0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic.
Rich,I didn't post that article, because it's what I believe; I posted it, because I thought it was relevant to the conversation on attempted absolution by railroads. I have refrained from stating my opinions regarding this tragic accident and, hopefully, will continue to do so, because (1) the investigation is not yet complete, (2) people in the U.S. are supposed to be innocent until proven guilty, and (3) speculation before the investigation is complete sometimes does more damage than good, e.g., Richard Jewell and his "trial by media."Just this week, involving this accident, the mayor of Philadelphia stated, "Clearly, it was reckless in terms of the driving by the engineer. There’s no way in the world he should have been going that fast into the curve.” See http://pjmedia.com/tatler/2015/05/14/ntsb-official-blasts-mayor-nutter-for-blasting-idiot-amtrak-engineer/. I'm glad the NTSB official responded, because there are many that will take the mayor's statements as gospel.Is the engineer guilty? I don't know. Was the mayor out of line for purely political purposes? I don't know. I just wish people could let these things get resolved without demanding (or creating their own) resolutions in CSI-style expedience.DFF
Unless they can find something wrong with the locomotive, I'm going to go out on a limb here and say this guy is probably done as an engineer.
Even if you accept that "rocking" or equivalent was the catalyst, how does the train accelerate? Is it like the movies where the engineer is rendered unconscious and slumps over the control stand, putting it into full throttle? Then he comes to, realizes what is happening and hits the emergencies too late?
Perhaps the engineer was startled, accidently pushed the throttle forward, and realized his mistake at the last minute?
That's my thinking , in his haste to duck and cover he hit the go faster lever . When came up he was too late to recover . Same type of damage on the Acella window . If the windows are equal the mass and velocity of both objects had to be close to the same . I think the Acella was struct in the same general area to the curve , not positive though .
assuming that he can psychologically get over the deaths and climb back aboard a locomotiveDFF
If the throttle is "pull back for accelerate, push forward for braking", accidentally pushing, or passing out and falling onto, the throttle handle would seem more likely to slow the train.It's interesting that the NTSB, right after checking the data recorder, specified that the emergency brake application was "operator initiated", but they DIDN'T say the same about the unexplained acceleration. That sounds like the throttle position wasn't changed, and the speed increase was due to something else.
Seems to me by not saying that was operator initiated they're digging into something else. But if that were the case, wouldn't they "ground" the ACS64s then while they check?
And all this speculation is the EXACT reason I wish they wouldn't release ANY details. Sheesh guys.
Not claiming that the throttle application was "operator initiated" is just the NTSB not leaping to premature conclusions; particularly of the variety that get someone charged with a crime, which would likely be the immediate next step if they were to even come close to claiming he had fault. These things get extremely political, the NTSB knows that better than anyone, and a hint of fault is going to have a district attorney placing charges (the State AG could always drop them later if things develop, but they're gonna want to look good and place them as soon as they think they have something that might stick). The NTSB knows that if the people who are operating this equipment don't trust them to have their best interests, they're not going to get their incredibly vital cooperation in the future whenever these sorts of things happen. That's why the NTSB chewed out the Mayor for saying the engineer was at fault. It may be true. The NTSB may even be thinking it at this point. But they can't have the guy getting flayed in the court of public opinion -- or worse, get actual charges placed against him -- and still get his needed cooperation. Claiming that the brake was 'operator-initiated' has no potential negative repercussions and, if anything, makes it appear that the investigators are on the operator's 'side' which can be useful to getting a guy to open up.
Don't disagree with any of what you said. I would still like to have seen them do something with the ACS64s, regardless of where initial findings were heading, to cover all bases,Phil