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Originally Posted by Lionlman:

According to Reuters it was BNSF unless I missed something in the article.

 

http://www.reuters.com/article...dUSKBN0FA0QD20140705

BNSF and ML have a operating agreement through there. The locos may have been BNSF, but they were running under the MRL control.

Our sister wife's ex husband works for MRL, he has the kids this month and called to let her know that he was going to have to leave the kids with relatives while he had to go the site.

Last edited by cbojanower

I'm a pilot too, and I'm sure some of the stuff will be salvaged and used.  It all depends on what's damaged and what the damage is.  The stuff that went into the water is probably toast, but the cars that just derailed and the cargo is intact, I'd expect that material to be evaluated on an individual basis.  I worked in Aerospace for years, and I saw lots of stuff that was damaged and returned to service after repairs. 

 

The insurance company isn't going to just shell out the money without a fight.

 

 
Yea ... that is really cool (especially since no one was hurt). I would love to be on one of those rafts.
 
 
 
Originally Posted by cbojanower:
 

BNSF and ML have a operating agreement through there. The locos may have been BNSF, but they were running under the MRL control.

 

MRL crews take control of these BNSF trains between Billings and Spokane.

Last edited by CNJ Jim
Originally Posted by Bill T:

Ok, what was Boeing thinking when they came up with this "plane on a train" idea in the first place?

 

They have shipped a few thousand this way for years from Kansas to Washington.

OK< but why not build the whole thing either in Kansas or Seattle?  Parts by rail, yes.  But airplane bodies?  I know they have been doing it for years, but I don't see the logic in it.

Originally Posted by Dominic Mazoch:
Originally Posted by Bill T:

Ok, what was Boeing thinking when they came up with this "plane on a train" idea in the first place?

 

They have shipped a few thousand this way for years from Kansas to Washington.

OK< but why not build the whole thing either in Kansas or Seattle?  Parts by rail, yes.  But airplane bodies?  I know they have been doing it for years, but I don't see the logic in it.

I believe it has to do with modern large corporate business models.  There is also a Boeing plant,  in South Carolina, a right to work state.  The two or more production facilities appear to be a labor cost control system.  

Air Bus does a similar thing with the A380.  Large parts are built in England and shipped to a final assembly point mainland Europe.

 

They also ship these large parts around by air cargo.  This cargo plane, (747 Dream Lifter), made the news when it landed at the wrong airport.   Click on the underlined phrase to link.  After reviewing the short runway problem, they decided to take-off from the short runway.  You have to think the pilot pushed the throttles all the way up. Cargo was a 787 fuselage.  787 components are light weight composite material v.s. traditional aluminum.

So there is a control of shipping cost also.  Air freight v.s. rail freight. 

Wild world, IMO, Mike CT

From Wikipedia

 

Last edited by Mike CT

This guy was definitely NOT in charge of these landings!!!!...

 

Pilot Link

 

Maybe the BNSF should've had him in the right-hand cab seat of this 'flight'!?

 

Saw a cable TV show on treehouses not long ago.  Someone took an old airliner, put it up in the trees in the tropics somewhere as a treehouse.  So, here ya go!!!...Cheap! (except for the cost to extract from their current location!!)  Somebody will know how to make a buck off this mess.

 

I know, I know!!!....Engineer at the throttle?....Gerald McBoeing-Boeing!!  Hoo-boy, now I AM dating myself!!!!

 

KD

 

 

 

Last edited by dkdkrd

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