MarkIV_railie
New Member
Yes, you do have two conflicting statements, but both can be true. Clearance from a lead or "Central" gives you the "right" to follow their instructions without risk of reprimand. But, IMHO, you always need to double check for yourself (mentally, visually, whatever). When driving your car and trying to make a left turn across traffic, do you TOTALLY trust the passenger to tell you when it is clear? Or do you hope they are right, but still look for yourself as you start moving to confirm you are safe?Phonedave seems to sum up the problem. One Pilot says the word from control is as good as gold, and another says that these switching problems are relatively common. Obviously this puts the type of pressure on Pink that we all worry about: What to do when given the clearance, but personal observation should expose the problem? So I have 2 questions for clarification:
1. Is the clearance to back up sometimes wrong?
2. What training or procedures are in place for those times when the switching does not occur?
I suppose this then leads to a 3rd question:
3. Have close calls happened before?
Thanks for your enlightenment.
Please do not take my comment about what I observed 25 years ago as meaning it was "common", just that it was possible, although it did occur multiple times. And dare I say, some of those times were
- probably when people who were not fully qualified to be a base lead were in charge or
- they were a temporary fill in and not fully briefed on train switching plans or
- visibility was near zero and we were in radio dispatch mode.
If I was in motion and saw something wrong (never happened), I would have immediately done what was necessary to keep my train and passengers safe, then got on the radio to notify somebody of the issue.
I have no idea what the current training level is or how prepared current drivers or leads are for the un-expected. I know that when I let my train roll "a little too far" after failing an afternoon MAPO test, the base lead needed new underwear
Interestingly, you could not really FAIL a MAPO test back then because the spec for the system was officialy an anti-colision system. so the only way to FAIL, was to make physical contact, which I never saw. Failing to get a MAPO stop during checks was just an "issue" not a "failure".
Have close calls happened before? I guess that depends upon your definition of "close calls". I honestly do not know the answer. Maybe a long term railie could give their opinion. Otherwise you would need some overrun statistics from HR or management to study annual trends. 38 years gives you a strong incentive to "if it aint broke, then do not fix it".