0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
Postman: Thank you! And thanks for the link. I don't read Spanish, but can puzzle out much of it, especially when I know what it's talking about. A very odd arrangement. I would have thought they'd put the diesel engine in the lead unit, like an FL9. Dual voltage and diesel is probably also unique.In a way it reminds me of the old MILW, with a lead electric controlling trailing diesel(s). They usually used both at the same time, but I've read stories of running through work zones on only the diesels, pans down, but still controlled from the electric.Apparently the train is dual gauge, which I knew some earlier Talgo versions were. Are the locomotives also dual gauge, or do they have to be changed at gauge-change points?I used Google Translate on the webpage and the translation was almost as confusing as trying to read the Spanish...
This is of course completely speculative, but I wonder if the driver's negligence was to rely on the ERTMS as a safety net and let his attention wander. Perhaps he even fell asleep. And then he wasn't ready to slow the train down when it came time.
The gauge is not the same I guess everywhere in Spain , I saw it from far up in the hill between France and Spain , there was a place where they changed the gauge .I found a video of how they do it , The video is in spanish but you can still understand watching the video . Specially toward the end . I think their usual gauge is 5' 6" . />