Modeling BNSF and Milwaukee Road in SW Wisconsin
QUOTE: Originally posted by Tracklayer That's a good question dthurman... I'd like to know the answer to that one myself. I do recall hearing a bell a while back on a UP freight train that was coming through town, and if memory serves me right, it came to a stop. Not sure if the bell ringing and it stopping work together or not. Hope someone comes along that can answer this. Tracklayer
Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com
Take a Ride on the Reading with the: Reading Company Technical & Historical Society http://www.readingrailroad.org/
QUOTE: Contrary to previous posts, bells are not used continuously in switching operations. Usually it's only used to signal the intial move of a switching crew. Nick Brodar
NORAC & other standard RR books of operating rules require use of engine bell: when engine is about to move; when running through tunnels; while approaching and passing public highway crossings at grade; when approaching locations where Roadway Workers may be at work on tracks, bridges, and other points; when passing a train on an adjacent track; in an emergency.
ahh, the old, let's revive a 9-year old thread trick.
Alton Junction
richhotrain ahh, the old, let's revive a 9-year old thread trick.
"The true sign of intelligence is not knowledge but imagination."-Albert Einstein
http://gearedsteam.blogspot.com/
richhotrainahh, the old, let's revive a 9-year old thread trick.
Exactly what I was thinking, Chief!
https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling
Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.
Texas Zepher richhotrain ahh, the old, let's revive a 9-year old thread trick. So???? Is it not still relevant when to ring a bell?
So???? Is it not still relevant when to ring a bell?
TZ, I am sure that you understand the point of my comment.
In the greater scheme of things, who cares if someone revives a thread that has been dormant for 9 years. You don't. I don't.
But, you have to wonder how this came about. Think about it for a moment. Is someone doing a search for "when to use a bell on a train" and then stumbles onto a 9 year old thread? Was the fellow, who revived the old thread, wanting to give us this NORAC information and chose to reply to a nearly decade old thread rather than simply start a new one?
I just find it curious, that's all.
Rich
To coin a old line..''.give the guy some slack, he's new to this''.
Take Care!
Frank
zstripe To coin a old line..''.give the guy some slack, he's new to this''. Take Care! Frank
I was expecting a link from you.
I ring the bell without regard to any rules or lack there of. If the engine is standing still and about to move, it rings and continues to ring once moving in a town or in some rapid switching operations in or around a yard. When entering a town or junction at reduced, speeds, especially crawls, it rings. Only at road speeds or in open country is the bell never sounded.
Any train or engine movement in town has the bell on. The towns are all tiny little outposts and switching limited to tiny pockets of congestion with people walking in and around the tracks. The bell saves a lot of noisey and annoying whistling, though the whistle rules are obeyed.
The rules about the bell are your rules and often the rules of the engineer/fireman practiced through the team experience. If there are bell rules regarding when you must ring, on any road, there are absolutely no rules to tell you when it should never ring or be sounded. Common sense should dictate.
Richard
If I can't fix it, I can fix it so it can't be fixed
From the Pennsylvania RR Rule Book, Rev. 10/27/57: "30. The engine bell or warning signal must be sounded when an engine is about to move, when running through tunnels, while approaching and passing public crossings at grade and when passing a train standing on an adjacent track."
From the Wabash RR Rule Book Rev 1941: "30. The engine bell must be rung when an engine is about to move and while approaching and passing public crossings at grade."
From both books above: "32. The unnecessary use of either the whistle or the bell is prohibited."
I could find no place in either book which mentions the use of the engine bell. Apparently, the definition of "unnecessary" is up to the individual engine crew.
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Gary M. Collins gmcrailgNOSPAM@gmail.com
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"Common Sense, Ain't!" -- G. M. Collins
http://fhn.site90.net
If you model the Mississippi Central from 1936 to the end of steam your locomotive will have two bells. The one overhanging the smokebox door will sound continuously whenever the locomotive is in motion, even if there's nothing but plowed fields for miles around.
That was part of a ruling handed down after a train/school bus encounter at a grade crossing. The same ruling led to legislation that outlawed wooden-bodied school busses in Mississippi.
P.S. If you DO model the above, remind me not to visit.
Chuck (Modeling Central Japan in September, 1964 - where locomotives didn't have bells)
Wow. I thought this was a new thread until I saw that it was dated late September of 2005. And what's more I had replied to it - twice... Thanks for the memory.
Tracklayer