Trains.com Sites
Resources
Shop
E-mail Newsletters
SEARCH THIS SITE
Help
Contact Us »
|
Customer Service
Get our free e-mail newsletters
Model Railroader
(weekly)
Model Railroader VideoPlus
(weekly)
Trains
(weekly)
Classic Toy Trains
(bi-weekly)
Garden Railways
(bi-weekly)
Classic Trains
(bi-weekly)
By signing up I may also receive reader surveys and occasional special offers from Trains.com. We do not sell, rent or trade our e-mail lists.
Details about our newsletters »
Read our privacy policy »
Join our Community!
Our community is
FREE
to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.
Search Community
Searching
Please insert search terms into the box above to run a search on the community.
Users Online
There are no community members online
Thread Details
Rate This
3
Replies — 996 Views
0
Subscribers
Posted
over 19 years ago
Thread Options
Subscribe via RSS
Share this
Tag Cloud
1950s
advice
Amtrak
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe
Baltimore and Ohio
Boxcars
Bridges
Burlington Northern Santa Fe
Caboose
Canada
Canadian National Railway
Canadian Pacific Railway
cargo
Chicago
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy
Colorado and Southern
Coupler
Coupling
CSX
dcc sound
Depots
Diesel Engines
education
Emporia
fec
Home
»
Discussion Forums
»
General Discussion (Trains.com)
»
Flamable material placards
Forums
|
Want to post a reply to this topic?
Login
or
register
for an acount to join our online community today!
Flamable material placards
Posted by
Anonymous
on
Mon, Jun 20 2005 5:11 PM
How do you read these placards? Are they also for hazardous material?
You have posted to a forum that requires a moderator to approve posts before they are publicly available.
Replies to this thread are ordered from "oldest to newest". To reverse this order, click
here
.
To learn about more about sorting options, visit our
FAQ page
.
Posted by
ndbprr
on
Mon, Jun 20 2005 5:31 PM
Yes. All liquids require them I believe. That way the emergency crews cab tell what they are up against. One number is flammability. Can't remember the others., Could be toxicology and carcinogenic characteristics.
You have posted to a forum that requires a moderator to approve posts before they are publicly available.
Posted by
Anonymous
on
Mon, Jun 20 2005 6:03 PM
Ok.
They are in 9 main classes of material such as Class 1 for explosives or Class 7 for Radioactive
The 4 digit number denotes the exact material that is on board. You might discover that a tanker truck might be hauling gasoline or desiel fuel by finding out the 4 digit numbers.
The colors of the diamonds as authorized in the Haz-mat class table refer specifically to the TYPE of hazard.
Example Red means Flammable, Orange means explosive etc...
Every driver is issued a response book. In the book are procedures to be followed such as Evacuation, Type of fire fighting or action to be taken.
If a rail car carrying artillery shells, for example, derails in my town and catches fire (Not likely but bear with me) You would need to evacuate ALL people starting with "Line of Sight" and up to 5 miles radius.
That means my entire town would need to speedily get out and that can be rough.
The many subclasses and charts also explains how to placard a load, denies loading of certain products with each other such as Chlorine and Alcohol (+ Something else = Boom)
Fire Departments recieve extensive training and all responders usually have some kind of action ready for hazmat.
Industrial Buildings show a diamond with 4 colors
Blue
Red
Yellow
Clear
On each of these colors is fixed a number from one to four (1 - 4)
By simply looking at the large diamond on the exterior of the building containing hazmat you can understand the level of danger associated with the product.
Extreme rules apply to those who haul or are involved with Hazmat. For example.. if there is a leak of Inhalation Hazard you would be required to clear everyone out of the area downwind up to a distance set in the book.
If anyone behind me trips and falls while fleeing I cannot go back to help. It might result in two casulties not just one. That is just one example.
I hope this helps.
You have posted to a forum that requires a moderator to approve posts before they are publicly available.
Posted by
Anonymous
on
Tue, Jun 21 2005 10:41 AM
Thanks for the info.
You have posted to a forum that requires a moderator to approve posts before they are publicly available.
Home
»
Discussion Forums
»
General Discussion (Trains.com)
»
Flamable material placards