Skip to main content

If this guy worked for me, I would fire him on the spot. Here's video of an engineer running a high-speed passenger train on the Northeast Corridor...READING A NEWSPAPER! This was front page news in New York City along with all the typical drive-by media hype.

As a result of this idiot's actions, the FRA will be increasing inspections in the weeks to come. Make sure that you have only company reading material in the cab. Your cell phone should be turned off and stored out of sight.


 

It's guys like this that give engineers a bad name.

Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Originally Posted by Scrapiron Scher:

Wow . . . that is shocking.

Even worse than Scrapiron's exploits.

At least I was paying attention.

 

Eliot

So the operator is reading a paper and nothing happens. Elliot pays attention and the 765 almost meets its demise.

 

I have an idea, next time give Elliot some paper and crayons and everything will be just fine

Here in CA, the Metrolink trains have inward facing cameras recording audio and video. This was put in place shortly after the Catsworth crash. It's only a matter of time before we have the same setup on our freight trains too. The thing is, just like this case NY, the cameras don't stop it from happening, they just show what was going on in the cab prior to the event, whatever it maybe.   

With the broad brush of the media, one bad apple can spoil the whole bunch as now this gives the John Q Public the impression nobody is minding the store when this is such an outrageously extreme and rare example of irresponsibility, considering all the hundreds of commuter runs that occur daily. The safety record of all commuter lines speaks for itself. That seems to get lost in the mix and all perspective flies out the window. The engineer should be prosecuted for endangering public safety etc. Getting canned should be the least of the consequences.

Originally Posted by Wyhog:
.

Can you imagine somebody like  that on a steam loco? Their inattention would at the least damage the loco and at the worst blow the thing sky high!

 

 

A certain engineer with an extreme attraction to the Nickel Plate told me of an engineer back in the steam days who used to sleep while running! He'd nod off after a while, waking up to blow for crossings and adjust as needed. Even while firing! Nod off and adjust the stoker motor or water pump as needed.

There is absolutely no excuse for that behavior.  Eyes on the road, pay attention, etc etc.  Yet for what its worth, how many of us drive the same monotonous road morning/night and once in great rare while suddenly realize you don't remember driving the route to your destination. ie zombie state?  Engineer has probably piloted this NEC train "a million" times and knows every hill and sag, curve and signal post blindfolded (ie when to throttle up/down, brake reduction/release) so it becomes a boring soul deadening trip. Again, absolutely no excuse whatever for this idiot, especially with so many lives and umpteen tons of machiney.

There was an accident somewhere in California because a clown was texting and driving a commuter train, ran the signal and killed about 24 people & himself in the train he rear-ended.

Maybe it is time to watch the conductors more often or put in some kind of device to monitor the engineer.

There is NO excuse for negligence like that.

 

Lee F.

Personally, it drives me crazy when job postings make note that they are looking for some stellar, outstanding, upstanding, spiffy Joe who can multitask in 40 directions. Of course, there is also the 'boss' who rates our performance (read $$$) based on the the number of spinning plates we can keep on the sticks at one time!

 

Meanwhile, study after study after study has shown that multitasking is completely inefficient - and in some cases - actually dangerous.

 

Still - we continue to get the 'programming' that multitasking is a valuable and highly sought after skill. Now add in the car manufacturers and the insurance company ratings on how wonderfully "safe" our car's on these days....and we have the proverbial recipe for a disaster.

 

Ah yes...comfortably numb.

 

Originally Posted by Mark440:

Personally, it drives me crazy when job postings make note that they are looking for some stellar, outstanding, upstanding, spiffy Joe who can multitask in 40 directions. Of course, there is also the 'boss' who rates our performance (read $$$) based on the the number of spinning plates we can keep on the sticks at one time!

 

Meanwhile, study after study after study has shown that multitasking is completely inefficient - and in some cases - actually dangerous.

 

Still - we continue to get the 'programming' that multitasking is a valuable and highly sought after skill. Now add in the car manufacturers and the insurance company ratings on how wonderfully "safe" our car's on these days....and we have the proverbial recipe for a disaster.

 

Ah yes...comfortably numb.

 

Have to agree with you, Mark.  Computers multi-task fairly well (after a fashion).  Humans do not (by comparison).

 

And while posting the photo of The Donald was meant to be funny (IMO), I consider him a complete waste of human flesh.  I've seen his handiwork up close and personal.  In fact, he's a complete train wreck all by himself.

 

George

Originally Posted by gftiv:

Computers do not multi task. They do one job at a time. They swap jobs faster than you can detect. Note: dual processor computers are two computers and they can do two jobs at once. Most computers do the main job and when there is spare processor time. the other jobs are done in the background.

Yes, I know.  That's why I said "after a fashion".  I wasn't going to start a discussion of swapping vs paging, context switching, examine the complexities of virtual memory, or hold forth on disk latency or the types of cache memory and the methods of refreshing it. 

 

George

Originally Posted by phillyreading:

There was an accident somewhere in California because a clown was texting and driving a commuter train, ran the signal and killed about 24 people & himself in the train he rear-ended.

Maybe it is time to watch the conductors more often or put in some kind of device to monitor the engineer.

There is NO excuse for negligence like that.

 

Lee F.

Well, it was a HEAD-ON crash with a U.P. freight train.  Twenty-five people (total) killed and 135 injured.  "Clown" is a NICE term to describe the PoS engineer who was showing off.  Lee is correct:  "NO excuse".

Originally Posted by gunrunnerjohn:
Originally Posted by Alex Malliae:

Wow that's horrible, he could hurt and kill so many people like that

I hope he was fired.

 

Thanks, Alex

No way, the union would never let that happen.  I'll bet he gets a slap on the wrist and it's business as usual.

The only union job I had, the union would make sure the paperwork was filed correctly and help the guy out the door.  Guess things are different in yours.

One solution would be to redo the controls and the seats so they have to basically stand-up at all times and pay attention to the trip. If they were sitting in a seat that was high off the floor like a bicycle seat there would be no leaning back.

 

The cabin is set up so they are lounging, then they get complacient and bored.

 

Covering the windows will not solve "the problem" of people watching and recording them lounging.

 

Andrew

Originally Posted by morg777:
Originally Posted by gunrunnerjohn:
Originally Posted by Alex Malliae:

Wow that's horrible, he could hurt and kill so many people like that

I hope he was fired.

 

Thanks, Alex

No way, the union would never let that happen.  I'll bet he gets a slap on the wrist and it's business as usual.

The only union job I had, the union would make sure the paperwork was filed correctly and help the guy out the door.  Guess things are different in yours.

You haven't kept up.   My wife worked for years for county government, and it was almost impossible to fire someone, no matter what the reason.

Originally Posted by Cabrat4449:
Originally Posted by Wyhog:
.

Can you imagine somebody like  that on a steam loco? Their inattention would at the least damage the loco and at the worst blow the thing sky high!

 

 

A certain engineer with an extreme attraction to the Nickel Plate told me of an engineer back in the steam days who used to sleep while running! He'd nod off after a while, waking up to blow for crossings and adjust as needed. Even while firing! Nod off and adjust the stoker motor or water pump as needed.

That's exactly what happened to Virginian 2-10-10-2 800 on an eastbound coal train out of Roanoke in April 1939.  The engineer was a known snoozer; he liked to "enjoy the fleshpots of Roanoke" and get his rest on the way home to Victoria.  The problem that day was that he had a new fireman and a stopped-up hose strainer.  The engineer woke up near Stewartsville, looked at the water glass, saw no water, pulled on the injector, and St. Peter welcomed him, the fireman and the brakeman.

 

The operator at JK Tower, a friend of mine, was the last one to see the crew alive.  He handed up the orders to the brakeman in the gangway; he said the engineer already had his head down and eyes closed.  He already had the 800 throttle and reverse lever set, and that was all he needed (he didn't have any block signals or road crossings to bother him).  He thought.

 

EdKing

 


 

Originally Posted by gunrunnerjohn:
Originally Posted by morg777:
Originally Posted by gunrunnerjohn:
Originally Posted by Alex Malliae:

Wow that's horrible, he could hurt and kill so many people like that

I hope he was fired.

 

Thanks, Alex

No way, the union would never let that happen.  I'll bet he gets a slap on the wrist and it's business as usual.

The only union job I had, the union would make sure the paperwork was filed correctly and help the guy out the door.  Guess things are different in yours.

You haven't kept up.   My wife worked for years for county government, and it was almost impossible to fire someone, no matter what the reason.

I have kept up, and am still aware of what goes on.  No changes really.  Maybe things are different back in your part of the country.

Post

OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×