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How and Who Deternines Track Speed Limits

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How and Who Deternines Track Speed Limits
Posted by Northtowne on Tuesday, November 19, 2019 6:58 PM

This probably been on here before, have to say again I have been away for a good while.

Was wondering about the process of setting track speed limits, don't mean the obvious such as curves, bridges, city limits. etc., or special trains, but ordinary main line runs of track between sidings and yards. What do they look at and which department or departments rule on this and how high up the ladder does it go to be final?

Northtowne

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Posted by BaltACD on Tuesday, November 19, 2019 8:48 PM

Northtowne
This probably been on here before, have to say again I have been away for a good while.

Was wondering about the process of setting track speed limits, don't mean the obvious such as curves, bridges, city limits. etc., or special trains, but ordinary main line runs of track between sidings and yards. What do they look at and which department or departments rule on this and how high up the ladder does it go to be final?

Northtowne

The owner sets the desired speed for every line that they own.  They do this by building and maintaining their tracks to the standards set by the FRA for the various classes of track.  If they want 10 MPH, they maintain the track to the level of EXEMPT track - the deteriorated ties with minimal spike holding power and the number of 'wide' guage situations as well as deficienty cross level conditions - ROCK & ROLL.  If they want higher speeds they maintain, surface, align the track to the higher standards required for each class of track.  The degree of curvature may impose slower speeds than exist on trangent track on the same line.

I am not any kind of expert on track requirements - 'mudchicken' is.

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Posted by rdamon on Wednesday, November 20, 2019 7:26 AM
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Posted by tree68 on Wednesday, November 20, 2019 7:37 AM

On the non-regulatory side, there is AREMA, which meets regularly.  Again, Mudchicken is the resident expert.

It's not hard to imagine the volumes likely dedicated to exactly what the standards are for each class of track.  How much vertical and horizontal variation is allowed, curvature as mentioned, weight of rail, jointed vs welded, and any of a host of other variables.

What is sometimes hard to comprehend is how much labor and know-how it took to maintain jointed rail capable of carrying trains at speeds of 100 MPH before the advent of the mechanized and computer controlled equipment of today.

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Posted by steve14 on Wednesday, November 20, 2019 11:05 AM

The simple answer, once track has been put in service at whatever designated speed, is that the track inspector is the one who "owns" what the speed will be. By FRA regulation they are the only ones who have the authority and responsibility to determine how fast the trains can go. This is based on what they find on their trips over the line. They are required to take action based on the conditions they find, BEFORE THE NEXT TRAIN. See 49CFR213 for the specifics. 

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Posted by caldreamer on Wednesday, November 20, 2019 12:18 PM

In addition, when the route was chosen the railroads engineering personell would determine the inital maximum speed for each segment based upon curvature and slope,  A tight curve and the maximum speed would be less than for a wider curve, etc. to prevent derailments.  A steeper decending grade might require a slower speed for the same reason..

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Posted by tree68 on Wednesday, November 20, 2019 12:28 PM

The flip side of this question is this -  how fast do trains need to go in a given section?

The terrain and potential track conditions might permit 100 MPH speeds, but if the railroad only needs 25 MPH, that's what the track will be maintained for.

The maintenance cost required to maintain a give class of track has to be balanced with the operational requirements.  

If the railroad needs 100 MPH and the track profile won't support that, you'll end up with line relocations, tunnels, cuts, etc to make such speeds possible.

The New York Central famously relocated both their track and the Mohawk River after the Gulf Curve disaster in Little Falls, NY.

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Posted by cv_acr on Wednesday, November 20, 2019 12:48 PM

Track conditions and also signalling are a factor.

I understand there are legal maximums for dark [non-signalled] track.

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Posted by mudchicken on Wednesday, November 20, 2019 4:13 PM

Track Inspector works under the Roadmaster/Track Supervisor. All three have the certification under FRA rules as a responsible party. The operating side, Traimanster up to Superintendent (along with the rules examiner and road foreman) may be the one putting out the timetable, but it is the track side that determines the actual speed in the field in the end. Track Department, Mechanical Department, Operating Department are supposed to all be on the same side, but there are limits (and just a little friction at times.) A superintendent or dispatcher is not going to over-ride a decision placed by those under the Division Engineer, etc.

 

Know of at least one Chief Engineer who got caught trying to remove an FRA slow order off a geometry car  to appease an operating general manager, over the objection of a roadmaster who had not checked out the defect location yet - Instant Code 1!

cv_acr - In the US: 49 freight/60 passenger ... not exactly sure what the Transport Canada rule is for the same thing.

Always cringe when the engineer "cheats" to make up time with the logic that the track used to be good for that in the bad old days.

People forget that those FRA rules are interpretted to mean what the track does under load. (Part of why the track tribe is so nervous about mudholes)

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Posted by Erik_Mag on Wednesday, November 20, 2019 10:06 PM

mudchicken

People forget that those FRA rules are interpretted to mean what the track does under load. (Part of why the track tribe is so nervous about mudholes)

I assume this pretty much means that measurements need to be made with a track geometry car. I can see why mudholes would keep the track tribe awake at nights.

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Posted by mudchicken on Thursday, November 21, 2019 1:43 PM

A good trackman can generally compensate for what goes on when the loading isn't there (thus the mudhole comment and watching the give-and-take in the ballast section.)

You can't have a geometry car on speed-dial for inspections on short notice and shortlines often can't afford them at all (except for the occassional visit by FRA T-2 etc.)....Many of the geometry cars are ballasted extra heavy and some of the off-the-shelf self propelled cars are not heavy enough. trying to equip a truck with measurement gear is just throwing money away - the people that ordered them did NOT understand what they were doing. Clearly did not talk to the AREMA tribe that writes the chapter on g-car basics and suggested guidelines. Now with the gage resistance programs out there, only a few have the funds to invest in the technology. (The pioneer FRA car T-100 started as an oddball SP-SD45X and is super heavy.)

A well trained trackman with a sharp eye and institutional memory is priceless.

Mudchicken Nothing is worth taking the risk of losing a life over. Come home tonight in the same condition that you left home this morning in. Safety begins with ME.... cinscocom-west
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Posted by tree68 on Thursday, November 21, 2019 1:46 PM

mudchicken
A well trained trackman with a sharp eye and institutional memory is priceless.

Job qualifications for section foreman, back in the day...

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Posted by Falcon48 on Thursday, November 21, 2019 2:20 PM

cv_acr

Track conditions and also signalling are a factor.

I understand there are legal maximums for dark [non-signalled] track.

 

Yes.  Unless a PTC system is installed, FRA rules establish the following maximum speeds for non-signalled track: (i) passenger trains > 60 mph; freight trains > 50 mph.  49 CFR 236.0(c)(2).   

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Posted by Overmod on Thursday, November 21, 2019 5:05 PM

You've got the definitions precisely reversed as notated:

Maximum speed for passenger is denominated at 59mph because the rule is "60mph or greater" and the unit of measurement is quantized in whole mph.  The limit for any signal system that does not contain explicit ATS ls likewise "80mph or above" (and has been by statute since the early 1920s, purposely confirmed and left unchanged by the ICC Order of 1947).

I know all this is what you meant, but it's not what your sentence said.

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Posted by cx500 on Thursday, November 21, 2019 5:19 PM

Speed can also be limited by existing crossing warning circuits.  Go too fast and the lights, bell, etc. will not be operating for the mandatory minimum period before the train occupies the crossing.  Perhaps more of an issue with older installations that depend entirely on insulated joints and basic DC track circuits.

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Posted by Northtowne on Thursday, November 21, 2019 8:34 PM

rdamon, thanks , article was a good read.

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Posted by Falcon48 on Thursday, November 21, 2019 9:58 PM

Overmod

You've got the definitions precisely reversed as notated:

Maximum speed for passenger is denominated at 59mph because the rule is "60mph or greater" and the unit of measurement is quantized in whole mph.  The limit for any signal system that does not contain explicit ATS ls likewise "80mph or above" (and has been by statute since the early 1920s, purposely confirmed and left unchanged by the ICC Order of 1947).

I know all this is what you meant, but it's not what your sentence said.

 

  The question as stated had to do with "unsignalled" track, not "signalled" track with ATS, ATC or ACS.  Here is the actual rule (49 CFR 236.0(c)(ii)(D)(2)):

"On and after January 17, 2012, where a passenger train is permitted to operate at a speed of 60 or more miles per hour, or a freight train is permitted to operate at a speed of 50 or more miles per hour, a block signal system complying with the provisions of this part [ed 49 CR Part 236] shall be installed unless an FRA approved PTC system meeting the requirements of this part for the subject speed and other operating conditions is installed."

I recognize that, as a practical matter, a limit of "60 or more miles per hour" translates to "greater than 59 MPH" and "50 or more miles per hour," translates to "greater than 49 MPH".  But that's not what the rule says. 

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Posted by BaltACD on Thursday, November 21, 2019 10:07 PM

Falcon48
 
Overmod

You've got the definitions precisely reversed as notated:

Maximum speed for passenger is denominated at 59mph because the rule is "60mph or greater" and the unit of measurement is quantized in whole mph.  The limit for any signal system that does not contain explicit ATS ls likewise "80mph or above" (and has been by statute since the early 1920s, purposely confirmed and left unchanged by the ICC Order of 1947).

I know all this is what you meant, but it's not what your sentence said. 

  Here is the actual rule (49 CFR 236.0(c)(ii)(D)(2)): 

"On and after January 17, 2012, where a passenger train is permitted to operate at a speed of 60 or more miles per hour, or a freight train is permitted to operate at a speed of 50 or more miles per hour, a block signal system complying with the provisions of this part [ed 49 CR Part 236] shall be installed unless an FRA approved PTC system meeting the requirements of this part for the subject speed and other operating conditions is installed."

Less than 80 is not 80.  Less than 60 is not 60.  Less than 50 is not 50.  In the nearest whole MPH that is 79,  59 and 49.

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Posted by Falcon48 on Thursday, November 21, 2019 10:16 PM

BaltACD
 
Falcon48
 
Overmod

You've got the definitions precisely reversed as notated:

Maximum speed for passenger is denominated at 59mph because the rule is "60mph or greater" and the unit of measurement is quantized in whole mph.  The limit for any signal system that does not contain explicit ATS ls likewise "80mph or above" (and has been by statute since the early 1920s, purposely confirmed and left unchanged by the ICC Order of 1947).

I know all this is what you meant, but it's not what your sentence said. 

  Here is the actual rule (49 CFR 236.0(c)(ii)(D)(2)): 

"On and after January 17, 2012, where a passenger train is permitted to operate at a speed of 60 or more miles per hour, or a freight train is permitted to operate at a speed of 50 or more miles per hour, a block signal system complying with the provisions of this part [ed 49 CR Part 236] shall be installed unless an FRA approved PTC system meeting the requirements of this part for the subject speed and other operating conditions is installed."

 

Less than 80 is not 80.  Less than 60 is not 60.  Less than 50 is not 50.  In the nearest whole MPH that is 79,  59 and 49.

 

Why is this an issue?  We are saying essentially the same thing.  I'm just quoting the actual rule text, which is what it is. A passenger train operating at 59.5 mph on unsignalled track would be exceeding 59 mph, but not be violating the rule.  Granted, a half mile per hour increment would be difficult for an engineer to maintain, and he would probably end up exceeding the > 60 mph limit.  But, if he didn't, it wouldn't be a violation.        

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Posted by BaltACD on Thursday, November 21, 2019 10:22 PM

Falcon48
 
BaltACD 
Falcon48 
Overmod

You've got the definitions precisely reversed as notated:

Maximum speed for passenger is denominated at 59mph because the rule is "60mph or greater" and the unit of measurement is quantized in whole mph.  The limit for any signal system that does not contain explicit ATS ls likewise "80mph or above" (and has been by statute since the early 1920s, purposely confirmed and left unchanged by the ICC Order of 1947).

I know all this is what you meant, but it's not what your sentence said. 

  Here is the actual rule (49 CFR 236.0(c)(ii)(D)(2)): 

"On and after January 17, 2012, where a passenger train is permitted to operate at a speed of 60 or more miles per hour, or a freight train is permitted to operate at a speed of 50 or more miles per hour, a block signal system complying with the provisions of this part [ed 49 CR Part 236] shall be installed unless an FRA approved PTC system meeting the requirements of this part for the subject speed and other operating conditions is installed." 

Less than 80 is not 80.  Less than 60 is not 60.  Less than 50 is not 50.  In the nearest whole MPH that is 79,  59 and 49. 

Why is this an issue?  We are saying essentially the same thing.  I'm just quoting the actual rule text, which is what it is. A passenger train operating at 59.5 mph on unsignalled track would be exceeding 59 mph, but not be violating the rule.  Granted, a half mile per hour increment would be difficult for an engineer to maintain, and he would probably end up exceeding the > 60 mph limit.  But, if he didn't, it wouldn't be a violation.   

Essentially is not the same.  Rule books that the railroad's operate their properties under specify 79 - 59 - 49.  I have yet to see a rule in a Rule Book state that the maximum speed is a speed not greater than 80.  

Your argument makes you seem like a lawyer trying to create a 'gotcha'.

Lawyer can argue essentially, railroaders don't.

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Posted by Erik_Mag on Thursday, November 21, 2019 10:31 PM

mudchicken

A well trained trackman with a sharp eye and institutional memory is priceless.

I have no doubt about that - related to why the military has senior enlisted officers. Unfortunately it seems that HR types often have no clue about the value of institutional memory.

Also makes sense as to why the mud holes get special attention.

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Friday, November 22, 2019 7:01 AM

cx500

Speed can also be limited by existing crossing warning circuits.  Go too fast and the lights, bell, etc. will not be operating for the mandatory minimum period before the train occupies the crossing.  Perhaps more of an issue with older installations that depend entirely on insulated joints and basic DC track circuits.

John

 
That was almost a problem for North Shore Line when the Electroliners were being introduced.  Their greater speed capabilities allowed them to come close to overrrunning grade crossing circuits.
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Posted by mudchicken on Friday, November 22, 2019 7:35 AM

Erik_Mag

 

 
mudchicken

A well trained trackman with a sharp eye and institutional memory is priceless.

 

 

I have no doubt about that - related to why the military has senior enlisted officers. Unfortunately it seems that HR types often have no clue about the value of institutional memory.

Also makes sense as to why the mud holes get special attention.

 

  Nobody on the engineering side of the railroad profession would argue that. Would have been a smarter move to lay off the spineless senior execs that surrendered to the beancounter mentality. The industry would have been better off. (Some of that institutional/ intellectual property has not returned and HR took way too long to realize that that talent cannot be found just anywhere.) The latest PSR stupidity just reinforces that. Brain drain problems are bad and it's about to get worse.

Mudchicken Nothing is worth taking the risk of losing a life over. Come home tonight in the same condition that you left home this morning in. Safety begins with ME.... cinscocom-west
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Posted by Falcon48 on Friday, November 22, 2019 11:35 AM

BaltACD
 
Falcon48
 
BaltACD 
Falcon48 
Overmod

You've got the definitions precisely reversed as notated:

Maximum speed for passenger is denominated at 59mph because the rule is "60mph or greater" and the unit of measurement is quantized in whole mph.  The limit for any signal system that does not contain explicit ATS ls likewise "80mph or above" (and has been by statute since the early 1920s, purposely confirmed and left unchanged by the ICC Order of 1947).

I know all this is what you meant, but it's not what your sentence said. 

  Here is the actual rule (49 CFR 236.0(c)(ii)(D)(2)): 

"On and after January 17, 2012, where a passenger train is permitted to operate at a speed of 60 or more miles per hour, or a freight train is permitted to operate at a speed of 50 or more miles per hour, a block signal system complying with the provisions of this part [ed 49 CR Part 236] shall be installed unless an FRA approved PTC system meeting the requirements of this part for the subject speed and other operating conditions is installed." 

Less than 80 is not 80.  Less than 60 is not 60.  Less than 50 is not 50.  In the nearest whole MPH that is 79,  59 and 49. 

Why is this an issue?  We are saying essentially the same thing.  I'm just quoting the actual rule text, which is what it is. A passenger train operating at 59.5 mph on unsignalled track would be exceeding 59 mph, but not be violating the rule.  Granted, a half mile per hour increment would be difficult for an engineer to maintain, and he would probably end up exceeding the > 60 mph limit.  But, if he didn't, it wouldn't be a violation.   

 

Essentially is not the same.  Rule books that the railroad's operate their properties under specify 79 - 59 - 49.  I have yet to see a rule in a Rule Book state that the maximum speed is a speed not greater than 80.  

Your argument makes you seem like a lawyer trying to create a 'gotcha'.

Lawyer can argue essentially, railroaders don't.

 

I fail to see why you are arguing about this.  The comment I was originally responding to (by cv_acr) was about "legal maximums for dark [non-signalled] track".  The legal maximums for dark track are contained in the FRA rule I quoted (not, by the way, in the 1947 ICC order, which has long been superceded by FRA rules).  The FRA rule says what it says.  I certainly recognize that many (probably most) railroads choose to comply with the FRA rule by internal speed limits which are slightly more restrictive than the FRA rule (e.g., "59 mph" rather than "less than 60 mph").  That's perfectly OK.  A railroad is free to set its own internal speed restrictions, so long as they are not more permissive than FRA rules.  But the legal maximums are those in the FRA rule.

Sometimes I wonder why I even bother to post things to this forum.  Even the most innocuous comments seem to provoke snide remarks and name calling (as here). I spent my entire working career in the rail industry and I'm interested in railroad matters.  But I have absolutely no interest in flamethrowing contests with posters who can't deal civily with other forum participants.

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Posted by Northtowne on Monday, November 25, 2019 6:43 PM

Thanks for the replies; what I think I found out from this is that the track super is the last word and cannot be overruled, and aside from some FRA, and other rules, the setting of the track speed is largely subjective.

You know, I am a neophite in all this, but it seems that much of railroading is subjective (people and their experience and dedication) and PSR is moving railroading in the opposite direction.

Nothtowne  

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Posted by Falcon48 on Monday, November 25, 2019 7:42 PM

Duplicate post deleted (my legendary lack of computer skills at work),

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Posted by Falcon48 on Monday, November 25, 2019 7:47 PM

I retired from the rail industry before PSR reared its ugly head.  But I would be very careful about casually buying into the knee jerk railfan reaction that PSR is nothing more than aberration cococted by bean counters just to cut costs by destroying service.  

Sitting at home contemplating my navel in my doddering old age, it seems to me that one of the key objectives of PSR is to keep cars moving rather than to have them sitting in classification yards.  Classification yards are a necessary evil in railroading, but they usually add significant transit time delays to shipments.  For example, every time a car must go through a classification yard (usually a hump yard at high volume locations) you can assume that it will add roughly 1 day to the transit time (a truck can go nearly halfway across the country in that amount of time).  Spread over thousands of cars, that's a lot of non-productive delay which degrades service and requires additional assets (cars) to move a given volume of traffic.  

Anything that reduces the need for cars to be switched at classification yards will reduce transit time (thus improving service and reliability) and reduce the amount of assets (like cars) needed to move a given amount of traffic.   In other words, once the bugs are worked out (in the rail industry, it usually takes a few years to fully work the bugs out of a major new operating plan), PSR should improve service and decrease costs. We'll see how this will actually play out as PSR matures.  But I'm not willing to simply assume that PSR is a degradation of service in pursuit of profit. Railfans usually don't like "new", but "new" isn't necesarily bad - keep an open mind.     

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Posted by PNWRMNM on Monday, November 25, 2019 9:24 PM

Northtowne,

All of the discussion so far has been at a micro level. The macro decision was made just before a line was built. Grade and curviture will control the maximum speed physically attainable. In non-mountain territory curviture is typically the limiting factor.

Then comes traffic issues. How fast does the line need to operate and why? If it is a busy main line you may see 70 or 60 MPH freight train speeds because time counts for at least some of the traffic. If it is a 50 mile long branch line with one local a day, then 25 MPH is sufficient. These economic decisions drive the standard of maintenance. The FRA track standards are simply a codification of railroad practice at the time they were written made legally enforceable.

Yes, the length of the track circuit at a grade crossing signal may impose a speed limit, but that circuit length was based on the intended speed at the time. If there is an economic need to increase speed, and no nearby speed limiting curves, lengthing the circuit is relatively cheap and easy to do.

The point is that in relatively flat country the limiting factor is usually the sharpness of curves, and fixing 'too sharp' curves is very expensive.

Mac McCulloch

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Posted by Falcon48 on Monday, November 25, 2019 10:26 PM

PNWRMNM

Northtowne,

All of the discussion so far has been at a micro level. The macro decision was made just before a line was built. Grade and curviture will control the maximum speed physically attainable. In non-mountain territory curviture is typically the limiting factor.

Then comes traffic issues. How fast does the line need to operate and why? If it is a busy main line you may see 70 or 60 MPH freight train speeds because time counts for at least some of the traffic. If it is a 50 mile long branch line with one local a day, then 25 MPH is sufficient. These economic decisions drive the standard of maintenance. The FRA track standards are simply a codification of railroad practice at the time they were written made legally enforceable.

Yes, the length of the track circuit at a grade crossing signal may impose a speed limit, but that circuit length was based on the intended speed at the time. If there is an economic need to increase speed, and no nearby speed limiting curves, lengthing the circuit is relatively cheap and easy to do.

The point is that in relatively flat country the limiting factor is usually the sharpness of curves, and fixing 'too sharp' curves is very expensive.

Mac McCulloch

 

  Precisely correct.  I would only add that the signalization on any particular rail line is also a function of "traffc issues".  The business question is "how fast does the line need to operate?"  If  the commercial requirement is that the line needs to operate at a speeds requiring signalization, and the revenues produced by the traffic are sufficient to support the investment in signalization, then the line will be signalized to support the required speeds..

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Posted by daveklepper on Tuesday, November 26, 2019 6:15 AM

Falcon 48, please remember that for every poster that makes comments that may annoy you, there are at least 50, probably 100, that do our best to keep our conversation as civil as possible and also deeply respect your own railroad knowledge.

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