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   RAILFAN      Trains, model railroading hobby      3,261 messages   

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   Message 1,570 of 3,261   
   Adam H. Kerman to bob   
   Re: Grade Crossing Safety   
   20 Feb 15 14:59:22   
   
   From: ahk@chinet.com   
      
   bob  wrote:   
   >On 2015-02-17 16:38:27 +0000, Adam H. Kerman said:   
   >>rcp27g@gmail.com wrote:   
   >>>On Monday, 16 February 2015 16:25:47 UTC+1, Adam H. Kerman  wrote:   
   >>>>bob  wrote:   
   >>>>>On 2015-02-13 20:23:01 +0000, Marc Van Dyck said:   
   >>>>>>rcp27g@gmail.com explained on 13-02-15 :   
      
   >>>>>>>or putting in positive singalling control on others (ie where the   
   >>>>>>>crossing is protected by railway signals that aren't cleared for the   
   >>>>>>>train until the barriers are down and the crossing positively checked   
   >>>>>>>to be clear).   
      
   >>>>>>This is perfectly feasable but requires to order the gates to go down   
   >>>>>>at a distance that is longer than the braking distance of the train.   
   >>>>>>This means there will be a long delay between the gate going down and   
   >>>>>>the train actually passing the grade crossing.   
      
   >>>>>Indeed, this is the case.  It is less convenient but allows for   
   >>>>>positive safety.   
      
   >>>>>>As it has been mentioned,   
   >>>>>>motorists are unpatient creatures; if the delay is too long, people   
   >>>>>>think the gates are faulty and start turning around them. You might end   
   >>>>>>up this way with a grade crossing that is inherently less safe, because   
   >>>>>>of human nature...   
      
   >>>>>Solved by making the barriers block the whole road.  As the crossing is   
   >>>>>positively checked to ensure the barriers are down and the crossing is   
   >>>>>clear before clearing the signals for the trains, the issue of cars   
   >>>>>being trapped within the crossing is avoided.   
      
   >>>>Clearing level crossings several minutes before the train arrives mitigates   
   >>>>against non-existant risk, and it's quite labor intensive. How is the   
   >>>>cost of delay justified? How is the personnel cost justified?   
      
   >>>This "non-existant risk" just killed 6 people.   
      
   >>You know, I really can't stand people on Usenet who can't debate,   
   >>and therefore find it necessary to set up a straw man.   
      
   >Pot, meet kettle.   
      
   Well, no, I didn't set up a straw man, so your PKB accusation is   
   inappropriate.   
      
   >>She didn't violate the grade crossing minutes before the train arrived, but   
   >>within the last 15 seconds. She had a minor intrusion at about 15 seconds,   
   >>then at about 5 seconds, pulled deliberately into the path of the oncoming   
   >>train.   
      
   >You are contending that people will violate a crossing regardless of   
   >the state of barriers across the roadway blocking access to the   
   >crossing.  I contend this is not the case.   
      
   Drivers drive around lowered crossing gates. There's a famous video of   
   a driver who drove around lowered crossing gates in a situation in which   
   video cameras were placed at a newly-designed grade crossing with major   
   safety improvement. A center barrier had been erected for the last 40 feet   
   of the highway approaching the grade crossing, and the lowered gate completely   
   blocked that side of the highway. A motorist made the decision to drive   
   onto the wrong side of the highway to drive around the lowered gates.   
      
   You cannot contend that a safety system can be placed at a grade crossing   
   that no driver will violate.   
      
   >In the collision in question here, the barrier came down *on top of*   
   >the vehicle.  That means the vehicle was *already* inside the crossing   
   >(as defined by the area bounded by the road barriers) *before* the   
   >barriers came down.   
      
   It means that she violated the grade crossing, ignoring the flashers and   
   bells AND the gate that was in the process of being lowered. If anything,   
   a gate being lowered moves and truly catches the driver's eye, so that   
   actually adds a bit of safety.   
      
   A crossing gate isn't a genuine barrier as they are designed to be   
   flexible and to break readily so that vehicles are NEVER trapped. The   
   main purpose of the crossing gate is to put additional flashers at   
   the driver's eye level, at least when it's lowered.   
      
   >I would suggest that, while some drivers will enter crossings with the   
   >barriers up even if the lights/sound warnigns are active, and will drive   
   >around partial barriers (plenty of youtube videos show this taking place),   
   >they are far far less likely to drive *through* a barrier that is blocking   
   >the road.   
      
   That's nice, but you're backing off your earlier contention that drivers   
   won't violate the grade crossing given the state of barriers across   
   the roadway. So you still think some drivers will violate the grade crossing.   
      
   >>The system you advocated addresses a period of minutes before the   
   >>train arrives in which there really isn't any danger of collision.   
      
   >The difference between the crossing types I have described is not down   
   >to the method used to keep cars off the crossing, but the method used   
   >to keep *trains* off the crossing.  In the crossing involved in this   
   >collision, there is *no* method to stop trains from crossing.   
      
   Now you're trying to imply that trains can stop on a dime. Lovely.   
      
   As I've already explained about PTC grade crossings just recently installed   
   between Chicago and St. Louis, they have to be active many minutes before   
   the train gets there so that the train can be thrown into emergency and,   
   even then, it'll reduce speed down to 15 mph. Still addressing the issue   
   of grade crossing violations that occur minutes before the train gets   
   there, and not within the last 10 seconds as with the situation that   
   we are discussing. It addresses a truck that stalled within the grade   
   crossing minutes before the train gets there, nothing else.   
      
   The rest snipped unread. You just don't know what you're talking about.   
      
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