oltmannd Euclid Now that the carbuilders have said that it is impossible to prevent tank car breaches in high speed derailments by making the cars stronger, what is the point of new DOT standards to make the cars stonger? Stronger = better, not perfect. Stonger cars will breach less often.
Euclid Now that the carbuilders have said that it is impossible to prevent tank car breaches in high speed derailments by making the cars stronger, what is the point of new DOT standards to make the cars stonger?
Stronger = better, not perfect. Stonger cars will breach less often.
That seems like a performance standard will be impossible to measure. You could have ten oil train wrecks in a year, and the industry can say that it would have been worse without the new standards.
I know that perfection is impossible, so it cannot be expected. But when the carbuilders say that it is impossible to prevent tank car breaches in high speed derailments, that is as far from perfection as can be.
It has been suggested that tank cars in and by themselves without sensors, instrmentation and communication of data are stupid containers. It is obvious from Mount Carbon, WV, Lynchburg, VA, and Aliceville, AL, that the composition of bakken crude is something to consider. Its weight allows for only about 28,000 gallons to be loaded into a tank car. That volume alone allows for slosh behavior. Until slosh is fully understood and how bakken crude behaves it appears explosions will happen.
The only safe tank car is one that is designed to deliver data about the bakken crude behavior in transit. A stronger stupid tank car is useless in identifying the factors leading to derailment and explosion. Only an intelligent design will enable prevention.
As mentioned, pipeline SCADA systems monitor stupid pipe. However, SCADA relies upon changes in pressure. The monitoring is typically too far a part than what is prudent. The intervening r.o.w. valves all too often require a person to physically activate to close. Remotely controlled valves often are often without redundant design. So, the delay in detection and response means that an enormous column of refined or crude petroleum product is spilled and harms the envonment. Or, explodes and harms life, limb and / or property.
Polymer pipe liner with a web wrap of fiberoptic strands is available allowing for continuous analysis of pipeline r.o.w. integrity. Use of such makes the pipeline intelligent.
If a tank car was continuously equipped similarly with any and all sensor devices to measure heat, integrity, slosh, wheel rail interaction, truck stability etc. then bakken crude might likely to be transported with confidence. As it is, it might be a matter of time that a catastrophe happens in a metro area with stupid tank cars. Intelligent tank cars will measureably prevent explosions.
WilliamKiesel If a tank car was continuously equipped similarly with any and all sensor devices to measure heat, integrity, slosh, wheel rail interaction, truck stability etc. then bakken crude might likely to be transported with confidence. As it is, it might be a matter of time that a catastrophe happens in a metro area with stupid tank cars. Intelligent tank cars will measureably prevent explosions.
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
oltmannd WilliamKiesel So, is sloshing the problem? If so, what is the appropriate speed. What is the best manner for operation? What is the optimum number of tank cars? Should spacer cars with new draft gear and dampening design be interspered through the train? already suggested, might an electric controlled air brake system be part of he answer? These are all good questions. It's clear that the standard method of doing business is inadequate for these trains since there are so many and the danger is fairly great. The industry better get busy figuring out the answers.
WilliamKiesel So, is sloshing the problem? If so, what is the appropriate speed. What is the best manner for operation? What is the optimum number of tank cars? Should spacer cars with new draft gear and dampening design be interspered through the train? already suggested, might an electric controlled air brake system be part of he answer?
These are all good questions. It's clear that the standard method of doing business is inadequate for these trains since there are so many and the danger is fairly great. The industry better get busy figuring out the answers.
As you said in a later post, better is not perfect. Improving safety (crude oil and ethanol tank car transport, derailments, highways crossings) is always by incremental improvements, i.e., better. Unfortunately, some posters use the unattainability of perfection as a 'straw dog' as a justification to basically keep the status quo.
C&NW, CA&E, MILW, CGW and IC fan
Perfection in any endeavour will not likely ever be attained. So, what is your point in bashing those who are in touch with reality?
Norm
There has been a lot of posting of how these new cars did not work. Although pictures of the remaining train are few it appears that many cars maintained integrity. If so two main questions need to be answered. What worked and why & what did not work and why.
schlimmAs you said in a later post, better is not perfect. Improving safety (crude oil and ethanol tank car transport, derailments, highways crossings) is always by incremental improvements, i.e., better. Unfortunately, some posters use the unattainability of perfection as a 'straw dog' as a justification to basically keep the status quo.
Have there been this same type of derailments causing havoc with oil coming out of other sources?
Euclid I think the point is don’t let perfection become the enemy of good enough.
I think you need to reread his post.
Euclid This is turning out to be what I expected. I asked many times what the new tank car regulations will accomplish. The only answer is that they will increase safety. That is it. There is no quantification of how much safer.
The carbuilders are saying that the increase in safety will be non-existent with high speed derailments.
So the new tank car standards will be of no consequence.
Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com
oltmannd Euclid Being that the new DOT standards have not yet been released, does that mean that we have no way of knowing what those standards will require? I guess a surprise is always possible, but the rules usually look a lot like the drafts that circulated for comment.
Euclid Being that the new DOT standards have not yet been released, does that mean that we have no way of knowing what those standards will require?
I guess a surprise is always possible, but the rules usually look a lot like the drafts that circulated for comment.
Greg Saxton, Greenbrier’s chief engineer of manufacturing operations, said:
“Get on with it. You know this rule was supposed to be out the first of this year. Then around the first of the year, they says we’re going to get it out on May 12. Well, this has been going on a lot longer than a couple years, as I say.” . . . “I don’t know how this goes on forever, but we want it to stop.” [END EDIT]
I haven't looked up the proposed rules myself, so I have to wonder: What is the proposed test or means to achieve better safety ? Is it just in better materials (tougher, higher strength, more impact-resistant, etc.), or stronger assemblies (more material, maybe more support, etc.), and so on ?
In the building industry, there used to be a test to simulate the tornado impact resistance of a wall assembly, where a telephone pole was essentially shot at the wall by a compressed air cannon at a speed of like 100 MPH - really, a surrogate or substitute for the real thing. Is something like that proposed to test tank car shells under the new regs ? Say, shoot or drop a piece of rail on it endwise from a height of like 100 ft. to simulate the puncture-like impact forces in a derailment, and see how well the existing and proposed designs perform ? While a simplified substitute, at least then there'd be something quantifiable to measure and use as a guide to what's 'better' and what's not.
- Paul North.
Murphy Siding schlimm As you said in a later post, better is not perfect. Improving safety (crude oil and ethanol tank car transport, derailments, highways crossings) is always by incremental improvements, i.e., better. Unfortunately, some posters use the unattainability of perfection as a 'straw dog' as a justification to basically keep the status quo. Blah blah blah: I'm sure you have valid points and thoughts to share; but if all you want to do is joust with other posters, I can't see how you think anyone would take your points and thoughts seriously..... 'Just sayin' ....
schlimm As you said in a later post, better is not perfect. Improving safety (crude oil and ethanol tank car transport, derailments, highways crossings) is always by incremental improvements, i.e., better. Unfortunately, some posters use the unattainability of perfection as a 'straw dog' as a justification to basically keep the status quo.
Blah blah blah: I'm sure you have valid points and thoughts to share; but if all you want to do is joust with other posters, I can't see how you think anyone would take your points and thoughts seriously..... 'Just sayin' ....
Well, I made a simple, declarative sentence. And it said "some posters." But perhaps in your need to defend a certain element on these forums who will not tolerate any criticism of the status quo, you choose to misread. Or perhaps you consider yourself to be representative of all? So be it.
Norm48327 Perfection in any endeavour will not likely ever be attained. So, what is your point in bashing those who are in touch with reality?
What is your point in posting anything? Mostly what you do is to "bash" or threaten those who make any post which those like yourself and murphy cannot stand because you are intolerant of any criticism.
dehusmanWill the improvements completely eliminate the possibilty of a release? No. Will the improvements reduce the probability of a release? Yes. Even if it cannot be quantified to your satisfaction.
Precisely, as the old chestnut goes, "Perfect is the enemy of good" or, "Better a diamond with a flaw than a pebble without." -—Confucius, attrib
How do you expect someone to quantify something that has not been released yet?
An "expensive model collector"
Paul_D_North_Jr Is something like that proposed to test tank car shells under the new regs ? Say, shoot or drop a piece of rail on it endwise from a height of like 100 ft. to simulate the puncture-like impact forces in a derailment, and see how well the existing and proposed designs perform ? While a simplified substitute, at least then there'd be something quantifiable to measure and use as a guide to what's 'better' and what's not.
Is something like that proposed to test tank car shells under the new regs ? Say, shoot or drop a piece of rail on it endwise from a height of like 100 ft. to simulate the puncture-like impact forces in a derailment, and see how well the existing and proposed designs perform ? While a simplified substitute, at least then there'd be something quantifiable to measure and use as a guide to what's 'better' and what's not.
Short answer, yes. They do impact tests, they do heat tests on the thermal shields, they do stress tests on the cars, they run prototype cars in regular train service and instrument them to see how the components perform.
For example another new tank car design is in testing. The test cars are billed in a route that is a huge loop about 2000 miles around. The railroads haul it in regular trains, switching in in regular yards, just like any other car. All it does is continuously loop, racking up miles. In a couple months it can travel more miles than a regular car moves in years.
"This thread is starting to have a really familiar feel to it. Bucky/Euclid asking the same questions over and over, with slightly different wording, talking in circles....."
You've noticed, huh?
EuclidThe carbuilders are saying that the increase in safety will be non-existent with high speed derailments.
That is not what they said. It isn't even what you said they said previously.
Obviously, stonger cars at the margins of the point of derailment will fare better than weaker ones.
EuclidThere is no quantification of how much safer.
That you know of. It's really difficult to do - even harder than predicting automotive collision protection prior to crash testing since derailments are far more complex than auto collisions.
-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
Paul_D_North_JrSomeplace else, an executive from Greenbriar (RR car mfgr.) was quoted as saying essentially "Just get the rule issued !"
I suspect he's frustrated because he's pretty much dead in the water with tank car construction. He needs the regs to get started on the design and get the supply chain spooled up.
It's really unfair to him for the regs to be delayed this long.
Wednesday's NPR show FRESH AIR carried a discussion with Marcus Stern who has spent the past year investigating the practice "CBR" in collaboration with the Nation Institute's Investigative Fund. Recent accidents show cars aren't built to carry so much oil, he says. He
http://www.npr.org/2015/02/25/389008046/a-hard-look-at-the-risks-of-transporting-oil-on-rail-tanker-cars
The significant point I picked up from this discussion is that this crude oil contains explosive gasses in solution. When it comes out of the ground, it's a mixture of oil and also what are called natural gas liquids. These are methane, butane, propane. They're gases that we all know, but they're actually suspended in the oil. And during the journey to the refinery, which can be thousands of miles, the gases begin to separate from the liquid, and you have a blanket of propane essentially sitting on top of the oil.
This is I believe the cause of the fireballs we have seen in these videos. The gasses need to stripped out of the crude prior to transport and shipped in the appropriate rail cars.
Railroads need to realize that they need to get this Baken Crude catagorized as explosive and treat it like propane until it is stripped of the volitile components.
oltmannd Paul_D_North_Jr Someplace else, an executive from Greenbriar (RR car mfgr.) was quoted as saying essentially "Just get the rule issued !" It's really unfair to him for the regs to be delayed this long.
Paul_D_North_Jr Someplace else, an executive from Greenbriar (RR car mfgr.) was quoted as saying essentially "Just get the rule issued !"
Yet in the "current" (April 2015) issue of Trains, Greenbrier has a full-page ad on the back cover captioned "THE TANK CAR OF THE FUTURE IS READY TODAY", with a tabulation of selected technical details.
Just saw an article (but don't remember where) that asserted that part of the problem was that the car manufacturers and railroads wanted to go with thinner steel. the article even went on to compute how much more oil the thinner steel cars would be able to carry.
Given that this is the first I've seen of such an assertion, I think the writer was inventing some of his information.
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...
Paul_D_North_Jr oltmannd Paul_D_North_Jr Someplace else, an executive from Greenbriar (RR car mfgr.) was quoted as saying essentially "Just get the rule issued !" It's really unfair to him for the regs to be delayed this long. That's how I read the linked article, too. Yet in the "current" (April 2015) issue of Trains, Greenbrier has a full-page ad on the back cover captioned "THE TANK CAR OF THE FUTURE IS READY TODAY", with a tabulation of selected technical details. - Paul North.
That's how I read the linked article, too.
Today's tank car is in fact tomorrow's tank car unless and until the regulations change for what tomorrow's tank car must be.
To date - the regulations (while much cussed and discussed) for tomorrow have yet to be set.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
Euclid The big problem with the delay in new regulations is that the existing car fleet shrinks as cars wear out every day. And the supply of oil to be moved is probably increasing. Investors are Leery of the cost risk of replacing these retiring tank cars unless they know what the Federal rules are. You could build a new and better tank car, and still find it renedered obsolete when the new rules are finally issued. Delay in this case is a powerful tool. The delay in rules will move us toward a car supply shortage.
I've been seeing photos of oil trains being stored. Low oil prices from across the pond is starting to affect oil trains, it seems.
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
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