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Full disclosure: I am a retired former UP employee.Derailments are caused by any of the following cause: operating [crew or dispatching], engineering [track or signal] or mechanical [locomotives and cars].At this point the reporter is only saying what her impression of the aftermath of the accident appeared to look like.Unless you are reacting to additional information, it is way to early to jump to any conclusion about PTC. As example, was this on double track where a derailed car or shifted load could have caused the problem?
I get what you're saying about the rock. The reason I assume that it's PTC is that all the signals and boxes have been replaced and PTC antennae installed from Ogden Utah to Green River Wyoming and old equipment has been removed for the most part. This is the same line just west of Cheyenne. Regardless to which signal system was in place here the loss of life is sad. I am curious though, have all mainline locomotives been converted to ptc?
Doesn't restricted speed, by definition, mean that you can stop within sight of any obstacle?
Well, yeah. But it’s still up to the engineer to do so. The point was that PTC is not going to stop you from running into another train while operating at restricted speed. It only enforces the max. speed of 20.
My point was that, given the deaths and the accordioned train, it seems implausible that the accident happened at restricted speed. It seems like either it wasn't PTC territory, or PTC failed.