewhere. Unless it is a food service item...that is something I've never heard of. I have handled spilled loads from large tractor trailers...we always sell whatever the load was to a salvage buyer. Zero reason to throw it away...though I never handled a load of coal.
 

dinglefritz

Heisman
Jan 14, 2011
51,387
12,801
78
The railroad will slow down the trains where the ground is saturated or when temperatures drop below zero. As for laying a iron on the tracks to derail a train is a little hard to believe, but I do know kids would do that about 50 yards down the line from a crossing with cross arms the rod would create a circuit to cause the cross arms to come down. Usually happened around Halloween
In theory they’ll slow the trains down. I’m not sure it always happens when it should
 

dinglefritz

Heisman
Jan 14, 2011
51,387
12,801
78
Sounds like a psychopath who should never see the light of day.
Anyone who tries to derail a train should be thought of no better than someone setting a crowded night club on fire.
Little known fact that right outside Lincoln there was a purposely set derailment that murdered 11 people. There is a bike trail in the Southwest part of town that has a marker and relays some information.

Haha. Yeah he’s still around and from a fairly prominent eastern Nebraska ag family……. He was just an ornery little kid. If it makes you feel any better I decked him once in college. Geez. That was 45 years ago now😕
 

Wizouski

Redshirt
Feb 1, 2023
56
0
0
I wouldn't worry too much. It's a coal train.

Other.....kinds of trains... Like 80 tanker cars filled with anhydrous ammonia, worry about those ones when they hit the ground.

Interesting side note/rumor: I was told that if that load was insured that coal has to be buried. Insurance companies cover all losses and losses can't be distributed even if all it is is shoveling the coal back into new cars.

So, like if a train is hauling lots of Bugatti's and the train derails and the load is considered a loss....those cars are going in a hole somewhere, no refurbishment, no scraping parts, it's gone and no one gets it...so I was told.

Any insurance adjusters can chime in if they know different, I wouldn't mind knowing.
Years ago you were correct. High school classmate did cleanup after train accidents. He ran equipment to basically bury stuff. Don't know if that is true today.
 
Aug 26, 2022
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Haha. Yeah he’s still around and from a fairly prominent eastern Nebraska ag family……. He was just an ornery little kid. If it makes you feel any better I decked him once in college. Geez. That was 45 years ago now😕
If he's 'ornery' maybe Charles Manson can be described as lil' rascal. ;)
Thanks for taking care of him.
 

HUSKERFAN66

All-Conference
Dec 8, 2004
21,193
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A friend of mine told me they now have a way to ship ethanol through pipe lines now
True but not sure they've gotten approval.

I know there was talk about corrosiveness and how it would react to static electricity. But I'm sure that was all debunked concerns
 

Sinomatic

Senior
Nov 15, 2017
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You mean this whole thing isn't scripted?


I is one.....and there is a disconnect here somewhere. Unless it is a food service item...that is something I've never heard of. I have handled spilled loads from large tractor trailers...we always sell whatever the load was to a salvage buyer. Zero reason to throw it away...though I never handled a load of coal.

Years ago you were correct. High school classmate did cleanup after train accidents. He ran equipment to basically bury stuff. Don't know if that is true today.
Thanks guys! It sounded wasteful at the time to me. This was like 18 years ago I was told they just bury claimed insured loads.
 
Aug 27, 2006
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Thanks guys! It sounded wasteful at the time to me. This was like 18 years ago I was told they just bury claimed insured loads.

My guess is, if it was buried, it was just more cost effective to handle it that way. If the load was destroyed with little to no value after the accident....I can see that happening. It's also possible the load was only partially covered, and again not cost effective for the person(s) on the hook for the remaining balance to move the salvaged item(s), especially if it happens out in the sticks. Betting those reasons, outside of the food service issue, are the reasons it happens. Once an ins company pays the loss on those items, it becomes theirs (unless it was only partially insured) and ins companies are not in the biz of burying cash. I could also see something like coal being "dirty" if it hits the ground maybe, and difficult to pick up and keep it clean so it become useless. Totally guessing on the coal thing, never handled one of those losses.
 

Sinomatic

Senior
Nov 15, 2017
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My guess is, if it was buried, it was just more cost effective to handle it that way. If the load was destroyed with little to no value after the accident....I can see that happening. It's also possible the load was only partially covered, and again not cost effective for the person(s) on the hook for the remaining balance to move the salvaged item(s), especially if it happens out in the sticks. Betting those reasons, outside of the food service issue, are the reasons it happens. Once an ins company pays the loss on those items, it becomes theirs (unless it was only partially insured) and ins companies are not in the biz of burying cash. I could also see something like coal being "dirty" if it hits the ground maybe, and difficult to pick up and keep it clean so it become useless. Totally guessing on the coal thing, never handled one of those losses.

The two derailment cleanups I participated in were coal trains and derailed in empty corn fields.

Other derailments I've witnessed first hand were where the engines were upright, but had run off the side of the rails due to ice buildup in crossovers within a rail yard area. So one set of wheels on the ground fieldside of the tracks and one set on the ties between the rails if that makes sense.
 

king_kong_

Redshirt
Nov 3, 2021
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here is a quote from Jimmy Carter I found interesting - has nothing (or perhaps everything) to do with this, but didn't want to start a new thread:

 

OO Snipes_rivals

All-Conference
Apr 10, 2005
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PSR. Cut thousands from the workforce who inspect, maintain and repair the tracks and equipment and it’s a recipe for disaster. This is driven to get to the lowest operating ratio and benefits the shareholders. Unfortunately it puts the public at risk.
And UP is one of the worst offenders. Ironically they call it progressive/precision railroading I believe. Working in the industry I can tell you that just in our area we usually have 3-4 derailments a year.
 
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dand84

All-Conference
Oct 28, 2017
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SIAP…
But WHAT THE F***?!?
How is this POSSIBLY a coincidence? Being done on purpose, maybe? Anyone else considering this?
Train derailments happen all the time for a variety of reasons. Usually you don’t hear about them. The reason you hear about them now are the two NS derailments with hazmat on them. Now every derailment gets major news coverage.

UP is not NS. UP has a sophisticated response network. NS is in the stone ages for disaster management. UP has response teams all over its territory. Centralized communications to coord with state/local officials and fed agencies. They train thousands of local first responders every year.