cute.But then who will be here to kill manbearpig (you kno, half man, half bear, and half pig). And even after manbearpig is dead, who will save the Earth from ....GLOBAL WARMING
cute.But then who will be here to kill manbearpig (you kno, half man, half bear, and half pig). And even after manbearpig is dead, who will save the Earth from ....GLOBAL WARMING
Knowing a transfer of a train was underway, am I the only person who is surprised that Tower Control didn't realize it was heading back on the same track, nor did they even throw the switch to move it over to the spur?
Switching the beams is done by Monorail Shop, not Central.
Very sad..A young life lost. I recently returned from Disney. I actually was staying in the Polynesion near the Ticket and Transportation center. We left early in the morning the day of the crash. I was up at 4 am. and saw the emergency lights. I just have to post this because I noticed this on our 5 day trip. Cast members seemed to be complaining. In some instances I noticed that they couldn't wait to get off work. There was a different attitude than my last visits. Has any one noticed this also? Has Disney made cutbacks that affects the quality and safety of its cast members?
Thanks for the clarification.
One clarification:
Purple had passengers. Were these people disembarking at TTC? And was Purple holding outside the station waiting for Pink to transfer to the spur?
I've kinda been wondering about this. I know purple had passengers and pink did not. I know the Magic Kingdom was open really late that night and guests were likely taking the Epcot monorail back over to return to their cars that were parked over there. What I don't get is if Epcot had closed considerably earlier in the evening what were passengers coming from Epcot to the TTC for? Not that it's a cardinal sin or in any way factors into this equation. I'm just curious. Maybe Epcot was open later than what I was thinking it was. Maybe they just felt like riding the loop. I've done that several times in the past... :shrug:
Nothing stopping monorail fans from riding the loop from TTC around EPCOT and back. :shrug:That's why I asked, because I've read that EPCOT closed earlier and that the EPCOT monorail line was open just to ferry MKers back to EPCOT parking. If so, why were passengers on the train coming into TTC from EPCOT at 2am?
Also, there was a lot of speculation and thought that pink's pilot was negligent by not realizing he was not on the right track or not passing over the switch. I dunno. I think that's a bit harsh. If pink had accelerated to 15 mph in reverse (think of how long the entire train is here) by the time the cab has passed the switch area and realized something isn't right now he's passing Central Control on the wrong side and realizing something definitely isn't right. By the time he's springing into action Cab 6 is at the impact point. He did what he was supposed to and that's listen to what he is instructed by Central because he knows he can't see the back of his train. Like another poster said who was formerly a monorail pilot: If Central says it is is as good as gold. You do it. I used to be a law enforcement dispatch supervisor. The units on the road rely on their dispatcher and put a lot of faith in their hands. It has to be done.
Nothing stopping monorail fans from riding the loop from TTC around EPCOT and back. :shrug:
They did say there were only seven.
NTSB Joins Probe Into Disney Monorail Crash
Monorail Reopens As Friends Remember Austin Wuennenberg
POSTED: 6:50 am EDT July 6, 2009
UPDATED: 6:02 pm EDT July 6, 2009
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. -- The National Transportation Safety Board has joined the investigation into the fatal monorail crash at Disney World, the agency said late Monday.
In a news release, the NTSB said it is sending an investigator from the agency's Office of Railroad, Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Investigations to look into the crash that killed monorail pilot Austin Wuennenberg on Sunday.
The news contrasts with an earlier statement from NTSB to WESH 2 News in which a spokesman said the agency would review what local investigators found. The spokesman said many NTSB resources were tied up with the recent crash on the DC subway system.
Federal law requires the NTSB to investigate every aviation accident but only "significant" accidents in other modes of transportation, according to its Web site.
....snipped.....
Also, there was a lot of speculation and thought that pink's pilot was negligent by not realizing he was not on the right track or not passing over the switch. I dunno. I think that's a bit harsh. If pink had accelerated to 15 mph in reverse (think of how long the entire train is here) by the time the cab has passed the switch area and realized something isn't right now he's passing Central Control on the wrong side and realizing something definitely isn't right. By the time he's springing into action Cab 6 is at the impact point. He did what he was supposed to and that's listen to what he is instructed by Central because he knows he can't see the back of his train. Like another poster said who was formerly a monorail pilot: If Central says it is is as good as gold. You do it. I used to be a law enforcement dispatch supervisor. The units on the road rely on their dispatcher and put a lot of faith in their hands. It has to be done.
...
Witness says Disney monorail crash was "head-on"
I apologize if this article has been posted already:
Witness says Disney monorail crash was "head-on"
What`s low in monorail terms? This one would have had a combined impact speed of around 20-30 mph. A reversing train is limited to a maximum of 15mph using MAPO overide, which Pink had to do to reverse, and Purple was in a 30mph zone and decellerating to enter a 15mph zone that begins not 100ft from the point of collision.
So many procedures failed at the worst possible time.
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