schlimmYou have no credible evidence that the windshield, etc. were not examined thoroughly.
I don't claim to have any evidence of whether or not the windshield was examimed. All I am saying is that a credible report will include such a laboratory examination of the windshield and will state the results of that examination. If the investigation final report does not include that, I will consider the investigation and the report to be flawed.
schlimm You have no credible evidence that the windshield, etc. were not examined thoroughly.
You have no credible evidence that the windshield, etc. were not examined thoroughly.
Schlimm, while what you say may be true, this is the kind of post that is offensive to the must of the posters (at least this one) and is what starts the thread being locked. I would ask that you refrain from trying to pick fights or arguments.
We don't have knowledge of what the investigation has determined yet and until we do, we can speculate. Things we do know include a SEPTA train being rocked. And Bostian alerting it to his approach.
Bostian seems like what we want in an engineer, it is reasonable to give him any benefit of the doubt until all the evidence is in. I concur that the possibility of something impacting the ACS-64 could be involved. He took the Southbound Acela with no incident to Washington. He passed the substance tests and cooperated with the investigation. I say lets wait until the investigation is complete before jumping to any conclusions. And lets not challenge other posters as if they have commited blasphemy. Please.
Simply stating a fact without rancor, without name-calling, is not picking a fight. Euclid and I respect each other's opinions but feel entirely free to challenge each other.
C&NW, CA&E, MILW, CGW and IC fan
Excerpt from interview of SEPTA engineer Curtis Parrish
http://dms.ntsb.gov/public/58000-58499/58167/585209.pdf
Q. Okay, Mr. Parrish, like I mentioned before, if you could just give us a run-down leaving 30th Street and what you experienced, and in particular, anything that you remember about the 188 train as he, I understand, he came up and went by you? Over.
A. All right. We left 30th Street at approximately 9:01. Nothing out of the ordinary. Came eastbound through Mantua. I started to increase speed, I was just -- well, in fact, as I was leaving Mantua. And I saw a white light. I don't know what it was. It looked like it could've been somebody carrying a white light. So I decided to blow the horn for them, to make sure they know I was coming. I'm positive it wasn't an employee or an Amtrak employee because they didn't have a whistle board or anything like that. So I just wanted to warn them that a train was coming. As I blew the horn, something hit the windshield and knocked glass into my face and onto the console, then onto my person. As I ducked down, trying to get away from it, I was clutching the door and trying to get out of the door; couldn't get the door open. And I heard a passenger knock on the door because they also heard the sound too. I put the train into emergency, and I finally got the door open and started to call the CTEC 6. I could tell there was a person out there, but I couldn't tell -- I couldn't give a description or anything, because you -- if you're running in the dark, you can tell there's someone out there, but you can't really tell -- you couldn't really tell a description because they were on the 3 track that's on my right. And I'm sure that they weren't trying to be seen anyway, but I digress. I called CTEC 6 and told them that something hit my windshield and shattered the windshield. I don't what it was. I told them that we would had put our train in emergency and we were stopped at milepost 86. They asked me again, you know, where we were, approximately where we were, if anybody was hurt. I told them that no one was hurt, and he asked me again, was -- did I need assistance. So finally, I told him that, okay, you can send assistance, but I don't believe anybody was hurt because I was the only one in the cab obviously. I was, you know, brushing the glass off of me and everything like that. And the Amtrak train was coming east, and I could hear him on the radio saying -- because he saw us stopped, I could hear him on the radio saying we have hot rail on 2. That would be train 188 passing us. That was approximately 15 minutes -- we had been stopped -- maybe 10 minutes after we had been stopped. So he passed us. When he passed us, I didn't see anything out of the ordinary out of 188. It seemed to pass us at normal speed. I don't think he was going any faster than he should've been. It just passed us. But the other train was just, was telling us that a train was coming. I can't even remember if he blew his horn or not, but -- usually that would be the case, but I can't remember if he blew his horn or not. So there was really nothing I could say that was out of the ordinary about 188 passing us. Usually that train does not pass us until later down the road, but since we had been -- we're in emergency and we had stopped because I was making a report to CTEC 6, it passed us earlier than it usually does. It passed us. I tried to make another report to CTEC 6 because he was just trying to make sure we were okay and trying to make sure that he had someone coming to our assistance. That's when our power when out. And when our -- after our power went out and came back on, he told me that he had gotten an emergency call so he couldn't talk to us anymore. Because I didn't yell emergency on the radio. I just knew something hit us, and I was kind of shocked that something hit us. So I didn't yell emergency on the radio. But Amtrak got the emergency call from the 188 train, so we didn't have any more contact with CTEC 6. Outside of that, they sent fire, they sent police to our train. You know, we -- you know, I made sure I gave all the information to the police officers that showed up. I told the EMTs that I did not need assistance and they continued on to the other scene. That's basically everything that happened to our train.
All of the interviews are interesting.
http://dms.ntsb.gov/pubdms/search/hitlist.cfm?docketID=58167&CurrentPage=9&EndRow=135&StartRow=121&order=1&sort=0&TXTSEARCHT
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