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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...
Ed, I have a quick question for you. Industial uses often use trains to deliver hazardous materials. Asking for a friend** If an industrial faciltiy is set up to recieve haz mat via rail, and becuase of supply and demand is forced to recieve truck deliveries could a tanker truck traverse an industrial rail spur to "off load" the haz mats? There is a passenger rail track next to the spur. What would an industrial facility need to do to to safely carry out the off loading? Would the RR need to be notified? Are spur lines regulated differently than main lines?
This is an *18 years* old thread...
Chris van der Heide
My Algoma Central Railway Modeling Blog
mountaingirl87Ed, I have a quick question for you. Industial uses often use trains to deliver hazardous materials. Asking for a friend** If an industrial faciltiy is set up to recieve haz mat via rail, and becuase of supply and demand is forced to recieve truck deliveries could a tanker truck traverse an industrial rail spur to "off load" the haz mats? There is a passenger rail track next to the spur. What would an industrial facility need to do to to safely carry out the off loading? Would the RR need to be notified? Are spur lines regulated differently than main lines?
Ed passed on several years ago.
A HAZMAT industry will be, in most all instances, behind a fenced enclosure with a gate across the track(s) that enter the industry. Railroad crews will normally have to contact someone from the industry to unlock the gate and let the crew in the plant.
The lead into a industry is owned by that industry from the clearance point of the switch with the railroad. What the industry does with the trackage that it owns vis a vie letting trucks move on it - is totally within the industry's purview. The industry should be smart enough not to let a railroad engine and crew to occupy the same segment of track at the same time as they have a truck occupying the same track segment within their plant.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
BaltACD The industry should be smart enough not to let a railroad engine and crew to occupy the same segment of track at the same time as they have a truck occupying the same track segment within their plant.
Two words: Restricted Speed.
It's been fun. But it isn't much fun anymore. Signing off for now.
The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any
Tacking onto Balt & Zugs comments:
(1) Blue Flag rule
(2) Derail protection (Lock-out/ Tag Out private lock probably on top of a)
(3) Any hazmat transfer site is most likely equipped with additional protection (see EPA, OSHA, FRA & PHMSA rules depending on the product transloaded) that will usually include track pans, hoods, special grounding, pits etc. where truck vs train unloading create incompatible conditions. (Typical case: Trucks destroy fiberglass track pans).... Local permitting inside the plant comes into play as well (permitted use often spells out type of vehicle) ...
Typical first to be cited for hazmat/environmental non-compliance are the agridummies.
As posted, you really don't have enough stated to form a plausible answer.
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