riprap wrote:To perhaps regurgitate, most of the posts which explain a location where crewless trains have been possible, the common link is that all of them are without any grade crossings or contact (presumably) with pedestrians and the like. You may remember that just a few years ago, they finished the project down in LA where a triple track, dedicated freight line btw the Port of Long Beach and the rail yards of (then) SP, (then) SF and UP. Once, let's say, a transcontinental RR develops, and achieves economies of scale that another RR might not, what's to keep them from (eventually) eliminating all grade crossings, putting a concrete wall around the whole shebang, then eliminating the crews? Yes, of course, it would take time, but wouldn't that absolute cost be smaller than the absolute cost of paying labor to do its job? Riprap
To perhaps regurgitate, most of the posts which explain a location where crewless trains have been possible, the common link is that all of them are without any grade crossings or contact (presumably) with pedestrians and the like. You may remember that just a few years ago, they finished the project down in LA where a triple track, dedicated freight line btw the Port of Long Beach and the rail yards of (then) SP, (then) SF and UP. Once, let's say, a transcontinental RR develops, and achieves economies of scale that another RR might not, what's to keep them from (eventually) eliminating all grade crossings, putting a concrete wall around the whole shebang, then eliminating the crews? Yes, of course, it would take time, but wouldn't that absolute cost be smaller than the absolute cost of paying labor to do its job?
Riprap
M636C wrote: blhanel wrote: samfp1943 wrote:IF those trains were on ROW's that were COMPLETLY isolated from any other traffic or pedestrians. Which is precisely the situation on the Black Mesa and Lake Powell in northern Arizona, which I seem to remember from an old Trains article that they tried to run remotely controlled trains for awhile. I don't think it worked very well, though. There was another operation run by "American Electric Power" (I've forgotten the location) which used 50 kV locomotives built to the Pennsylvania E44 design but rated at 5000 HP. This too was listed as still in service in a fairly recent Trains magazine - possibly the "Lonely Railroads of the Four Corners" (if I recall the title correctly). These were romotely controlled originally, but as the open cut minre progressed, the line got shorter, and the automatic operation went away (I think). M636C
blhanel wrote: samfp1943 wrote:IF those trains were on ROW's that were COMPLETLY isolated from any other traffic or pedestrians. Which is precisely the situation on the Black Mesa and Lake Powell in northern Arizona, which I seem to remember from an old Trains article that they tried to run remotely controlled trains for awhile. I don't think it worked very well, though.
samfp1943 wrote:IF those trains were on ROW's that were COMPLETLY isolated from any other traffic or pedestrians.
There was another operation run by "American Electric Power" (I've forgotten the location) which used 50 kV locomotives built to the Pennsylvania E44 design but rated at 5000 HP. This too was listed as still in service in a fairly recent Trains magazine - possibly the "Lonely Railroads of the Four Corners" (if I recall the title correctly). These were romotely controlled originally, but as the open cut minre progressed, the line got shorter, and the automatic operation went away (I think).
M636C
I believe when CN built it's line in northern Alberta to the Northwest territories in Canada in the early 1960's, it was built to run automatically. There were hardly any grade crossings. There were transponders? placed in the track and special GP9's painted yellow with black lettering were filled with radio controls in the short hood. I think these GP9's ran short hood forward which at the time was the opposite that CN ran. The trains were to speed up and slow down on there own. There were crew in the cabs though I don't know how many. Never heard very much about this though and it seemed to quietly faded away. Anyone else hear of this or can verify it?
Barry
Brian (IA) http://blhanel.rrpicturearchives.net.
CrazyDiamond wrote:...and arn't the Lodon 'tube' trains driverless too? The benefits would be numerous!
For trains such as subways and shuttles, "crewless" might work. The route is constant, the performance is predictable. To call them totally crewless would be inaccurate, as even if there is no conductor or motorman/engineer, someone, somewhere is monitoring the operation, perhaps even with a video link to watch the action.
Mainline railroading, on the other hand, is likely miles from such an operation. It's certainly not impossible, but it's not likely anytime soon. Labor issues notwithstanding, there's a lot of lines of code to be written to introduce the ability to control trains of varying consists over track with a varying profile in a safe, consistent manner. Mix up the traffic types, and you have a nightmare. As I said, it's not impossible, but it might be cheaper in the end to put humans on the trains...
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...
riprap wrote: Way back in the days of Pacific Rail News (anybody remember them?), one of the RR editorial writers was predicting that the day of the "conductorless" freight train was not too far into the future. I believe, but am not sure, that it is already possible to run a driverless light-rail train controlled by electricity. With all of the new innovations in technology, how far away are we from a "crewless" train? What stumbling blocks, if any, remain for such a train? What would be the good points and bad points? (and on a side note, have any readers out there seen Ed Ripley's by-line on anything train-related? He would write for PRN regularly, but after their demise I haven't seen anything by him (I've tried to Google his name)) Riprap
Way back in the days of Pacific Rail News (anybody remember them?), one of the RR editorial writers was predicting that the day of the "conductorless" freight train was not too far into the future. I believe, but am not sure, that it is already possible to run a driverless light-rail train controlled by electricity. With all of the new innovations in technology, how far away are we from a "crewless" train? What stumbling blocks, if any, remain for such a train? What would be the good points and bad points? (and on a side note, have any readers out there seen Ed Ripley's by-line on anything train-related? He would write for PRN regularly, but after their demise I haven't seen anything by him (I've tried to Google his name))
Well the New York City subway has had a crewless operation for years.
The Chicago rapid system is now one man.
Go to major airports like O'Hare, Atlanta, Las Vegas, Minneapolis-St. Paul and you'll find crewless operations.
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