They did that on the Capitol. When they went to a one person engine crew the engineers did not run the entire distance without changing.
zugmannDoesn't amtrak limit one-person engine cabs to runs shorter than 6 or 8 hours?
Which - by schedule is most all of their crew runs - of course day to day railroading will make many of those runs over 8 hours in reality.
Auto-Train is engineer only in the cab with crew change and fueling at Florence, SC both ways.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
zugmannFederal orders aren't "make a deal".
Right, that was the point of my post. It was a "Take it or leave it!" scenario.
"You want one-person train operation approval from us, this is what we want from you."
This may not be the best example of the limitations of one-man operation but the Chicago Transit Authority has operated its rapid transit service with only a motorman, no conductor, for some years now. There haven't been any major issues but the equipment is rather homogeneous in its dimensions and performance characteristics.
To me, if you are going to have a 2 man road crew then it should be something like the airlines have. Namely an Engineer and Assistant Engineer or maybe Senior Engineer and Engineer. That way one man doesn't have to be at the trottle all of the trip. The Assistant would probably be younger so would be the one doing any required groundwork. [Local freights would probably have one Engineer and 1 or 2 Conductors.]
alphas To me, if you are going to have a 2 man road crew then it should be something like the airlines have. Namely an Engineer and Assistant Engineer or maybe Senior Engineer and Engineer. That way one man doesn't have to be at the trottle all of the trip. The Assistant would probably be younger so would be the one doing any required groundwork. [Local freights would probably have one Engineer and 1 or 2 Conductors.]
That already happens more than you might think.
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
zugmann Euclid I don’t think the industry would accept the offer. Federal orders aren't "make a deal". I wouldn't be surprised if we eventually get a train-size limit as well.
Euclid I don’t think the industry would accept the offer.
Federal orders aren't "make a deal".
I wouldn't be surprised if we eventually get a train-size limit as well.
What I suspect you'll see with 'long trains' is a combination of assessing new, much larger penalties for cutting crossings, combined with very strict enforcement of high dollar penalties for any train above a certain length, say what was being proposed in the House and Senate bills (about 80 cars?)
In other words, disincentives that remove the perceived 'cost advantages' of operating very long DP consists slowly. Rather than an outright ban on train length, for which there is likely no contrived "safety" justification now any more than at other times the idea of train-length restrictions has been floated.
Not surprisingly, if there is a guaranteed $5000 to $25000 fee for every crossing left 'uncut' after 15 minutes from certain kinds of stop... much of the big perceived savings from one-man crews goes away.
https://railroads.dot.gov/sites/fra.dot.gov/files/2022-12/Stakeholder%20Perceptions%20of%20Longer%20Trains_Final_-A.pdf
tree68 Amtrak has been running one person crews virtually since Day 1.
Rio Grande Valley, CFI,CFII
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