I remember reading that somewere. Something about a train had to hold while it was still over a switch. The shop thought it had cleared and cycled the switch back.
Frantic yelling from the pilot alerted them otherwise.
I thought it was WDW, not DL though.
-dave
So the pilot would disengage MAPO Override after passing (completely?) through Base station (which Concourse was mistaken for here). So if the operating cab of pink (the undamaged cab from the crash) were still in the station at the time of the crash, would MAPO Override have been released?There are no MAPO transmittors on any of the switchbeams. Therefore, anytime a train moves across any switch (or down the spurline to shop) it has to be in MAPO override. So if Pink had been on the correct route, it would have had to MAPO override through switches 9 and 8, because there are no transmittors telling it where it is. Then, once it was passing through Base, the train would begin to "see" the transmittors behind it on the Express beam (the direction it is traveling), the MAPO would return to green, since the train was off the switch, the pilot would disengage MAPO Override, and continue in reverse on Express at normal operating speeds, with a Green MAPO.
So the pilot would disengage MAPO Override after passing (completely?) through Base station (which Concourse was mistaken for here). So if the operating cab of pink (the undamaged cab from the crash) were still in the station at the time of the crash, would MAPO Override have been released?
Basically what I am asking is when does protocol dictate when the MAPO Override should be released and the pilot should go by the lights on his display?
And thanks again for all your help on this thread, I've read through every post and yours are the most helpful by far.
This all seems to me that there is not enough oversite on the system. i would think central should always be occupied until every last train is done for the day or atleast make it so the drivers can get more info then a red light when there is a problem.
If that is the case, and everybody everything "by the book" then think what must be going though thier heads. The Pink pilot knows he followed instruction to reverse and override MAPO. But he also knows that if he had noticed the tower was on the wrong side, he could have stopped -maybe.
I *believe* that it was a trainee and is trainer who had left the shop for the run. Shop threw switch #3 in their favor and the monorail proceed. However, the train went very slow through the area and shop assumed that the train had cleared the switch and threw it back in to its original position while the train was still over it.
So, the train continued across slowly and traversed and "open" track, creating an awful noise as the front of the train moved in one direction while the back moved in another. But the train was not heavily damaged.
This was in WDW.
The procedure was posted a few pages back and answers these questions.
No problem, and don't worry, it made sense.Thank you. I too had read every post and was starting to become frustrated and thought I'd add what I knew about the system!
...
Gah that sounded confusing.
I can't help but think why didn't the pilot of Purple radio to Central that another train was headed right towards him. I can't imagine it was too difficult to see in to the station, down the beam.
If he did, then I would assume that Pink was told to stop but it was too late at that point.
Or a third possibility is human error that Pink thought they heard it was all clear but Central never cleared.
I can't help but think why didn't the pilot of Purple radio to Central that another train was headed right towards him. I can't imagine it was too difficult to see in to the station, down the beam.
If he did, then I would assume that Pink was told to stop but it was too late at that point.
What I REALLY would like to ask for opinions on...is the following...
(1) After talking with MULTIPLE monorail pilots, they've all answered, "I definitely know when I'm backing through that switch" And the reason is...that you actually FEEL the train shift through a sharp left as you're backing onto the spur. They said it's very hard to not notice.
(2) If you pass ANY switches at night-time, they are lit. You'd be able to see as soon as the cab passes over the switch that you're on the wrong one, and Estop. AND Estop with sufficient room that your back car doesn't even enter the station.
(3) Monorail pilots also tell me...even if its dark, you'd be able to VISUALLY confirm you're on the wrong rail. If you were backing onto the spur, you'd be able to see the Epcot line DIRECTLY to your right (refer to Rob's picture).
What I REALLY would like to ask for opinions on...is the following...
(1) After talking with MULTIPLE monorail pilots, they've all answered, "I definitely know when I'm backing through that switch" And the reason is...that you actually FEEL the train shift through a sharp left as you're backing onto the spur. They said it's very hard to not notice.
It almost seems to me that if Pink was paying attention like he/she should have been...(and not even a GREAT deal of attention, these are all minor things)...then poor Austin would have went home that night. Lack of attention to the motion and position of his train, I think holds equally accountable as the switches not being in the right position.
You can blame it on the safety overrides all day. But he just wasn't paying a reasonable amount of attention. Now this could also deal with fatigue. But that also falls on the pilot to notify his/her manager that he/she was sleepy or exhausted.
This is EXACTLY what I'm saying.... thank you for saying it in a much more eloquently than I did. Pink had to have known that he was on the wrong rail...
Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.