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A Cop Quickie

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A Cop Quickie
Posted by Mookie on Tuesday, February 24, 2004 1:33 PM
Got a quickie for the policemen on this forum - I know you are out there.

Train watching - arms go down, signals flash - no train. Maybe one of the usual pigeons set it off. They have trouble in that area.

Cruiser - gentleman inside on cell phone, didn't hesitate but instead pulled around the arm and went on his way up the street, still talking on his cell phone.

I listen to a scanner and know those cell phones are used for conversations they don't want on the radio. So he probably wasn't talking to dispatch to go to a call. He was talking to who knows, and none of my business, but it irritated me that first he went around the gates and 2nd that he didn't stop and look to show others sitting there waiting that this is what you legally do when there is no train coming.

He wasn't calling the railroad, cuz he was on the phone well before he got to the gates - in fact driving parallel to the tracks and was actually trespassing on rr property. Maybe that should have been my first clue.

I know police are humans, too, but should show by example!

Mook

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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, February 24, 2004 2:23 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie


I know police are humans, too, but should show by example!

Mook


I famous man once said...

"Who's more the fool, the fool or the fool who follows him"

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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, February 24, 2004 2:31 PM
QUOTE:
Train watching - arms go down, signals flash - no train. Maybe one of the usual pigeons set it off. They have trouble in that area.


That reminds me of where I used to work. The staff room overlooked a 3 rail grade crossing (great for train watching over the lunch hour!). I was on graveyard shift, so I took my lunch around 2am. I'm watching the crossing and the arms kept going down, staying there for a few minutes then went back up, then down again, and up.

It happened the entire hour I was there, truly weird. I thought they might have been doing some testing or something, but there didn't seem to be anyone else in sight!?

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Posted by Mookie on Tuesday, February 24, 2004 2:45 PM
I know this particular place has problems with weather or birds or whatever and it was explained on here how those things happen. It was daylight and I knew there was no train coming, since I sit there almost every weekend. But he never hesitated, didn't really even look. Drove around a whole string of cars that watched him while they all stopped and waited.

Guess this goes back to the poor sheriff that drove around a whole string of stopped cars with lights and siren going and into the side of the old engineer's work train - broad daylight!

That he wasn't hurt makes it pretty funny, but really - I do hold politicians, clergypeople and the police officers to just a little higher standard than Mr & Mrs JQ Public!

Old Fashioned and Wrinkled Fur Mook

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Posted by rrnut282 on Tuesday, February 24, 2004 3:51 PM
In all likelihool nothing will happen to the individual. That's too bad, because if I were the judge, I'd like to ask him how many people he has ticketed for doing that and base my fine accordingly[:(!].
Mike (2-8-2)
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Posted by rrnut282 on Tuesday, February 24, 2004 3:56 PM
FYI
Around here, if a school bus driver does that,(disregard RR crossing equipment) they lose their CDL licence, period. Trains in sight or no trains in sight. Empty or full. If that applied to everyone, maybe they would think twice before trying to beat the train.[V]
Mike (2-8-2)
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, February 25, 2004 6:40 AM
The answer to this is education. My department has been through an Operation Lifesaver program, so now we know better (the example of a locomotive hitting a car being like a car hitting a beercan struck home with us.) If I and my partner are on a call, lights and sirens going, we might- just might- blow through a gate, but not without looking. Incidentally, many cell phones allow us to clearly communicate with our dispatchers or supervisors when we are in radio dead spots... contrary to popular opinion, most of the time we are not calling for take out from Dunkin' Donuts). Anyway, Lifesaver turned a few of us from being idle observers into railfans.
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Posted by CShaveRR on Wednesday, February 25, 2004 10:28 AM
I've just now decided...volunteering for Operation Lifesaver would be a good thing to do after I retire. Nobody argues with the message they send, but it just doesn't get out to people who need it (Metra just had an incident in which a 10-year-old boy was hit because he didn't see the second train coming).

Carl

Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)

CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)

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Posted by dekemd on Wednesday, February 25, 2004 12:41 PM
Ericthered has it pretty much right. Cell phones allow us to communicate with the dispatcher better. If an officer somewhere is on some really hot traffic, the dispatcher may tell all officers to hold their radio traffic unless it's an emergency, so a cell phone is used to commicate until the channel is released. This may have been the case. As for driving around the crossing, no excuse unless it was an emergency. If so he should have been running lights and siren. Personally, if I'm running lights and siren, I'll treat a rail crossing just like a major intersection. I may not completely stop, but you can bet I make sure I can make it safely across before I go through. Nothing like a couple knuckle through the door to ruin your day.

Derrick
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Posted by traingeek087 on Thursday, March 4, 2004 4:47 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie

I know this particular place has problems with weather or birds or whatever and it was explained on here how those things happen.


Where Might that be Mookie?
Rid'n on the city of New Orleans................
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, March 4, 2004 6:09 PM
Mook-

As an ex-Cop I can honestly say: "I love quickies!!"

LOL!!!

LC
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Posted by Mookie on Friday, March 5, 2004 6:15 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by traingeek087

QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie

I know this particular place has problems with weather or birds or whatever and it was explained on here how those things happen.


Where Might that be Mookie?
Right where we watch trains! [:)]

Watch the gates go up and down and lights flash as the temp goes up and down or the sun or a pigeon or .......They must drive the maintenance crews crazy!

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Posted by Mookie on Friday, March 5, 2004 6:18 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Limitedclear

Mook-

As an ex-Cop I can honestly say: "I love quickies!!"

LOL!!!

LC
hmm...dated a cop or two and a sheriff. And that's all I am going to say!

[}:)]

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, March 5, 2004 2:51 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie

Got a quickie for the policemen on this forum - I know you are out there.

Train watching - arms go down, signals flash - no train. Maybe one of the usual pigeons set it off. They have trouble in that area.

Cruiser - gentleman inside on cell phone, didn't hesitate but instead pulled around the arm and went on his way up the street, still talking on his cell phone.

I listen to a scanner and know those cell phones are used for conversations they don't want on the radio. So he probably wasn't talking to dispatch to go to a call. He was talking to who knows, and none of my business, but it irritated me that first he went around the gates and 2nd that he didn't stop and look to show others sitting there waiting that this is what you legally do when there is no train coming.

He wasn't calling the railroad, cuz he was on the phone well before he got to the gates - in fact driving parallel to the tracks and was actually trespassing on rr property. Maybe that should have been my first clue.

I know police are humans, too, but should show by example!

Mook


Well, the general feeling that they are above the law they enforce is one of the reasons why i dislike cops in general. Such is (while not universal) a prevalent attitude.

I used to work at a mall, and it was not uncommon to see an on duty officer pull his cruiser into a fire lane and park while he slips insideto do some last minute shopping for the holiday, then well sincehe was in there anyway, stop by the coffee bar to chat with his buddies.

I used to thrill on telling such cops to write themselves a ticket, especially when I'd note little
"extras" such as the wheel nearest the curb being in excess of 18" away from the curb.[4:-)]


What? Well heck yeah Mook, of course doing that made me popular, why do you think I did it in the first place?[^]

I remember one "hot shot" in particular that after months of "razzing" each other back and forth,. after I found out he was about to be a daddy without the help of his wife of 6 years, he finally snapped and ambushed me (verbal confrontation only) coming out of work one night, telling me how lucky I was that he was a good cop and a good christian, or "we'd be rolling right there on the dark sidewalk together"

I told him I wasn't into guys, so "sorry"...[}:)]

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Posted by Mookie on Friday, March 5, 2004 3:02 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by TheAntiGates

QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie

Got a quickie for the policemen on this forum - I know you are out there.

Train watching - arms go down, signals flash - no train. Maybe one of the usual pigeons set it off. They have trouble in that area.

Cruiser - gentleman inside on cell phone, didn't hesitate but instead pulled around the arm and went on his way up the street, still talking on his cell phone.

I listen to a scanner and know those cell phones are used for conversations they don't want on the radio. So he probably wasn't talking to dispatch to go to a call. He was talking to who knows, and none of my business, but it irritated me that first he went around the gates and 2nd that he didn't stop and look to show others sitting there waiting that this is what you legally do when there is no train coming.

He wasn't calling the railroad, cuz he was on the phone well before he got to the gates - in fact driving parallel to the tracks and was actually trespassing on rr property. Maybe that should have been my first clue.

I know police are humans, too, but should show by example!

Mook


Well, the general feeling that they are above the law they enforce is one of the reasons why i dislike cops in general. Such is (while not universal) a prevalent attitude.

I used to work at a mall, and it was not uncommon to see an on duty officer pull his cruiser into a fire lane and park while he slips insideto do some last minute shopping for the holiday, then well sincehe was in there anyway, stop by the coffee bar to chat with his buddies.

I used to thrill on telling such cops to write themselves a ticket, especially when I'd note little
"extras" such as the wheel nearest the curb being in excess of 18" away from the curb.[4:-)]


What? Well heck yeah Mook, of course doing that made me popular, why do you think I did it in the first place?[^]

I remember one "hot shot" in particular that after months of "razzing" each other back and forth,. after I found out he was about to be a daddy without the help of his wife of 6 years, he finally snapped and ambushed me (verbal confrontation only) coming out of work one night, telling me how lucky I was that he was a good cop and a good christian, or "we'd be rolling right there on the dark sidewalk together"

I told him I wasn't into guys, so "sorry"...[}:)]


to use a very old expression - I bet you are a "caution"! [;)]

And if he was such a good Christian - why wasn't his wife going to be the Mommy?

But I digress - so I will go home and take an antacid for it!

C U All Monday! Happy Train Watching!

Mookie

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, March 5, 2004 3:21 PM
Well, *that's* obviously part of the illustration that he measured himself by an entirely different yardstick that the rest of us are supposed to use...

I think he started hating me the day I asked him in front of his buddy's, if he'd like to buy a dime bag. (he REALLY thought he had me),...after he said "Surrree, is it good stuff?" I pulledf out a sandwich bag with $10 worth of Roosevelt dimes in it and said "You bet, the pure stuff too"

His cop buddies still razz him about that in the locker room, according to one cop I am actually friends with[:-,]
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, March 5, 2004 4:49 PM
Doofus cop story... right out of our Lifesaver investigator's notebook.

A conscientious police officer was escorting a funeral when he came to a crossing (ungated). He saw a train coming, so rather than interrupt the funeral procession, he got off his motorcycle, and put his hand up to stop the train.

Fortunately for him, the train was able to stop after a quarter mile of emergency brake application. No one was hurt on the ground or on the train.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, March 5, 2004 6:16 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by erikthered

Doofus cop story... right out of our Lifesaver investigator's notebook.

A conscientious police officer was escorting a funeral when he came to a crossing (ungated). He saw a train coming, so rather than interrupt the funeral procession, he got off his motorcycle, and put his hand up to stop the train.

Fortunately for him, the train was able to stop after a quarter mile of emergency brake application. No one was hurt on the ground or on the train.


That's a great story,...[:)] Hopefully it didn't cause flats to get ground into the wheels?
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, March 6, 2004 2:14 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie

QUOTE: Originally posted by Limitedclear

Mook-

As an ex-Cop I can honestly say: "I love quickies!!"

LOL!!!
[bow][bow]
LC
hmm...dated a cop or two and a sheriff. And that's all I am going to say!

[}:)]


[;)] Works for me...

LC


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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, March 6, 2004 9:05 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by macguy

QUOTE:
Train watching - arms go down, signals flash - no train. Maybe one of the usual pigeons set it off. They have trouble in that area.


That reminds me of where I used to work. The staff room overlooked a 3 rail grade crossing (great for train watching over the lunch hour!). I was on graveyard shift, so I took my lunch around 2am. I'm watching the crossing and the arms kept going down, staying there for a few minutes then went back up, then down again, and up.

It happened the entire hour I was there, truly weird. I thought they might have been doing some testing or something, but there didn't seem to be anyone else in sight!?




Well Maybe I can help put here.

The old Systems used to activate RR lights Were somewhat flawed, and can still be found in various places Still in operation.

I doubt they use the old insulated link system on Main lines, but if you live of a branch line or near a yard, this is what it could be:

An insulated link, with wires petruding from both sides are used to tell the location of the train. This sends a signal to the silver looking box known as the "Boite Logiciel" in Quebec, Heaven knows what that is in English.

The problem with this system, was that, It was never fool proof, and far from it. Teenagers with 10 Guage CU or AL wire could easily send this lights of in a tissy, and would drive the neighbors insane all night.

They were very easily "accidently" set off. That is why, newer Railraods use a different system, and I don't know how the hell that works, You see the problem with links are:

1. There are a lot of Natural Conductors in this world, Certain trees falling on the lines Could cause The Electricity to flow through The links, Such as Oak is an extremely good conductor, where as a maple tree isn't.

2. Freezing Rain: The ions and different metals in Rain that freezes on the tracks could easily cause a Joint Circuit and set the lights off, Rememrb, H20 itsel;f does not conduct electricity, But rain is comprised of almost every metal from the periodic table, Highly Acidic, and a good conductor when it becomes ice.

3. Loose Wires: A slightly loose wire, A wire with some rust would not be making proper contact, and the first thing an RR light set is programmed to so, that if there is a loose contact, and at any time can not do a proper job at monitoring the Tracks, Failsafe is activated. Failsafe Is What RR lights do when they malfunction, there would be no other way to reset them after failsafe is activated then to press the Reset button or to Turn them on or off.

3B) weather conditions: Cold weather means Contractions of the track, which might break a link, Hot weather means Expansion of a track with could Cause a loose wire.

4) Link system: 1,2,3,4 and 4,3,2,1. A train running in a certain Direction must complete the links in a certain order. 1 then 2 then 3 then 4, or 4 then 3 then 2 then 1. If the silver box faiuled to detect the train passing over link 3, yet detects it over link 4, hence 1,2,4 that would activate Failsafe.

========1=============2==|---ROAD----|==3=================4====

4a) is a train is moving -----> that way, it would hit link 1 wich would activate the signal, hit #2, which would then indicate to the silver box that the train is NEAR then end, and when the last car passes over #3, that would effectively shut off the RR lights

--But there is a catch

Rememebr 1,2,3,4?

A train has anywere from 2 to 5 to 10 to 20 maybe evern an hour in some places to effectivel;y Run over the fourth link, if it does not, the circuit would not be complete, and failsafe would self activate, because according to the silver box, the Train has only completed 1,2 and 3

2 and 3 are your island circuits. If you has to wait until the Train hit humber 4 to shut off, you'd be waiting an extra 20-30 secondes for the lights to stop

Also, the biggest Flaw.. this system does not factor speed in. Links are set and can not be moved, well they can, it's just a nuissance. If a train is moving at...let's kid around here.. 85MPH, then it might take 2.3 secondes to reach the crossing, while if it is going 0.0000001 MPH, it might take the rest of the decade to reach the crossing, But let's put a valid number in there, uhhhh, 2 MPh, and it would take 20 minutes to reach the crossing

Thos are some of the major flaws with the RR link system.

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