QUOTE: Originally posted by AntonioFP45 QUOTE: Originally posted by csxengineer98 it is well known that csx is on the FRAs watch list as far as thier tracks go... but when you pay out 43 million to Mr snow... the money has to come from someones budget csx engineer That is so aggravating. Yes, it was perfectly legal the way corporations work pay package contracts out for executives, but, IMHO, that is absolutely ridiculous. Makes me wonder how many safety related repairs could have been done with even half that money! Or providing the service employees needed at strategic locations to make sure that toilets in locomotives are properly sanitized! And the CSX brass today still keeps crying that it doesn't even have money to paint that bridge in Kentucky that the residents have been complaining about.
QUOTE: Originally posted by csxengineer98 it is well known that csx is on the FRAs watch list as far as thier tracks go... but when you pay out 43 million to Mr snow... the money has to come from someones budget csx engineer
"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"
QUOTE: Originally posted by CSXrules4eva QUOTE: Originally posted by csxengineer98 i personly want to know what makes you a MOW road master...... the condition you said above is not uncommon on any railroad...anywhere in the USA.... you will find the same thing on evey major road and shortline in the country... it is a normal condition... not a safty issue as you so pointed out... i may sound like a company tool but im sick of people that dont have a real clue about track and MOW issues raising red flags and pulling the emergancy alarm for a non existant danger....and by the way you posted your thread..you did just that......... csx engineer Yes I happen to agree with ya 100% This isn't a problem that only CSX has, I've seen this on NS mailine track, Conrail track, ex Milwaukee Road, and shortline traffic tracks. I don't think it poses a real safety issue like rail cracking or fatiuge. If a person physically touches this then it is a safety issue.
QUOTE: Originally posted by csxengineer98 i personly want to know what makes you a MOW road master...... the condition you said above is not uncommon on any railroad...anywhere in the USA.... you will find the same thing on evey major road and shortline in the country... it is a normal condition... not a safty issue as you so pointed out... i may sound like a company tool but im sick of people that dont have a real clue about track and MOW issues raising red flags and pulling the emergancy alarm for a non existant danger....and by the way you posted your thread..you did just that......... csx engineer
QUOTE: Originally posted by csxengineer98 i personly want to know what makes you a MOW road master...... the condition you said above is not uncommon on any railroad...anywhere in the USA.... you will find the same thing on evey major road and shortline in the country... it is a normal condition... not a safty issue as you so pointed out... i may sound like a company tool but im sick of people that dont have a real clue about track and MOW issues raising red flags and pulling the emergancy alarm for a non existant danger....and by the way you posted your thread..you did just that.........csx engineer
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QUOTE: Originally posted by Limitedclear Antonio- First, I must tell you that trespassing and touching damaged rail is a VERY dangerous thing to do. I have seen people touch rail splinters and discover the hard way just how sharp and brittle they are. Second, such splinters are not a major track defect. It is likely a rail surface problem. As long as the head of the rail is intact I wouldn't consider it that big of a problem. If you think it makes a derailment an issue, call CSX and report it. LC
QUOTE: Originally posted by n_stephenson Gabe, Are you talking about Hillsdale?? Right by the Wabash river and where US 36 and Indiana 63 meet??? We run a coal drag down that about five times a week with a pair of six axles. We have to crawl around that stretch of track very slowly (10mph).
QUOTE: Originally posted by Limitedclear Gabe- Sounds like you are talking about curve worn rail that should be replaced if it is that badly worn. I was more concerned about Antonio trespassing as he said he had actually touched the rail and broken off parts of it. LC
QUOTE: Originally posted by mloik QUOTE: Originally posted by gabe (although I am 73% certain I was not trespassing). Gabe, Your quantification of the degree of certainty certainly made me chuckle. Thanks. Michael
QUOTE: Originally posted by gabe (although I am 73% certain I was not trespassing).
QUOTE: Originally posted by Limitedclear Antonio- First, I must tell you that trespassing and touching damaged rail is a VERY dangerous thing to do. I have seen people touch rail splinters and discover the hard way just how sharp and brittle they are. I even had to take one conductor to the hospital for it once. Having a doctor pull those things out of your hands (it went right through his glove) and the tetanus shot and the other issues that go along with it are not fun. For some reason everyone seems drawn to such splinters. I'm not sure if it is the shiny look or just the desire to see what they feel like, but resist the temptation. Second, such splinters are not a major track defect. It is likely a rail surface problem. As long as the head of the rail is intact I wouldn't consider it that big of a problem. If you think it makes a derailment an issue, call CSX and report it. LC
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