I doubt surviving a head-on crash was ever even in the design brief. The whole concept of the monorail is that the trains are on a signal controlled known path, with trained pilots. This makes a head on crash highly unlikely. It's nothing like the situation you get with a car, where head on crash is likely.
Right. The frame is probably light-gauge steel or perhaps even aluminum, with a fiberglass/composite body. I'm sure the intent was to design them as light as possible, since they'd already be heavy enough when fully loaded.
Besides, when these trains were made, they probably weren't even putting all of the roll-cage type steel in cars that they are today, so why design it into a monorail that "should never possibly" come into contact with another vehicle.
this is very sad, in one of the pictures with the dibris in the platform you can the the console. you cant see the seat which is somewhat odd but they may have removed it
if he was strapped into it. this is very sad but does anybody know
the exact cause of death? plus was he sitting in the seat when the trains hit or did he try to get to the ground?
There are no seatbelts on the monorail pilot seats. He was either sitting in the seat, or standing beside the console (which is unlikely, since he was already seated to drive the thing).
Also, the cause of death was probably a combination of "blunt force trauma" and "crushing"
As for what Austin was doing at the crash, I believe it came out in the investigation that he was in the process of trying to reverse his train to avoid the collision, but it was too late, which means he was sitting at the console. He also knew he had Guests in the car right behind him, and I believe he worked valiantly to do everything in his power to save them from injury in the crash.
-Rob
Yup. And based on everything I've read and seen, he probably didn't have a LOT of time to react (since he was coming around a curve, in the dark, with foggy windows, and not expecting to have a train barreling down on him), which means he would have been lucky to even get the thing stopped - let alone stop it, switch directions on the console, and reverse. When you're in "panic mode", even the most highly skilled operator doesn't always think through every step (except Chesley Sullenberger).
cant you put the train in reverse without sitting in the seat because if i was gonna crash i would get on the ground.
Austin's train was somewhere between 15-20 feet above concrete/asphalt when he would have first realized what was happening and when the collision actually happened. Jumping out of the train may have crossed his mind, but it may not have ended any better, unfortunately.