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What I have read is that there is no PTC and plans were to have it in place sometime in 2018.http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/train-crashes-new-jersey-transit-hoboken-station-article-1.2811435
Why not install automatic retarders on the tracks? Expensive, but it would allow any equipment to operate into the station, requires no special equipment on board. Retarders are very effective in slowing freight cars quickly, and given the trains are at restricted speed into the station, may have prevented this accident.
If my understanding is correct the train was running cab car first pushed by an unmanned loco (one man crew) in the rear?
Lock4244: Automatic retarders wouldn't help. The BN had them in Pasco's hump yard, in the 1970s, to replace the "skate tenders", to keep the cars from rolling out the far end of the bowl tracks, if they were humped a little too fast into an empty track. They worked fine for that.However, they were ALSO designed so that the cars in the bowl tracks could be pulled from the far end, for assembling trains. The switchers would run right through the retarders, and could pull the cuts out through them, with no noticeable extra effort. They were designed to stop a couple slow rolling freight cars, not a fast moving train, and especially not if the train was under power. There is no adjustable force on the ones in Pasco, just spring-loaded brake shoes.The biggest problem with retarders, and it affected the hump retarders as well, is that they only brake the wheels that are actually IN the retarder. If it's a multi-car cut, the cars outside the retarder keep pushing/pulling on the ones in the retarder, and there isn't enough braking force to overcome it. In one extreme case, involving multiple grain hoppers, the brake shoes were pulled out of a hump retarder at Pasco. The computer tried to stop the cut, but the momentum was too great, and the computer wasn't programmed to release the cut if it couldn't be stopped. The hump retarders were about as long as two grain hoppers.