jeffhergert MidlandMike There was a story in today's NewsWire about a CPKC train in icy Iowa that stalled on a hill and started sliding back downhill in emergency, headed to the BNSF mainline diamond in Ottumwa, with a BNSF train stopped across the diamond. The CP train finally stopped 20 feet short of the crossing, and the BN train had been warned and moved. https://www.trains.com/trn/news-reviews/news-wire/tense-moments-but-no-disaster-after-train-stalls-on-cpkcs-rutledge-hill-in-iowa/ From the Steel Highways railcam. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1L3CxHtsO5k Jeff
MidlandMike There was a story in today's NewsWire about a CPKC train in icy Iowa that stalled on a hill and started sliding back downhill in emergency, headed to the BNSF mainline diamond in Ottumwa, with a BNSF train stopped across the diamond. The CP train finally stopped 20 feet short of the crossing, and the BN train had been warned and moved. https://www.trains.com/trn/news-reviews/news-wire/tense-moments-but-no-disaster-after-train-stalls-on-cpkcs-rutledge-hill-in-iowa/
There was a story in today's NewsWire about a CPKC train in icy Iowa that stalled on a hill and started sliding back downhill in emergency, headed to the BNSF mainline diamond in Ottumwa, with a BNSF train stopped across the diamond. The CP train finally stopped 20 feet short of the crossing, and the BN train had been warned and moved.
https://www.trains.com/trn/news-reviews/news-wire/tense-moments-but-no-disaster-after-train-stalls-on-cpkcs-rutledge-hill-in-iowa/
From the Steel Highways railcam.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1L3CxHtsO5k
Jeff
After stalling, if you don't apply the 'train brake'; GRAVITY for the WIN!
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
My money is on ice on the rails/lack of sufficient adhesion to hold the train. If ice on shoes were the issue we would see alot more brake related accidents in the winter time as shoes ice up and fail... we would see wide spread failures, not just the odd one on a grade like this one.
UlrichMy money is on ice on the rails/lack of sufficient adhesion to hold the train. If ice on shoes were the issue we would see alot more brake related accidents in the winter time as shoes ice up and fail... we would see wide spread failures, not just the odd one on a grade like this one.
Have never seen a condition where REPEATED wheel movement on the top of the rail didn't end up with wheels getting down to steel.
Ulrich Backshop I wonder how autonomous railcars would do in this situation, since this is the area that some proposed to use them in? Same laws of physics would apply.. likely they too would slide, although the emotive radio chatter would be absent.. Would a third locomotive on the back have helped? Sounds to me (and I'm no expert) like a failure to plan for conditions. not the crew's fault, but someone somewhere along the line could have predicted this and added a unit.. or wait for conditions to improve.
Backshop I wonder how autonomous railcars would do in this situation, since this is the area that some proposed to use them in?
I wonder how autonomous railcars would do in this situation, since this is the area that some proposed to use them in?
Same laws of physics would apply.. likely they too would slide, although the emotive radio chatter would be absent..
Would a third locomotive on the back have helped? Sounds to me (and I'm no expert) like a failure to plan for conditions. not the crew's fault, but someone somewhere along the line could have predicted this and added a unit.. or wait for conditions to improve.
I would opine that it was snow/ ice on the brake shoes. Air brake and train handling rules often contain provisions that the engineer must peridocally apply the brakes in snowy conditions order to clean out any snow/ ice that may have accumulated and to ensure brake effectiveness. Normally, the engineer would do this when approaching a location where the brakes will be needed, i.e. approaching a downhill section or a siding or stopping point, but it would be counterintuitive to do so on an uphill climb.
The other reason I am thinking snow on the brake shoes is that the train did eventually stop itself. As it was rolling backwards, the brake shoes eventually cleaned out the snow as they slowly heated up, and the brakes gradually began to grab. It is the same reasoning as to why you apply the brakes before you need them - to give the brakes time to clean themselves of snow and warm the shoes to where they will be effective. Of course I have no odea of the territory, so it could also be that the rear portion of the train got to a flat enough section of track where gravity was less of a factor.
The incident happened on Rutledge hill, named for the siding at the top of the hill. Rutledge was also the junction with the original main line from Marion/Cedar Rapids and the current main line from Davenport. The original line became a secondary branch and was abandoned in 1980. The hill had the only regularly assigned helper district on the MILW east of the mountain districts in the steam era.
Ottumwa is a crew change point between Nahant (Davenport) and Kansas City. The hill isn't long, but steep and on a curve. When the rear end was in the BNSF interlocking it was on the flatter portion.
adkrr64 I would opine that it was snow/ ice on the brake shoes. Air brake and train handling rules often contain provisions that the engineer must peridocally apply the brakes in snowy conditions order to clean out any snow/ ice that may have accumulated and to ensure brake effectiveness. Normally, the engineer would do this when approaching a location where the brakes will be needed, i.e. approaching a downhill section or a siding or stopping point, but it would be counterintuitive to do so on an uphill climb. The other reason I am thinking snow on the brake shoes is that the train did eventually stop itself. As it was rolling backwards, the brake shoes eventually cleaned out the snow as they slowly heated up, and the brakes gradually began to grab. It is the same reasoning as to why you apply the brakes before you need them - to give the brakes time to clean themselves of snow and warm the shoes to where they will be effective. Of course I have no odea of the territory, so it could also be that the rear portion of the train got to a flat enough section of track where gravity was less of a factor.
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