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Hi! I had a few questions about what exactly the dispatchers do. So do the trains have to send them information about what is in the train, what company, and stuff? if so would it be a difficult task to add things to this checklist for them to see before they allow a train to depart? such as what is the length of the train. I was wondering just how much they know about the trains. do they know much more than the company and train ID?
any answers would be helpful thank you!!
Information on consists is pretty much all automated now. The dispatcher will need to know about any special handling (ie, high/wide, possibly hazmat) but beyond that, he/she doesn't care.
What the dispatcher does need to know is the length of the train and whether it can make it over the road. The power desk will presumably assign enough power to accomplish that.
One could think of the dispatcher's duties as a sort of game - arranging the traffic so it moves in the most efficient manner possible. The variables are many. Events can lead to congestion, which ties up a lot. Some trains have priority over others (contracts, etc) so will get priority handling, while others languish in sidings or never leave a terminal.
The dispatcher's computer aided dispatch system (CAD) helps by double checking for conflicting movements and the like.
There's much more to it, but there's a start.
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tnagle192034Hi! I had a few questions about what exactly the dispatchers do. So do the trains have to send them information about what is in the train, what company, and stuff? if so would it be a difficult task to add things to this checklist for them to see before they allow a train to depart? such as what is the length of the train. I was wondering just how much they know about the trains. do they know much more than the company and train ID? any answers would be helpful thank you!!
Railroads have multiple interlocking data systems to facilitate their operation as a transportation company that move customers freight from origin plant to destination plant. Every car has its own identity - Car Initial and Car Number. Car Initials that end in X are private (non-railroad) owned cars. Data systems keep track of the thousands of cars that a carrier has on its line at any time. Yard personnel get 'work orders' for the actions crews need to take placing, pulling and/or respotting cars within each industry. Yard crews may service one or more customers and bring the results of their work back into the 'serving yard'. At the serving yard, personnel will then have other yard crews organize the results of the 'Industry' crews and form trains/blocks of cars based upon the destination/consignee of the cars. When track(s) of car(s) have been assembled for movement they are 'booked' into the carriers 'Car & Train Computer System'. Yard Supervision communicates with Division Supervision that they have a train to run for a specific scheduled train, extra section of a scheduled train or a extra train. The computer, when queried, will then provide all the necessary information about the train - Loads, Empties, Tonnage, Length, Clearance Restrictions, HAZMAT. Supervision will then apply locomotives to the train, normally with sufficient hauling capacity to move the train to its final desination over all the grades between Origin and Destination.
Once the train has been built, schedule assigned, power applied it will be 'consisted' into the computer system and all appropriate information will be sent from the 'Car & Train' computer system to the 'Computer Aided Dispatching System' (CADS). The Train Dispatcher manipulates CADS for all the trains operating over his territory - be that signaled or dark territory. CADS (at least CSX CADS) communicate a number of things with just how the Train ID gets displayed on the Dispatcher's model board computer screen. The lead alphabetic letter Identifier; P=passenger, M=merchandise, C=coal, G=grain, L=local and a number of other designators. The next three digits are the schedule number, the following two digits are the day date from origin. In the CSX CADS the date digits can be displayed in an array of different colors to signify different conditions - Clearance, HAZMAT and others.
Every train operating on a CADS territory has its own 'Train Sheet' a computer data packet that has Train ID, Crew Names, Engines by number, Loads, Empties, Tonnage, Length, Clearance details, HAZMAT details. Train sheet data is available to the Train Dispatcher with a mouse click any time he may want information about any individual train.
With scheduled movement between carriers they exchange data between each other on a train by train basis in both directions - both passenger and freight.
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Thank you so much for all of that information it will be very helpful! I was wondering one thing. what format is the length in? feet? amount of cars?
I'm not sure of the current practice but I have some older ETT's that list siding length by number of 40-foot cars.
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