I see so many things I just don't understand. Maybe someone can answer this one.....
Saw two GEVO's leaving town on a loaded coal train - going north/east. 2nd motor had both the front and back door open. Driver made a comment that I will have to clean up for the forum - maybe it needed airing.
They were coming right out of the yard and they didn't stop to make a crew change, so any guesses as to why the doors would have been open?
AND - can the conductor still make the trip back to the 2nd or 3rd motor w/o having to stop the train, or does safety dictate that he has to wait for the train to stop completely before going back there?
Back to watching some more.
La Mook
She who has no signature! cinscocom-tmw
Why not?
We still see folks out for a walk on the veranda, especially when the engine consist has one that died en-route.
Perchance the potty is getting too arromatic in that GEVO and it doesn't burn methane gases?
Randy...
We all know GEs are sound, solidly built machines that don't vibrate, rattle or knock things apart....
Mookie, the doors would not mean much more than lazy crew members who didn't feel like closing them, or as the Driver pointed out, the odor might have been a little over ripe...wont cause any real damage other than the seat and floor getting dirty and wet if it rains...the computers are inside the back electrical cabinet, and the chances of them being damaged are slim...remember, these things are built for use by the lowest common denominator...us switchmen...so most of what is inside is built to be abused and misused.
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edblysard wrote: Randy...We all know GEs are sound, solidly built machines that don't vibrate, rattle or knock things apart.... Mookie, the doors would not mean much more than lazy crew members who didn't feel like closing them, or as the Driver pointed out, the odor might have been a little over ripe...wont cause any real damage other than the seat and floor getting dirty and wet if it rains...the computers are inside the back electrical cabinet, and the chances of them being damaged are slim...remember, these things are built for use by the lowest common denominator...us switchmen...so most of what is inside is built to be abused and misused.
Ed -
I have thrown some unwanted passengers (human and otherwise) out of locomotive cabs and their presence can render the atmosphere downright ripe...
LC
Two thing I never forget on a road job...the Lysol spray,a pack of paper towels and a spray bottle of Febreze....when you consider my engineer is nick named Booger, well, let your mind run with it!
Sis, it's definitely possible to walk from unit to unit while the train's in motion, though it can be quite a thrill at speed (I think about 45 is the fastest I ever did it). Before locomotives were built with anticlimber platforms, they'd have drop-down walkways and chains that could be connected to provide the walkway. You'll see those on units older than about the mid-1970s.
At one time, somebody on CNW got a crazy idea that it wasn't safe to go from unit to unit, and our road units began to appear without the walkways and chains. This didn't last too long, as I'm sure other railroads were overjoyed at the prospect of encountering this (I remember a few times taking the step-to-footboard-to-footboard-to-step route). By the time CNW started getting SD40-2s in 1973 and 1974, things were back to normal.
Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
Limitedclear wrote: edblysard wrote: Randy...We all know GEs are sound, solidly built machines that don't vibrate, rattle or knock things apart.... Mookie, the doors would not mean much more than lazy crew members who didn't feel like closing them, or as the Driver pointed out, the odor might have been a little over ripe...wont cause any real damage other than the seat and floor getting dirty and wet if it rains...the computers are inside the back electrical cabinet, and the chances of them being damaged are slim...remember, these things are built for use by the lowest common denominator...us switchmen...so most of what is inside is built to be abused and misused.Ed -I have thrown some unwanted passengers (human and otherwise) out of locomotive cabs and their presence can render the atmosphere downright ripe...LC
When I first started working where I do now, I was amazed at all of the hiding places unwanted people can find on locomotives. As for smell no hiding place is safe, I'll find you.
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Once at a BNSF division point I saw three adults (two of them women) and two children get out of an engine where the "front" door is. (Not counting the two employees.) Do modern "safety cabs" make it easier for "hitchhikers" to stow away? And does every lav stink that bad?
al-in-chgo wrote: ***********************Once at a BNSF division point I saw three adults (two of them women) and two children get out of an engine where the "front" door is. (Not counting the two employees.) Do modern "safety cabs" make it easier for "hitchhikers" to stow away? And does every lav stink that bad?
Where was the division point? You ever been in a San-o-Can on a hot day?
doghouse wrote: al-in-chgo wrote: ***********************Once at a BNSF division point I saw three adults (two of them women) and two children get out of an engine where the "front" door is. (Not counting the two employees.) Do modern "safety cabs" make it easier for "hitchhikers" to stow away? And does every lav stink that bad? Where was the division point? You ever been in a San-o-Can on a hot day?
Um, question no. 1 I would rather not answer. I can say it was on July 4 weekend, hot but not insufferably hot (unless you're shut up in a steel box, I guess). Question no. 2 -- who hasn't been picnicking, gone camping, attended a large public event with a temporary venue (huge rock concert for example), or otherwise in some way had to use the "wet latrine" setup? P-U indeed! Are there any other options in a loco cab--composting latrine, chemical toilet?
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