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NS approaching a melt down ?

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Posted by Bicycle Rider Indy on Saturday, December 13, 2014 11:39 AM

I just drove by the construction work (Friday Dec 12th) at the new connection between BNSF and CSX in Smithboro, IL.  I saw new signal houses, communications towers, new mainline turnouts, grading for the connecting track in the NE quadrant, signage that the road crossing will be closed as of Dec 15.  Contract construction crews were on site and I assume carloads of ballast were east of the diamond on the CSX.

 

The connection track has not been built and is not in service.  The contractor has staged equipment and supplies so one would assume the track construction will start soon.

 

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Posted by MP173 on Thursday, November 13, 2014 10:06 AM

Slight change of topic (back to the original)....NS is pretty much back to normal in the Porter, In area, or at least it seems so from casual observation.  Amtrak 29 was by at 856am and 49 at 941am.  Not so many trains being tied up.

 

Ed

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Posted by zugmann on Wednesday, November 12, 2014 10:23 PM

ValleyX
Also, I throw this out and will probably get criticized for it but today's skill set isn't what it was. There are very few old conductors left who've spent decades doing this and today's crowd, when they get onto it and learn local work, become engineers.

 

No criticism from here.  Not only does the mandatory engineer service take away good conductors, there are very few brakeman spots left.  I was one of the last of the true brakemen where I worked.  That's how I learned to shift cars and industries.  Giving these new conductors a few days qualifying on the job (babies teaching babies) just isn't the same as working with a 30 year old head.

 

But it's all right.  We have a little card in our wallet that says we're certified.  It's all on us now.

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

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Posted by ValleyX on Wednesday, November 12, 2014 9:22 PM

 

 

 

 

 

[/quote]

simmerdown

Nothing to worry about. That's how you run skeleton railroad. Stocks way up. Do more with way less.

 

 

 

That's the beauty of it, I don't have to worry about it.  

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Posted by simmerdown on Tuesday, November 11, 2014 7:13 PM

Nothing to worry about. That's how you run skeleton railroad. Stocks way up. Do more with way less.

 

 

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Posted by ValleyX on Tuesday, November 11, 2014 10:59 AM

BaltACD

 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 With the changes to work rules over the past 40 years - Locals are not 'guaranteed' to have their train built in station standing order when they come on duty - in most cases they have to switch together their own train at outlying locations or have all the cars in their train, but in nowhere near station standing order when they come on duty at a major terminal.  Switching and the amount of time required for it is and will always continue to be the great unknown in the operation of locals.

At industries it is the rare industry that operates on everything on my tracks is empty so pull it and place my loads in place of the emptys that have been pulled.  More likely there are loads, part loads and empties intersperced and they will be switched as the industry specifies with new cars from the local's train taking the place of the cars that are pulled.  This can be a very involved and time consuming procedure.

 

That is exactly right.  In the latter years when I could work a local regularly, we spent a lot of wasted time taking our train about twenty miles to a place where we could line it up, which simplified the work for the rest of the day.  Also, I throw this out and will probably get criticized for it but today's skill set isn't what it was.  There are very few old conductors left who've spent decades doing this and today's crowd, when they get onto it and learn local work, become engineers.  It's hard to sit on an engine and give a lot of guidance.  It's  a considerably different world from the way it was.  In fairness, I'm sure it was always thus, that the previous generation didn't think the next generation would ever make it but I still believe that when you've only a few years, for the most part, of being a train service employee before becoming an engineer, removing the knowledge of what the old timers learned over a lifetime, it changes a lot of how the work gets done.

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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, November 10, 2014 10:08 AM

oltmannd

 

 
BaltACD
One fallacy of Local Train's operations is who is in charge of the work they are supposed to be performing.  On the Main tracks the Train Dispatcher is the first line supervisor and arbitor of track occupancy time (the local Trainmaster my be ultimately responsible for the work getting performed - but he is not responsible for Main Track operations).  Despite being the 'suprvisor' the Train Dispatcher must be informed by the Local Freight's Conductor of what specific work locations and estimated time to occupy the Main track at those work locations and then work the needs of the Local in with the overall priority requirement of all trains on his territory.  Management does not like seeing priority trains being delayed by a Local for any reason unless Senior Management has made a specific local service a priority. During periods of trains actually operating in or near their scheduled windows - the operation of the Locals will be in defined lulls in the overall operation of a territory.  One day a Local may only have a hours worth of Main track time needed for their work; another day they may need 5 or 6 hours of Main track time over 50 or 60 miles of territory - the Train Dispatcher never knows until he has a conversation with the Local Freight's Conductor.  With opeations as they exist today with a heavy volume of 'unscheduled' trains being operated on many territories, many of the windows that Locals have been scheduled into are not really viable windows any longer.  Throw in MofW needing track time for their actions and inspections and the windows shrink even further.

 

A good description of how locals are, and have been, handled on an ad-hoc basis day in and day out.

The day is coming when RRs will have enough information to plan the operation of locals with a lot more precision than this.  The cars for delivery don't just "beam down" onto the serving yard just before the local goes on duty.  Similarly, the originating loads and empties didn't just "beam down" onto the industry tracks.

 

Conversely - while the cars don't beam down - their order and the switching required to get them lined up by the local doing the work is one of the great imponderables.  The local could get his train switched in 1 hour or 7 hours - times unknown to the Train Dispatcher.  With the changes to work rules over the past 40 years - Locals are not 'guaranteed' to have their train built in station standing order when they come on duty - in most cases they have to switch together their own train at outlying locations or have all the cars in their train, but in nowhere near station standing order when they come on duty at a major terminal.  Switching and the amount of time required for it is and will always continue to be the great unknown in the operation of locals.

At industries it is the rare industry that operates on everything on my tracks is empty so pull it and place my loads in place of the emptys that have been pulled.  More likely there are loads, part loads and empties intersperced and they will be switched as the industry specifies with new cars from the local's train taking the place of the cars that are pulled.  This can be a very involved and time consuming procedure.

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

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Posted by oltmannd on Monday, November 10, 2014 9:40 AM

BaltACD
One fallacy of Local Train's operations is who is in charge of the work they are supposed to be performing.  On the Main tracks the Train Dispatcher is the first line supervisor and arbitor of track occupancy time (the local Trainmaster my be ultimately responsible for the work getting performed - but he is not responsible for Main Track operations).  Despite being the 'suprvisor' the Train Dispatcher must be informed by the Local Freight's Conductor of what specific work locations and estimated time to occupy the Main track at those work locations and then work the needs of the Local in with the overall priority requirement of all trains on his territory.  Management does not like seeing priority trains being delayed by a Local for any reason unless Senior Management has made a specific local service a priority. During periods of trains actually operating in or near their scheduled windows - the operation of the Locals will be in defined lulls in the overall operation of a territory.  One day a Local may only have a hours worth of Main track time needed for their work; another day they may need 5 or 6 hours of Main track time over 50 or 60 miles of territory - the Train Dispatcher never knows until he has a conversation with the Local Freight's Conductor.  With opeations as they exist today with a heavy volume of 'unscheduled' trains being operated on many territories, many of the windows that Locals have been scheduled into are not really viable windows any longer.  Throw in MofW needing track time for their actions and inspections and the windows shrink even further.

A good description of how locals are, and have been, handled on an ad-hoc basis day in and day out.

The day is coming when RRs will have enough information to plan the operation of locals with a lot more precision than this.  The cars for delivery don't just "beam down" onto the serving yard just before the local goes on duty.  Similarly, the originating loads and empties didn't just "beam down" onto the industry tracks.

-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/

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Posted by ValleyX on Sunday, November 9, 2014 6:15 PM

daveklepper

and from fort wayne to chicago?

 

The first train was the NS geometry train.  The first freight train ran via the CF&E on west of Fort Wayne but I don't know about the second train.  

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Posted by daveklepper on Sunday, November 9, 2014 8:10 AM

and from fort wayne to chicago?

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Posted by ValleyX on Saturday, November 8, 2014 10:13 PM

In some effort to alleviate congestion, NS started running a very few trains across the CF&E from Mansfield, OH, to Fort Wayne, IN, utilizing their trackage rights.  This is the former PRR and it appears that so far, they are running only a occasional westbound.  I believe the first train ran midweek.

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Posted by srjason747 on Friday, November 7, 2014 3:55 PM

NS has begun re-routing roughly a train every 1-2 days onto the CF&E through Ohio and Indiana to bypass the water level route.  2 days ago was the first with a  manifest freight (W1E) and today and today an empty oil train (67W). Both were westbound.

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Friday, November 7, 2014 7:51 AM

Joe Szabo is hardly an outsider.  I really don't think that he has the influence to muscle anybody into a compromise.  His longtime connections to railway labor may work against him in such a situation.

The daily commute is part of everyday life but I get two rides a day out of it. Paul
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Posted by blue streak 1 on Thursday, November 6, 2014 3:16 PM

Is it possible with Szabo moving to the Chicago planning group that changes could be in the wind ?  He may have the connections to bully the RRs into compromising ?  Being on the outside of the RRs he can go to any and all plus the DOT & FRA and put a bug into their ears ?

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Posted by BaltACD on Thursday, November 6, 2014 2:00 PM

oltmannd

UTCS went in without the movement planner turned on for many months.  The situation you describe of a phantom siding is not a problem with movement planner, but with the GE and NS folk who maintain the system.

As ValleyX points out (and as I see nearly every day on the CSX line near me), bozo meets are nothing new.  The movement planner could do a good job with locals if it had a solid schedule for that day's train - something that is in the works.

Is any railroad creating good, local train schedules from the specific work for that day's train?  I doubt it.

 

One fallacy of Local Train's operations is who is in charge of the work they are supposed to be performing.  On the Main tracks the Train Dispatcher is the first line supervisor and arbitor of track occupancy time (the local Trainmaster my be ultimately responsible for the work getting performed - but he is not responsible for Main Track operations).  Despite being the 'suprvisor' the Train Dispatcher must be informed by the Local Freight's Conductor of what specific work locations and estimated time to occupy the Main track at those work locations and then work the needs of the Local in with the overall priority requirement of all trains on his territory.  Management does not like seeing priority trains being delayed by a Local for any reason unless Senior Management has made a specific local service a priority.

During periods of trains actually operating in or near their scheduled windows - the operation of the Locals will be in defined lulls in the overall operation of a territory.  One day a Local may only have a hours worth of Main track time needed for their work; another day they may need 5 or 6 hours of Main track time over 50 or 60 miles of territory - the Train Dispatcher never knows until he has a conversation with the Local Freight's Conductor.  With opeations as they exist today with a heavy volume of 'unscheduled' trains being operated on many territories, many of the windows that Locals have been scheduled into are not really viable windows any longer.  Throw in MofW needing track time for their actions and inspections and the windows shrink even further.

Any idiot, or computer program, can line a signal - a Train Dispatcher knows when not to.

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Posted by oltmannd on Thursday, November 6, 2014 12:56 PM

UTCS went in without the movement planner turned on for many months.  The situation you describe of a phantom siding is not a problem with movement planner, but with the GE and NS folk who maintain the system.

As ValleyX points out (and as I see nearly every day on the CSX line near me), bozo meets are nothing new.  The movement planner could do a good job with locals if it had a solid schedule for that day's train - something that is in the works.

Is any railroad creating good, local train schedules from the specific work for that day's train?  I doubt it.

-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/

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Posted by oltmannd on Thursday, November 6, 2014 12:39 PM

jeffhergert
What stood out to me was one of the GE design people's comment.  He said one of the first things they needed to determine was "What flights need to be run today."

No wonder why the whole project is closing in on 20 years!  There's been lots and lots NS has had to teach the GE/Harris folk about this stuff.

-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/

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Posted by ValleyX on Thursday, November 6, 2014 12:32 PM

Meets such as Big Jim describes above used to make me crazy.  If anyone brought up the complete inaneness of it, dispatchers would be full of excuses.  None of them were good excuses.  Much as Big Jim describes, I'm sure it's still going on.

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Posted by BigJim on Wednesday, November 5, 2014 2:18 PM

oltmannd

 

 
BigJim
Crews are definately getting frustrated with the system. 


Actually, the crews have been telling me about how bad things are. The system even lined up two trains to meet where a siding had been taken up more than 30 years ago and no other place to meet in between! Luckily, having already been lined up to leave, one of the crews had heard the other train calling signals, figured out what was about to take place, called the dispatcher, and a very awkward and time consuming situation was avoided! Meets where a shirt tail local holds the main for a 8500' container train is not uncommon.

.

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Posted by oltmannd on Wednesday, November 5, 2014 11:20 AM

BigJim
Crews are definately getting frustrated with the system. 

NS has a long cultural history of being really bad a communicating.  I'll bet the only one who told you anything about movement planner is (are) the dispatcher(s).  And, that's just a shame.

-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/

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Posted by oltmannd on Wednesday, November 5, 2014 11:16 AM

BigJim

 

 
oltmannd
NS's  UTCS movement planner is not an "autorouter". It attempts to minimize the end point variance to schedule for all trains running on the network - accross the whole network - and is weighted by train priority.

 

Is this why long trains are being routed through sidings without even meeting a train? It is my understanding that the Chief will not let the dispatchers override the system, at least around here. Crews are definately getting frustrated with the system. 

 

The only time I've seen it do that was when the main had a work authority still on it.  The dispatcher governs that...and/or the roadway worker.  Most of the frustration I've heard about stems from the system not lining routes as far in advance as the dispatchers would like to see.

...and, yes, compliance is measured - but no one is expecting 100%

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Posted by BigJim on Wednesday, November 5, 2014 9:02 AM

oltmannd
NS's  UTCS movement planner is not an "autorouter". It attempts to minimize the end point variance to schedule for all trains running on the network - accross the whole network - and is weighted by train priority.

Is this why long trains are being routed through sidings without even meeting a train? It is my understanding that the Chief will not let the dispatchers override the system, at least around here. Crews are definately getting frustrated with the system. 

.

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Posted by oltmannd on Wednesday, November 5, 2014 7:42 AM

Some facts:

NS's  UTCS movement planner is not an "autorouter". It attempts to minimize the end point variance to schedule for all trains running on the network - accross the whole network - and is weighted by train priority.   It recalculates the whole network better than once every 5 minutes.  It isn't implemented in some terminal areas - not because it won't work - but because the input data quality is rotten (don't get good handoff times from connecting roads)

In general, the movement planner will be more aggressive in planning meets than a distpatcher.  A dispatcher will normally make meet decisions based on train priority. e.g. Merchandise train takes siding.  Premium train holds the main at track speed.  That may be a locally optimum solution, but is worse for the network - particularly if the Merch train is running late and premium train is running ahead. (dispatchers normally don't have current variance to schedule readily available to them - it's usually just "don't delay the premium train!")

NS does not have more traffic on the Chicago Line than it did n 2008 (and actully has less than Conrail did in the late 1990s)

 

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Posted by BaltACD on Wednesday, November 5, 2014 6:31 AM

zugmann
 
BaltACD
Any dispatcher that sees 'autoroute' lining up a move that should not be made - and lets it stand should be in a investigation the next day. Autoroute is a tool - nothing more and nothing less. If you let a tool overrule your better judgement you no longer deserve to be a train dispatcher. If management is forcing the use of a flawed tool then the management needs replacing.

 

 

It's not just a tool, from what I've been told, but it is a whole workshop.

As long as the dispatchers override it to keep things moving, the higher ups will deem it a success.  Think about it:  Autorouter implemented + trains running = success.

I would love to see the dispatchers just sit back and let autorouter do whatever it wants.  Either 2 things will happen:  it will run the trains like promised, or it will fail miserably.   Either way - we would know.  But this overriding/overruling thing is not going to help anything.  It'll just limp along (like so many other things out here that we make work).

Supposedly the software monitors everything on all territories and makes real time decisions based on that - and not just what is in the dispatcher's immediate territory. So I wonder that if by having all these dispatchers overruling the autorouter, it isn't negatively affecting the autorouter in other territories. Since autorouter is making decisions based on what the decisions would be if the computer was making them, and not what the dispatcher thinks is best.

 

 

 

When my carrier started into the CADS world - dispatchers were taught that autoroute was the way to go.  When the dispatchers used it - it was the automatic way to bring a territory to a codlocked stop.

After several years and multiple revisions to the 'logic' that autoroute was using, the word came down from on high - 'autoroute is a function of CADS - use it considering the peril you will be subject to for it delaying trains'.

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Posted by zugmann on Tuesday, November 4, 2014 11:40 PM

BaltACD
Any dispatcher that sees 'autoroute' lining up a move that should not be made - and lets it stand should be in a investigation the next day. Autoroute is a tool - nothing more and nothing less. If you let a tool overrule your better judgement you no longer deserve to be a train dispatcher. If management is forcing the use of a flawed tool then the management needs replacing.

 

It's not just a tool, from what I've been told, but it is a whole workshop.

As long as the dispatchers override it to keep things moving, the higher ups will deem it a success.  Think about it:  Autorouter implemented + trains running = success.

I would love to see the dispatchers just sit back and let autorouter do whatever it wants.  Either 2 things will happen:  it will run the trains like promised, or it will fail miserably.   Either way - we would know.  But this overriding/overruling thing is not going to help anything.  It'll just limp along (like so many other things out here that we make work).

Supposedly the software monitors everything on all territories and makes real time decisions based on that - and not just what is in the dispatcher's immediate territory. So I wonder that if by having all these dispatchers overruling the autorouter, it isn't negatively affecting the autorouter in other territories. Since autorouter is making decisions based on what the decisions would be if the computer was making them, and not what the dispatcher thinks is best.

 

 

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

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Posted by jeffhergert on Tuesday, November 4, 2014 10:54 PM

BaltACD
 
 

If management is forcing the use of a flawed tool then the management needs replacing.

 

Now that's funny.

Oh, I agree with the statement, but managment will never admit that something they implemented is flawed.  Even if everyone else (probably including many in management privately) can see it.  If it saves a penny or eliminates a job, it'll be considered a rousing success.  Even if the savings are an illusion and off set by costs rising in another area.

I saw a short video about Movement Planner put out by GE and NS on another site.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X5IYUjAiLek  What stood out to me was one of the GE design people's comment.  He said one of the first things they needed to determine was "What flights need to be run today."

Jeff  

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Posted by caldreamer on Tuesday, November 4, 2014 9:25 PM

What the dispatchers ned to do is to keep a detailed log (Time, date and exactly what happended) for each incident where the Aout router creates an unsafe condition and pass these logs along to FRA.  They take safety VERY seriously and would make sure that NS fixes the problem quickly..

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Tuesday, November 4, 2014 8:53 PM

Will try for fifth time to reply this.  Took three tries to get this link to stick in the thread.  Then posted that it appears that there is a an intermittent gremlin in this web site.  Can understand KPs frustration.  Note:  seems very likely that there is an intermittent bug.   Maybe only happens at some itteration of 2 to the X power.  such as 8 , 16, 32, 64  

 

http://www.updispatchers.com/ATDAFormalComplaintwithFRA-NSUTCS.pdf

 

 

 

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Posted by Convicted One on Tuesday, November 4, 2014 5:50 PM

Deggesty
The article mentioned "loading and unloading cars" as one reason for the trains to stop and sit. Were the people quoted saying this under the impression that the trains that blocked crossings handled LCL?

 

Well, you know, since they pulled up all the team tracks they've had to be creative.  Mischief

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