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Why did the metro bus stop at each railway crossing, despite no warning indicating a train was coming?
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I'm travelling in LA and we went to Knott's Berry Farm for a day out. We took the metro 460 bus, which goes to DisneyLand. During the drive on the way there and back, I noticed a peculiar habit. The bus driver would come to a complete stop at railway crossings and then after a few seconds continue on. Other cars didn't seem to do this and the driver did this on crossings with warning lights that would indicate a train was coming, but the lights weren't on.
Why were the bus drivers doing this? I can understand slowing down, to prevent damage and such, but a complete stop seemed odd.
public-transport los-angeles
add a comment
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I'm travelling in LA and we went to Knott's Berry Farm for a day out. We took the metro 460 bus, which goes to DisneyLand. During the drive on the way there and back, I noticed a peculiar habit. The bus driver would come to a complete stop at railway crossings and then after a few seconds continue on. Other cars didn't seem to do this and the driver did this on crossings with warning lights that would indicate a train was coming, but the lights weren't on.
Why were the bus drivers doing this? I can understand slowing down, to prevent damage and such, but a complete stop seemed odd.
public-transport los-angeles
1
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark Mayo♦
May 14 at 22:04
01:14
in Schoolhouse Rock: America - I'm Just a Bill Music Video
– uhoh
May 15 at 16:17
add a comment
|
I'm travelling in LA and we went to Knott's Berry Farm for a day out. We took the metro 460 bus, which goes to DisneyLand. During the drive on the way there and back, I noticed a peculiar habit. The bus driver would come to a complete stop at railway crossings and then after a few seconds continue on. Other cars didn't seem to do this and the driver did this on crossings with warning lights that would indicate a train was coming, but the lights weren't on.
Why were the bus drivers doing this? I can understand slowing down, to prevent damage and such, but a complete stop seemed odd.
public-transport los-angeles
I'm travelling in LA and we went to Knott's Berry Farm for a day out. We took the metro 460 bus, which goes to DisneyLand. During the drive on the way there and back, I noticed a peculiar habit. The bus driver would come to a complete stop at railway crossings and then after a few seconds continue on. Other cars didn't seem to do this and the driver did this on crossings with warning lights that would indicate a train was coming, but the lights weren't on.
Why were the bus drivers doing this? I can understand slowing down, to prevent damage and such, but a complete stop seemed odd.
public-transport los-angeles
public-transport los-angeles
asked May 12 at 15:45
DrakenDraken
9252 gold badges7 silver badges18 bronze badges
9252 gold badges7 silver badges18 bronze badges
1
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark Mayo♦
May 14 at 22:04
01:14
in Schoolhouse Rock: America - I'm Just a Bill Music Video
– uhoh
May 15 at 16:17
add a comment
|
1
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark Mayo♦
May 14 at 22:04
01:14
in Schoolhouse Rock: America - I'm Just a Bill Music Video
– uhoh
May 15 at 16:17
1
1
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark Mayo♦
May 14 at 22:04
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark Mayo♦
May 14 at 22:04
01:14
in Schoolhouse Rock: America - I'm Just a Bill Music Video– uhoh
May 15 at 16:17
01:14
in Schoolhouse Rock: America - I'm Just a Bill Music Video– uhoh
May 15 at 16:17
add a comment
|
7 Answers
7
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There is a federal regulation requiring buses to do this.
49 CFR 392.10:
Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, the driver of a commercial motor vehicle specified in paragraphs (a) (1) through (6) of this section shall not cross a railroad track or tracks at grade unless he/she first: Stops the commercial motor vehicle within 50 feet of, and not closer than 15 feet to, the tracks; thereafter listens and looks in each direction along the tracks for an approaching train; and ascertains that no train is approaching. When it is safe to do so, the driver may drive the commercial motor vehicle across the tracks in a gear that permits the commercial motor vehicle to complete the crossing without a change of gears. The driver must not shift gears while crossing the tracks.
(1) Every bus transporting passengers,
[...]
The idea, presumably, is that a train hitting a bus would cause much greater loss of life than if it hit a car, so extra precautions are warranted.
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark Mayo♦
May 14 at 22:04
add a comment
|
Trains move with steel wheels on steel rails, which is incredibly efficient, and allows trains 2+ miles long and 20,000 tons*. But steel-on-steel traction is quite poor, and it takes a long time to set brakes on a 2-mile train**. So a train can take a mile or more to stop, and can't appreciably slow down in the ~1/4 mile it might have to see you and react.*** But even slow trains are deadly.****
So it's all on the highway vehicle to make sure it's not in the wrong place at the wrong time. *****
To avoid mass casualty, it's especially important for buses. This ritual of "stop, look, listen" also puts them on guard against other mistakes - like pulling onto the crossing when there isn't room in front of them to fully clear the crossing.
Why does the bus get this extra task when ordinary cars do not? Because of the potential level of catastrophe (fuel trucks have to do the same thing). The fate befalling many people (it usually turns into a national-scale tragedy), and the the ease of making a mistake and leaving the back of the bus still fouling the tracks. (less likely in a car.) Also the impracticality of evacuating a bus.
As far as big special loads, crossings don't have phones like in the UK. They have "ENS" signs with a phone number. It's for emergencies, but if someone is scouting a special truck move, they will simply call that number and make arrangements.
* in North America, Russia, Australia, and other places with the infrastructure for trains that big. 40% of American freight moves this way... Especially in L.A., where almost everything unloaded at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach goes onward by rail.
** A lot is done to make air-brake commands move down the train quickly, but it can't go any faster than the speed of sound, can it? :)
*** Due to physics (energy being proportional to velocity squared), in 1/4 of its stopping distance, it won't even slow down 25%.
**** Looking at several years of accident reports, in fatal accidents of people getting in the way of trains (in vehicles or not), in half of all cases the train was moving slower than 5 mph.
***** This can be a culture shock for highway vehicle drivers, where so much of the driver experience is nerfed for your safety: air bags, crumple zones, guard rails, medians, energy absorbing bollards, traffic calming, curve and sightline engineering... trains have not been nerfed.
1
I'm referring to the actual question. OP wonders why the bus had to stop but the cars didn't have to. "Other cars didn't seem to do this". You only focus on the train. Can the train stop faster if a car approaches?
– pipe
May 13 at 15:21
2
@pipe ok fixed. Issue is level of potential calamity.
– Harper
May 13 at 15:30
2
@Harper Friction brakes are constant force devices (they deliver roughly the same amount of force regardless of speed, namely the friction coefficient times the normal force on the brake pad), which means they dissipate more energy per unit of time when braking at high speed. However, when braking at high speed, you also cover more distance per unit of time and as it happens, the time cancels out and the amount of energy dissipated is proportional to force multiplied by distance.
– Sanchises
May 14 at 14:16
5
***
Yes, it can go faster than the speed of sound (in air). More and more trains, especially passenger and very large, heavy freight trains are using ECP brakes which make use of electronic control signals to actuate all brakes on the train effectively simultaneously (rather than the old vacuum/pneumatic controls which could take 10s of seconds to propagate to the rear of the train). This improves braking, preventing the rear cars from heaving forward into the front cars while the brakes are being applied.
– J...
May 14 at 15:35
1
@JaccoAmersfoort If I reduce it to your level, it becomes a hollow finger-wag. I have already pushed most of the detail into asterisks, and at your request, I've pushed some more. The purpose of asterisks is to allow you to skip detail you don't care about. This is a technical forum and most people want details to be accessible, * is a fine compromise.
– Harper
May 15 at 14:52
|
show 11 more comments
The signals at a level crossing may have been configured to give adequate warning to the driver of a car. But a bus is a much longer vehicle, and thus needs more time to make the crossing.
In the UK, buses are not usually subject to extra requirements, but some types of long vehicle are, as per Rule 294 of the Highway Code:
Railway telephones. If you are driving a large or slow- moving vehicle, a long, low vehicle with a risk of grounding, or herding animals, a train could arrive before you are clear of the crossing. You MUST obey any sign instructing you to use the railway telephone to obtain permission to cross. You MUST also telephone when clear of the crossing if requested to do so.
10
When UK crossings have a telephone warning system, the rail track will get a stop signal until the road vehicle is clear. Hence the need for the second phone call when the crossing is clear again.
– alephzero
May 12 at 20:31
Naturally most of the commonwealth has inherited a similar requirement for busses to stop at railway lines.
– Criggie
May 14 at 14:00
@Criggie I've never heard of that in Australia.
– CJ Dennis
May 15 at 3:06
1
@Criggie That is not a British requirement. So it's not a Commonwealth thing. It is a US thing. In UK rail all level crossings are gated and controlled by signals - that is not true in the US
– Mark
May 15 at 20:40
add a comment
|
Other people have cited the relevant laws.
The laws exist because warning signals sometimes malfunction. It's probably fine for a passenger car to take that risk, but a bus carrying passengers has a higher standard of care to adhere to.
add a comment
|
Another thing to consider is the liability. Passengers place a lot of trust in the driver of a motor vehicle.
If I am driving my car and stop on the tracks, I am at fault if I get hit by a train. My passengers and I will be very hurt. If I survive, I will be liable for the suffering of my passengers.
If a bus driver stops on the tracks, the bus driver and the bus driver's employer can be held liable for any harm to the passengers. This is a huge risk to the employer.
In the U.S., bus drivers are often government employees. By making bus drivers stop before the tracks, it lowers the risk of harm and further lowers the financial liability because any bus driver caught breaking this law was acting against his/her training. This means the employer is less likely to be successfully sued. Non-government employers probably figured this out as well and would probably have implemented similar policies if they thought the price was right. The U.S. Gov. and companies base a lot of their decisions on money. I don't assume they based this decision 100% on money, but I am willing to believe that it wasn't 0%, either.
add a comment
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American railroads are historically poorly engineered with realtively few bridges and many grade crossings (level crossings), mostly without barriers. Commercial vehicles in general, and buses in particular, present particular risks, in the case of buses the potential for loss of life is obviously greater. The driver will not only stop, but in my experience also open the bus door, listen for the sound of any potential train horn, then if nothing is heard and no lights are flashing, proceed.
This is an important point. I used to be puzzled at how vehicles could be "stuck on the tracks", but that was before a level crossing near where I lived, spanned by metal platforms, was starting to collapse in small sections! I called the train company and they repaired it by completely replacing the metal with solid concrete. I hope anyone who sees such a degraded crossing will do the same. The railroad companies will fix them; they aren't interested in killing people.
– Kyralessa
Jun 6 at 15:14
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|
As other answers have stated, it's the law.
I'll just add some to the reasons for the law:
Every once in a while, a vehicle crossing the railroad tracks won't make it to the other side in time. The reasons include sudden drivetrain issues, getting stuck, traffic ahead blocking the way, or simple failure to notice the train, due to malfunctioning signals or inattention. This happens roughly 6,000 times a year in the US, or 16 times a day.
When it's a passenger car, including ones their owners call trucks, it's normally not such a big deal. Cars are quick to evacuate, only having 1-2 passengers per door, so only 1 in 10 train-car collisions results in fatalities. Being mostly sheet metal with relatively small rigid parts, road cars also present limited danger to the train. Most of these collisions go unnoticed by the public.
Commercial vehicles are more of a problem. Buses specifically are slow to evacuate, typically taking over a minute. Commercial trucks use long thick beams in their chassis, which can be a problem if they get pulled under the train. There have been dozens of fatal accidents involving train-truck collisions. While most train derailments are not Hollywood-grade disasters, with the cars just stopping as their wheels scrape over the sleepers, it's still likely to injure or kill passengers or overturn cargo cars.
The latest such accident happened just a week ago: https://www.thelocal.de/20190508/at-least-20-injured-after-train-and-truck-collide-near-hamburg
The second situation "traffic ahead blocking the way", is a much bigger issue for longer vehicles than shorter ones; I'd suggest that while trucks and buses at crossings may listen for trains because they're stopped anyway, a bigger safety factor is that it's much easier for driver in a stopped truck to judge whether there is enough on the other side for it to clear the intersection than for one in a moving truck to judge whether there will be enough space once the truck gets there.
– supercat
May 15 at 17:12
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7 Answers
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7 Answers
7
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There is a federal regulation requiring buses to do this.
49 CFR 392.10:
Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, the driver of a commercial motor vehicle specified in paragraphs (a) (1) through (6) of this section shall not cross a railroad track or tracks at grade unless he/she first: Stops the commercial motor vehicle within 50 feet of, and not closer than 15 feet to, the tracks; thereafter listens and looks in each direction along the tracks for an approaching train; and ascertains that no train is approaching. When it is safe to do so, the driver may drive the commercial motor vehicle across the tracks in a gear that permits the commercial motor vehicle to complete the crossing without a change of gears. The driver must not shift gears while crossing the tracks.
(1) Every bus transporting passengers,
[...]
The idea, presumably, is that a train hitting a bus would cause much greater loss of life than if it hit a car, so extra precautions are warranted.
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark Mayo♦
May 14 at 22:04
add a comment
|
There is a federal regulation requiring buses to do this.
49 CFR 392.10:
Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, the driver of a commercial motor vehicle specified in paragraphs (a) (1) through (6) of this section shall not cross a railroad track or tracks at grade unless he/she first: Stops the commercial motor vehicle within 50 feet of, and not closer than 15 feet to, the tracks; thereafter listens and looks in each direction along the tracks for an approaching train; and ascertains that no train is approaching. When it is safe to do so, the driver may drive the commercial motor vehicle across the tracks in a gear that permits the commercial motor vehicle to complete the crossing without a change of gears. The driver must not shift gears while crossing the tracks.
(1) Every bus transporting passengers,
[...]
The idea, presumably, is that a train hitting a bus would cause much greater loss of life than if it hit a car, so extra precautions are warranted.
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark Mayo♦
May 14 at 22:04
add a comment
|
There is a federal regulation requiring buses to do this.
49 CFR 392.10:
Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, the driver of a commercial motor vehicle specified in paragraphs (a) (1) through (6) of this section shall not cross a railroad track or tracks at grade unless he/she first: Stops the commercial motor vehicle within 50 feet of, and not closer than 15 feet to, the tracks; thereafter listens and looks in each direction along the tracks for an approaching train; and ascertains that no train is approaching. When it is safe to do so, the driver may drive the commercial motor vehicle across the tracks in a gear that permits the commercial motor vehicle to complete the crossing without a change of gears. The driver must not shift gears while crossing the tracks.
(1) Every bus transporting passengers,
[...]
The idea, presumably, is that a train hitting a bus would cause much greater loss of life than if it hit a car, so extra precautions are warranted.
There is a federal regulation requiring buses to do this.
49 CFR 392.10:
Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, the driver of a commercial motor vehicle specified in paragraphs (a) (1) through (6) of this section shall not cross a railroad track or tracks at grade unless he/she first: Stops the commercial motor vehicle within 50 feet of, and not closer than 15 feet to, the tracks; thereafter listens and looks in each direction along the tracks for an approaching train; and ascertains that no train is approaching. When it is safe to do so, the driver may drive the commercial motor vehicle across the tracks in a gear that permits the commercial motor vehicle to complete the crossing without a change of gears. The driver must not shift gears while crossing the tracks.
(1) Every bus transporting passengers,
[...]
The idea, presumably, is that a train hitting a bus would cause much greater loss of life than if it hit a car, so extra precautions are warranted.
answered May 12 at 15:55
Nate EldredgeNate Eldredge
29.7k11 gold badges103 silver badges127 bronze badges
29.7k11 gold badges103 silver badges127 bronze badges
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark Mayo♦
May 14 at 22:04
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Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark Mayo♦
May 14 at 22:04
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark Mayo♦
May 14 at 22:04
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark Mayo♦
May 14 at 22:04
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Trains move with steel wheels on steel rails, which is incredibly efficient, and allows trains 2+ miles long and 20,000 tons*. But steel-on-steel traction is quite poor, and it takes a long time to set brakes on a 2-mile train**. So a train can take a mile or more to stop, and can't appreciably slow down in the ~1/4 mile it might have to see you and react.*** But even slow trains are deadly.****
So it's all on the highway vehicle to make sure it's not in the wrong place at the wrong time. *****
To avoid mass casualty, it's especially important for buses. This ritual of "stop, look, listen" also puts them on guard against other mistakes - like pulling onto the crossing when there isn't room in front of them to fully clear the crossing.
Why does the bus get this extra task when ordinary cars do not? Because of the potential level of catastrophe (fuel trucks have to do the same thing). The fate befalling many people (it usually turns into a national-scale tragedy), and the the ease of making a mistake and leaving the back of the bus still fouling the tracks. (less likely in a car.) Also the impracticality of evacuating a bus.
As far as big special loads, crossings don't have phones like in the UK. They have "ENS" signs with a phone number. It's for emergencies, but if someone is scouting a special truck move, they will simply call that number and make arrangements.
* in North America, Russia, Australia, and other places with the infrastructure for trains that big. 40% of American freight moves this way... Especially in L.A., where almost everything unloaded at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach goes onward by rail.
** A lot is done to make air-brake commands move down the train quickly, but it can't go any faster than the speed of sound, can it? :)
*** Due to physics (energy being proportional to velocity squared), in 1/4 of its stopping distance, it won't even slow down 25%.
**** Looking at several years of accident reports, in fatal accidents of people getting in the way of trains (in vehicles or not), in half of all cases the train was moving slower than 5 mph.
***** This can be a culture shock for highway vehicle drivers, where so much of the driver experience is nerfed for your safety: air bags, crumple zones, guard rails, medians, energy absorbing bollards, traffic calming, curve and sightline engineering... trains have not been nerfed.
1
I'm referring to the actual question. OP wonders why the bus had to stop but the cars didn't have to. "Other cars didn't seem to do this". You only focus on the train. Can the train stop faster if a car approaches?
– pipe
May 13 at 15:21
2
@pipe ok fixed. Issue is level of potential calamity.
– Harper
May 13 at 15:30
2
@Harper Friction brakes are constant force devices (they deliver roughly the same amount of force regardless of speed, namely the friction coefficient times the normal force on the brake pad), which means they dissipate more energy per unit of time when braking at high speed. However, when braking at high speed, you also cover more distance per unit of time and as it happens, the time cancels out and the amount of energy dissipated is proportional to force multiplied by distance.
– Sanchises
May 14 at 14:16
5
***
Yes, it can go faster than the speed of sound (in air). More and more trains, especially passenger and very large, heavy freight trains are using ECP brakes which make use of electronic control signals to actuate all brakes on the train effectively simultaneously (rather than the old vacuum/pneumatic controls which could take 10s of seconds to propagate to the rear of the train). This improves braking, preventing the rear cars from heaving forward into the front cars while the brakes are being applied.
– J...
May 14 at 15:35
1
@JaccoAmersfoort If I reduce it to your level, it becomes a hollow finger-wag. I have already pushed most of the detail into asterisks, and at your request, I've pushed some more. The purpose of asterisks is to allow you to skip detail you don't care about. This is a technical forum and most people want details to be accessible, * is a fine compromise.
– Harper
May 15 at 14:52
|
show 11 more comments
Trains move with steel wheels on steel rails, which is incredibly efficient, and allows trains 2+ miles long and 20,000 tons*. But steel-on-steel traction is quite poor, and it takes a long time to set brakes on a 2-mile train**. So a train can take a mile or more to stop, and can't appreciably slow down in the ~1/4 mile it might have to see you and react.*** But even slow trains are deadly.****
So it's all on the highway vehicle to make sure it's not in the wrong place at the wrong time. *****
To avoid mass casualty, it's especially important for buses. This ritual of "stop, look, listen" also puts them on guard against other mistakes - like pulling onto the crossing when there isn't room in front of them to fully clear the crossing.
Why does the bus get this extra task when ordinary cars do not? Because of the potential level of catastrophe (fuel trucks have to do the same thing). The fate befalling many people (it usually turns into a national-scale tragedy), and the the ease of making a mistake and leaving the back of the bus still fouling the tracks. (less likely in a car.) Also the impracticality of evacuating a bus.
As far as big special loads, crossings don't have phones like in the UK. They have "ENS" signs with a phone number. It's for emergencies, but if someone is scouting a special truck move, they will simply call that number and make arrangements.
* in North America, Russia, Australia, and other places with the infrastructure for trains that big. 40% of American freight moves this way... Especially in L.A., where almost everything unloaded at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach goes onward by rail.
** A lot is done to make air-brake commands move down the train quickly, but it can't go any faster than the speed of sound, can it? :)
*** Due to physics (energy being proportional to velocity squared), in 1/4 of its stopping distance, it won't even slow down 25%.
**** Looking at several years of accident reports, in fatal accidents of people getting in the way of trains (in vehicles or not), in half of all cases the train was moving slower than 5 mph.
***** This can be a culture shock for highway vehicle drivers, where so much of the driver experience is nerfed for your safety: air bags, crumple zones, guard rails, medians, energy absorbing bollards, traffic calming, curve and sightline engineering... trains have not been nerfed.
1
I'm referring to the actual question. OP wonders why the bus had to stop but the cars didn't have to. "Other cars didn't seem to do this". You only focus on the train. Can the train stop faster if a car approaches?
– pipe
May 13 at 15:21
2
@pipe ok fixed. Issue is level of potential calamity.
– Harper
May 13 at 15:30
2
@Harper Friction brakes are constant force devices (they deliver roughly the same amount of force regardless of speed, namely the friction coefficient times the normal force on the brake pad), which means they dissipate more energy per unit of time when braking at high speed. However, when braking at high speed, you also cover more distance per unit of time and as it happens, the time cancels out and the amount of energy dissipated is proportional to force multiplied by distance.
– Sanchises
May 14 at 14:16
5
***
Yes, it can go faster than the speed of sound (in air). More and more trains, especially passenger and very large, heavy freight trains are using ECP brakes which make use of electronic control signals to actuate all brakes on the train effectively simultaneously (rather than the old vacuum/pneumatic controls which could take 10s of seconds to propagate to the rear of the train). This improves braking, preventing the rear cars from heaving forward into the front cars while the brakes are being applied.
– J...
May 14 at 15:35
1
@JaccoAmersfoort If I reduce it to your level, it becomes a hollow finger-wag. I have already pushed most of the detail into asterisks, and at your request, I've pushed some more. The purpose of asterisks is to allow you to skip detail you don't care about. This is a technical forum and most people want details to be accessible, * is a fine compromise.
– Harper
May 15 at 14:52
|
show 11 more comments
Trains move with steel wheels on steel rails, which is incredibly efficient, and allows trains 2+ miles long and 20,000 tons*. But steel-on-steel traction is quite poor, and it takes a long time to set brakes on a 2-mile train**. So a train can take a mile or more to stop, and can't appreciably slow down in the ~1/4 mile it might have to see you and react.*** But even slow trains are deadly.****
So it's all on the highway vehicle to make sure it's not in the wrong place at the wrong time. *****
To avoid mass casualty, it's especially important for buses. This ritual of "stop, look, listen" also puts them on guard against other mistakes - like pulling onto the crossing when there isn't room in front of them to fully clear the crossing.
Why does the bus get this extra task when ordinary cars do not? Because of the potential level of catastrophe (fuel trucks have to do the same thing). The fate befalling many people (it usually turns into a national-scale tragedy), and the the ease of making a mistake and leaving the back of the bus still fouling the tracks. (less likely in a car.) Also the impracticality of evacuating a bus.
As far as big special loads, crossings don't have phones like in the UK. They have "ENS" signs with a phone number. It's for emergencies, but if someone is scouting a special truck move, they will simply call that number and make arrangements.
* in North America, Russia, Australia, and other places with the infrastructure for trains that big. 40% of American freight moves this way... Especially in L.A., where almost everything unloaded at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach goes onward by rail.
** A lot is done to make air-brake commands move down the train quickly, but it can't go any faster than the speed of sound, can it? :)
*** Due to physics (energy being proportional to velocity squared), in 1/4 of its stopping distance, it won't even slow down 25%.
**** Looking at several years of accident reports, in fatal accidents of people getting in the way of trains (in vehicles or not), in half of all cases the train was moving slower than 5 mph.
***** This can be a culture shock for highway vehicle drivers, where so much of the driver experience is nerfed for your safety: air bags, crumple zones, guard rails, medians, energy absorbing bollards, traffic calming, curve and sightline engineering... trains have not been nerfed.
Trains move with steel wheels on steel rails, which is incredibly efficient, and allows trains 2+ miles long and 20,000 tons*. But steel-on-steel traction is quite poor, and it takes a long time to set brakes on a 2-mile train**. So a train can take a mile or more to stop, and can't appreciably slow down in the ~1/4 mile it might have to see you and react.*** But even slow trains are deadly.****
So it's all on the highway vehicle to make sure it's not in the wrong place at the wrong time. *****
To avoid mass casualty, it's especially important for buses. This ritual of "stop, look, listen" also puts them on guard against other mistakes - like pulling onto the crossing when there isn't room in front of them to fully clear the crossing.
Why does the bus get this extra task when ordinary cars do not? Because of the potential level of catastrophe (fuel trucks have to do the same thing). The fate befalling many people (it usually turns into a national-scale tragedy), and the the ease of making a mistake and leaving the back of the bus still fouling the tracks. (less likely in a car.) Also the impracticality of evacuating a bus.
As far as big special loads, crossings don't have phones like in the UK. They have "ENS" signs with a phone number. It's for emergencies, but if someone is scouting a special truck move, they will simply call that number and make arrangements.
* in North America, Russia, Australia, and other places with the infrastructure for trains that big. 40% of American freight moves this way... Especially in L.A., where almost everything unloaded at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach goes onward by rail.
** A lot is done to make air-brake commands move down the train quickly, but it can't go any faster than the speed of sound, can it? :)
*** Due to physics (energy being proportional to velocity squared), in 1/4 of its stopping distance, it won't even slow down 25%.
**** Looking at several years of accident reports, in fatal accidents of people getting in the way of trains (in vehicles or not), in half of all cases the train was moving slower than 5 mph.
***** This can be a culture shock for highway vehicle drivers, where so much of the driver experience is nerfed for your safety: air bags, crumple zones, guard rails, medians, energy absorbing bollards, traffic calming, curve and sightline engineering... trains have not been nerfed.
edited May 15 at 14:44
answered May 12 at 22:56
HarperHarper
20.6k3 gold badges39 silver badges89 bronze badges
20.6k3 gold badges39 silver badges89 bronze badges
1
I'm referring to the actual question. OP wonders why the bus had to stop but the cars didn't have to. "Other cars didn't seem to do this". You only focus on the train. Can the train stop faster if a car approaches?
– pipe
May 13 at 15:21
2
@pipe ok fixed. Issue is level of potential calamity.
– Harper
May 13 at 15:30
2
@Harper Friction brakes are constant force devices (they deliver roughly the same amount of force regardless of speed, namely the friction coefficient times the normal force on the brake pad), which means they dissipate more energy per unit of time when braking at high speed. However, when braking at high speed, you also cover more distance per unit of time and as it happens, the time cancels out and the amount of energy dissipated is proportional to force multiplied by distance.
– Sanchises
May 14 at 14:16
5
***
Yes, it can go faster than the speed of sound (in air). More and more trains, especially passenger and very large, heavy freight trains are using ECP brakes which make use of electronic control signals to actuate all brakes on the train effectively simultaneously (rather than the old vacuum/pneumatic controls which could take 10s of seconds to propagate to the rear of the train). This improves braking, preventing the rear cars from heaving forward into the front cars while the brakes are being applied.
– J...
May 14 at 15:35
1
@JaccoAmersfoort If I reduce it to your level, it becomes a hollow finger-wag. I have already pushed most of the detail into asterisks, and at your request, I've pushed some more. The purpose of asterisks is to allow you to skip detail you don't care about. This is a technical forum and most people want details to be accessible, * is a fine compromise.
– Harper
May 15 at 14:52
|
show 11 more comments
1
I'm referring to the actual question. OP wonders why the bus had to stop but the cars didn't have to. "Other cars didn't seem to do this". You only focus on the train. Can the train stop faster if a car approaches?
– pipe
May 13 at 15:21
2
@pipe ok fixed. Issue is level of potential calamity.
– Harper
May 13 at 15:30
2
@Harper Friction brakes are constant force devices (they deliver roughly the same amount of force regardless of speed, namely the friction coefficient times the normal force on the brake pad), which means they dissipate more energy per unit of time when braking at high speed. However, when braking at high speed, you also cover more distance per unit of time and as it happens, the time cancels out and the amount of energy dissipated is proportional to force multiplied by distance.
– Sanchises
May 14 at 14:16
5
***
Yes, it can go faster than the speed of sound (in air). More and more trains, especially passenger and very large, heavy freight trains are using ECP brakes which make use of electronic control signals to actuate all brakes on the train effectively simultaneously (rather than the old vacuum/pneumatic controls which could take 10s of seconds to propagate to the rear of the train). This improves braking, preventing the rear cars from heaving forward into the front cars while the brakes are being applied.
– J...
May 14 at 15:35
1
@JaccoAmersfoort If I reduce it to your level, it becomes a hollow finger-wag. I have already pushed most of the detail into asterisks, and at your request, I've pushed some more. The purpose of asterisks is to allow you to skip detail you don't care about. This is a technical forum and most people want details to be accessible, * is a fine compromise.
– Harper
May 15 at 14:52
1
1
I'm referring to the actual question. OP wonders why the bus had to stop but the cars didn't have to. "Other cars didn't seem to do this". You only focus on the train. Can the train stop faster if a car approaches?
– pipe
May 13 at 15:21
I'm referring to the actual question. OP wonders why the bus had to stop but the cars didn't have to. "Other cars didn't seem to do this". You only focus on the train. Can the train stop faster if a car approaches?
– pipe
May 13 at 15:21
2
2
@pipe ok fixed. Issue is level of potential calamity.
– Harper
May 13 at 15:30
@pipe ok fixed. Issue is level of potential calamity.
– Harper
May 13 at 15:30
2
2
@Harper Friction brakes are constant force devices (they deliver roughly the same amount of force regardless of speed, namely the friction coefficient times the normal force on the brake pad), which means they dissipate more energy per unit of time when braking at high speed. However, when braking at high speed, you also cover more distance per unit of time and as it happens, the time cancels out and the amount of energy dissipated is proportional to force multiplied by distance.
– Sanchises
May 14 at 14:16
@Harper Friction brakes are constant force devices (they deliver roughly the same amount of force regardless of speed, namely the friction coefficient times the normal force on the brake pad), which means they dissipate more energy per unit of time when braking at high speed. However, when braking at high speed, you also cover more distance per unit of time and as it happens, the time cancels out and the amount of energy dissipated is proportional to force multiplied by distance.
– Sanchises
May 14 at 14:16
5
5
***
Yes, it can go faster than the speed of sound (in air). More and more trains, especially passenger and very large, heavy freight trains are using ECP brakes which make use of electronic control signals to actuate all brakes on the train effectively simultaneously (rather than the old vacuum/pneumatic controls which could take 10s of seconds to propagate to the rear of the train). This improves braking, preventing the rear cars from heaving forward into the front cars while the brakes are being applied.– J...
May 14 at 15:35
***
Yes, it can go faster than the speed of sound (in air). More and more trains, especially passenger and very large, heavy freight trains are using ECP brakes which make use of electronic control signals to actuate all brakes on the train effectively simultaneously (rather than the old vacuum/pneumatic controls which could take 10s of seconds to propagate to the rear of the train). This improves braking, preventing the rear cars from heaving forward into the front cars while the brakes are being applied.– J...
May 14 at 15:35
1
1
@JaccoAmersfoort If I reduce it to your level, it becomes a hollow finger-wag. I have already pushed most of the detail into asterisks, and at your request, I've pushed some more. The purpose of asterisks is to allow you to skip detail you don't care about. This is a technical forum and most people want details to be accessible, * is a fine compromise.
– Harper
May 15 at 14:52
@JaccoAmersfoort If I reduce it to your level, it becomes a hollow finger-wag. I have already pushed most of the detail into asterisks, and at your request, I've pushed some more. The purpose of asterisks is to allow you to skip detail you don't care about. This is a technical forum and most people want details to be accessible, * is a fine compromise.
– Harper
May 15 at 14:52
|
show 11 more comments
The signals at a level crossing may have been configured to give adequate warning to the driver of a car. But a bus is a much longer vehicle, and thus needs more time to make the crossing.
In the UK, buses are not usually subject to extra requirements, but some types of long vehicle are, as per Rule 294 of the Highway Code:
Railway telephones. If you are driving a large or slow- moving vehicle, a long, low vehicle with a risk of grounding, or herding animals, a train could arrive before you are clear of the crossing. You MUST obey any sign instructing you to use the railway telephone to obtain permission to cross. You MUST also telephone when clear of the crossing if requested to do so.
10
When UK crossings have a telephone warning system, the rail track will get a stop signal until the road vehicle is clear. Hence the need for the second phone call when the crossing is clear again.
– alephzero
May 12 at 20:31
Naturally most of the commonwealth has inherited a similar requirement for busses to stop at railway lines.
– Criggie
May 14 at 14:00
@Criggie I've never heard of that in Australia.
– CJ Dennis
May 15 at 3:06
1
@Criggie That is not a British requirement. So it's not a Commonwealth thing. It is a US thing. In UK rail all level crossings are gated and controlled by signals - that is not true in the US
– Mark
May 15 at 20:40
add a comment
|
The signals at a level crossing may have been configured to give adequate warning to the driver of a car. But a bus is a much longer vehicle, and thus needs more time to make the crossing.
In the UK, buses are not usually subject to extra requirements, but some types of long vehicle are, as per Rule 294 of the Highway Code:
Railway telephones. If you are driving a large or slow- moving vehicle, a long, low vehicle with a risk of grounding, or herding animals, a train could arrive before you are clear of the crossing. You MUST obey any sign instructing you to use the railway telephone to obtain permission to cross. You MUST also telephone when clear of the crossing if requested to do so.
10
When UK crossings have a telephone warning system, the rail track will get a stop signal until the road vehicle is clear. Hence the need for the second phone call when the crossing is clear again.
– alephzero
May 12 at 20:31
Naturally most of the commonwealth has inherited a similar requirement for busses to stop at railway lines.
– Criggie
May 14 at 14:00
@Criggie I've never heard of that in Australia.
– CJ Dennis
May 15 at 3:06
1
@Criggie That is not a British requirement. So it's not a Commonwealth thing. It is a US thing. In UK rail all level crossings are gated and controlled by signals - that is not true in the US
– Mark
May 15 at 20:40
add a comment
|
The signals at a level crossing may have been configured to give adequate warning to the driver of a car. But a bus is a much longer vehicle, and thus needs more time to make the crossing.
In the UK, buses are not usually subject to extra requirements, but some types of long vehicle are, as per Rule 294 of the Highway Code:
Railway telephones. If you are driving a large or slow- moving vehicle, a long, low vehicle with a risk of grounding, or herding animals, a train could arrive before you are clear of the crossing. You MUST obey any sign instructing you to use the railway telephone to obtain permission to cross. You MUST also telephone when clear of the crossing if requested to do so.
The signals at a level crossing may have been configured to give adequate warning to the driver of a car. But a bus is a much longer vehicle, and thus needs more time to make the crossing.
In the UK, buses are not usually subject to extra requirements, but some types of long vehicle are, as per Rule 294 of the Highway Code:
Railway telephones. If you are driving a large or slow- moving vehicle, a long, low vehicle with a risk of grounding, or herding animals, a train could arrive before you are clear of the crossing. You MUST obey any sign instructing you to use the railway telephone to obtain permission to cross. You MUST also telephone when clear of the crossing if requested to do so.
answered May 12 at 19:39
anonanon
1672 bronze badges
1672 bronze badges
10
When UK crossings have a telephone warning system, the rail track will get a stop signal until the road vehicle is clear. Hence the need for the second phone call when the crossing is clear again.
– alephzero
May 12 at 20:31
Naturally most of the commonwealth has inherited a similar requirement for busses to stop at railway lines.
– Criggie
May 14 at 14:00
@Criggie I've never heard of that in Australia.
– CJ Dennis
May 15 at 3:06
1
@Criggie That is not a British requirement. So it's not a Commonwealth thing. It is a US thing. In UK rail all level crossings are gated and controlled by signals - that is not true in the US
– Mark
May 15 at 20:40
add a comment
|
10
When UK crossings have a telephone warning system, the rail track will get a stop signal until the road vehicle is clear. Hence the need for the second phone call when the crossing is clear again.
– alephzero
May 12 at 20:31
Naturally most of the commonwealth has inherited a similar requirement for busses to stop at railway lines.
– Criggie
May 14 at 14:00
@Criggie I've never heard of that in Australia.
– CJ Dennis
May 15 at 3:06
1
@Criggie That is not a British requirement. So it's not a Commonwealth thing. It is a US thing. In UK rail all level crossings are gated and controlled by signals - that is not true in the US
– Mark
May 15 at 20:40
10
10
When UK crossings have a telephone warning system, the rail track will get a stop signal until the road vehicle is clear. Hence the need for the second phone call when the crossing is clear again.
– alephzero
May 12 at 20:31
When UK crossings have a telephone warning system, the rail track will get a stop signal until the road vehicle is clear. Hence the need for the second phone call when the crossing is clear again.
– alephzero
May 12 at 20:31
Naturally most of the commonwealth has inherited a similar requirement for busses to stop at railway lines.
– Criggie
May 14 at 14:00
Naturally most of the commonwealth has inherited a similar requirement for busses to stop at railway lines.
– Criggie
May 14 at 14:00
@Criggie I've never heard of that in Australia.
– CJ Dennis
May 15 at 3:06
@Criggie I've never heard of that in Australia.
– CJ Dennis
May 15 at 3:06
1
1
@Criggie That is not a British requirement. So it's not a Commonwealth thing. It is a US thing. In UK rail all level crossings are gated and controlled by signals - that is not true in the US
– Mark
May 15 at 20:40
@Criggie That is not a British requirement. So it's not a Commonwealth thing. It is a US thing. In UK rail all level crossings are gated and controlled by signals - that is not true in the US
– Mark
May 15 at 20:40
add a comment
|
Other people have cited the relevant laws.
The laws exist because warning signals sometimes malfunction. It's probably fine for a passenger car to take that risk, but a bus carrying passengers has a higher standard of care to adhere to.
add a comment
|
Other people have cited the relevant laws.
The laws exist because warning signals sometimes malfunction. It's probably fine for a passenger car to take that risk, but a bus carrying passengers has a higher standard of care to adhere to.
add a comment
|
Other people have cited the relevant laws.
The laws exist because warning signals sometimes malfunction. It's probably fine for a passenger car to take that risk, but a bus carrying passengers has a higher standard of care to adhere to.
Other people have cited the relevant laws.
The laws exist because warning signals sometimes malfunction. It's probably fine for a passenger car to take that risk, but a bus carrying passengers has a higher standard of care to adhere to.
answered May 14 at 17:33
arparp
6814 silver badges8 bronze badges
6814 silver badges8 bronze badges
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Another thing to consider is the liability. Passengers place a lot of trust in the driver of a motor vehicle.
If I am driving my car and stop on the tracks, I am at fault if I get hit by a train. My passengers and I will be very hurt. If I survive, I will be liable for the suffering of my passengers.
If a bus driver stops on the tracks, the bus driver and the bus driver's employer can be held liable for any harm to the passengers. This is a huge risk to the employer.
In the U.S., bus drivers are often government employees. By making bus drivers stop before the tracks, it lowers the risk of harm and further lowers the financial liability because any bus driver caught breaking this law was acting against his/her training. This means the employer is less likely to be successfully sued. Non-government employers probably figured this out as well and would probably have implemented similar policies if they thought the price was right. The U.S. Gov. and companies base a lot of their decisions on money. I don't assume they based this decision 100% on money, but I am willing to believe that it wasn't 0%, either.
add a comment
|
Another thing to consider is the liability. Passengers place a lot of trust in the driver of a motor vehicle.
If I am driving my car and stop on the tracks, I am at fault if I get hit by a train. My passengers and I will be very hurt. If I survive, I will be liable for the suffering of my passengers.
If a bus driver stops on the tracks, the bus driver and the bus driver's employer can be held liable for any harm to the passengers. This is a huge risk to the employer.
In the U.S., bus drivers are often government employees. By making bus drivers stop before the tracks, it lowers the risk of harm and further lowers the financial liability because any bus driver caught breaking this law was acting against his/her training. This means the employer is less likely to be successfully sued. Non-government employers probably figured this out as well and would probably have implemented similar policies if they thought the price was right. The U.S. Gov. and companies base a lot of their decisions on money. I don't assume they based this decision 100% on money, but I am willing to believe that it wasn't 0%, either.
add a comment
|
Another thing to consider is the liability. Passengers place a lot of trust in the driver of a motor vehicle.
If I am driving my car and stop on the tracks, I am at fault if I get hit by a train. My passengers and I will be very hurt. If I survive, I will be liable for the suffering of my passengers.
If a bus driver stops on the tracks, the bus driver and the bus driver's employer can be held liable for any harm to the passengers. This is a huge risk to the employer.
In the U.S., bus drivers are often government employees. By making bus drivers stop before the tracks, it lowers the risk of harm and further lowers the financial liability because any bus driver caught breaking this law was acting against his/her training. This means the employer is less likely to be successfully sued. Non-government employers probably figured this out as well and would probably have implemented similar policies if they thought the price was right. The U.S. Gov. and companies base a lot of their decisions on money. I don't assume they based this decision 100% on money, but I am willing to believe that it wasn't 0%, either.
Another thing to consider is the liability. Passengers place a lot of trust in the driver of a motor vehicle.
If I am driving my car and stop on the tracks, I am at fault if I get hit by a train. My passengers and I will be very hurt. If I survive, I will be liable for the suffering of my passengers.
If a bus driver stops on the tracks, the bus driver and the bus driver's employer can be held liable for any harm to the passengers. This is a huge risk to the employer.
In the U.S., bus drivers are often government employees. By making bus drivers stop before the tracks, it lowers the risk of harm and further lowers the financial liability because any bus driver caught breaking this law was acting against his/her training. This means the employer is less likely to be successfully sued. Non-government employers probably figured this out as well and would probably have implemented similar policies if they thought the price was right. The U.S. Gov. and companies base a lot of their decisions on money. I don't assume they based this decision 100% on money, but I am willing to believe that it wasn't 0%, either.
answered May 15 at 2:10
NobodyImportantNobodyImportant
211 bronze badge
211 bronze badge
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American railroads are historically poorly engineered with realtively few bridges and many grade crossings (level crossings), mostly without barriers. Commercial vehicles in general, and buses in particular, present particular risks, in the case of buses the potential for loss of life is obviously greater. The driver will not only stop, but in my experience also open the bus door, listen for the sound of any potential train horn, then if nothing is heard and no lights are flashing, proceed.
This is an important point. I used to be puzzled at how vehicles could be "stuck on the tracks", but that was before a level crossing near where I lived, spanned by metal platforms, was starting to collapse in small sections! I called the train company and they repaired it by completely replacing the metal with solid concrete. I hope anyone who sees such a degraded crossing will do the same. The railroad companies will fix them; they aren't interested in killing people.
– Kyralessa
Jun 6 at 15:14
add a comment
|
American railroads are historically poorly engineered with realtively few bridges and many grade crossings (level crossings), mostly without barriers. Commercial vehicles in general, and buses in particular, present particular risks, in the case of buses the potential for loss of life is obviously greater. The driver will not only stop, but in my experience also open the bus door, listen for the sound of any potential train horn, then if nothing is heard and no lights are flashing, proceed.
This is an important point. I used to be puzzled at how vehicles could be "stuck on the tracks", but that was before a level crossing near where I lived, spanned by metal platforms, was starting to collapse in small sections! I called the train company and they repaired it by completely replacing the metal with solid concrete. I hope anyone who sees such a degraded crossing will do the same. The railroad companies will fix them; they aren't interested in killing people.
– Kyralessa
Jun 6 at 15:14
add a comment
|
American railroads are historically poorly engineered with realtively few bridges and many grade crossings (level crossings), mostly without barriers. Commercial vehicles in general, and buses in particular, present particular risks, in the case of buses the potential for loss of life is obviously greater. The driver will not only stop, but in my experience also open the bus door, listen for the sound of any potential train horn, then if nothing is heard and no lights are flashing, proceed.
American railroads are historically poorly engineered with realtively few bridges and many grade crossings (level crossings), mostly without barriers. Commercial vehicles in general, and buses in particular, present particular risks, in the case of buses the potential for loss of life is obviously greater. The driver will not only stop, but in my experience also open the bus door, listen for the sound of any potential train horn, then if nothing is heard and no lights are flashing, proceed.
answered May 16 at 18:31
John MacLeodJohn MacLeod
3432 silver badges2 bronze badges
3432 silver badges2 bronze badges
This is an important point. I used to be puzzled at how vehicles could be "stuck on the tracks", but that was before a level crossing near where I lived, spanned by metal platforms, was starting to collapse in small sections! I called the train company and they repaired it by completely replacing the metal with solid concrete. I hope anyone who sees such a degraded crossing will do the same. The railroad companies will fix them; they aren't interested in killing people.
– Kyralessa
Jun 6 at 15:14
add a comment
|
This is an important point. I used to be puzzled at how vehicles could be "stuck on the tracks", but that was before a level crossing near where I lived, spanned by metal platforms, was starting to collapse in small sections! I called the train company and they repaired it by completely replacing the metal with solid concrete. I hope anyone who sees such a degraded crossing will do the same. The railroad companies will fix them; they aren't interested in killing people.
– Kyralessa
Jun 6 at 15:14
This is an important point. I used to be puzzled at how vehicles could be "stuck on the tracks", but that was before a level crossing near where I lived, spanned by metal platforms, was starting to collapse in small sections! I called the train company and they repaired it by completely replacing the metal with solid concrete. I hope anyone who sees such a degraded crossing will do the same. The railroad companies will fix them; they aren't interested in killing people.
– Kyralessa
Jun 6 at 15:14
This is an important point. I used to be puzzled at how vehicles could be "stuck on the tracks", but that was before a level crossing near where I lived, spanned by metal platforms, was starting to collapse in small sections! I called the train company and they repaired it by completely replacing the metal with solid concrete. I hope anyone who sees such a degraded crossing will do the same. The railroad companies will fix them; they aren't interested in killing people.
– Kyralessa
Jun 6 at 15:14
add a comment
|
As other answers have stated, it's the law.
I'll just add some to the reasons for the law:
Every once in a while, a vehicle crossing the railroad tracks won't make it to the other side in time. The reasons include sudden drivetrain issues, getting stuck, traffic ahead blocking the way, or simple failure to notice the train, due to malfunctioning signals or inattention. This happens roughly 6,000 times a year in the US, or 16 times a day.
When it's a passenger car, including ones their owners call trucks, it's normally not such a big deal. Cars are quick to evacuate, only having 1-2 passengers per door, so only 1 in 10 train-car collisions results in fatalities. Being mostly sheet metal with relatively small rigid parts, road cars also present limited danger to the train. Most of these collisions go unnoticed by the public.
Commercial vehicles are more of a problem. Buses specifically are slow to evacuate, typically taking over a minute. Commercial trucks use long thick beams in their chassis, which can be a problem if they get pulled under the train. There have been dozens of fatal accidents involving train-truck collisions. While most train derailments are not Hollywood-grade disasters, with the cars just stopping as their wheels scrape over the sleepers, it's still likely to injure or kill passengers or overturn cargo cars.
The latest such accident happened just a week ago: https://www.thelocal.de/20190508/at-least-20-injured-after-train-and-truck-collide-near-hamburg
The second situation "traffic ahead blocking the way", is a much bigger issue for longer vehicles than shorter ones; I'd suggest that while trucks and buses at crossings may listen for trains because they're stopped anyway, a bigger safety factor is that it's much easier for driver in a stopped truck to judge whether there is enough on the other side for it to clear the intersection than for one in a moving truck to judge whether there will be enough space once the truck gets there.
– supercat
May 15 at 17:12
add a comment
|
As other answers have stated, it's the law.
I'll just add some to the reasons for the law:
Every once in a while, a vehicle crossing the railroad tracks won't make it to the other side in time. The reasons include sudden drivetrain issues, getting stuck, traffic ahead blocking the way, or simple failure to notice the train, due to malfunctioning signals or inattention. This happens roughly 6,000 times a year in the US, or 16 times a day.
When it's a passenger car, including ones their owners call trucks, it's normally not such a big deal. Cars are quick to evacuate, only having 1-2 passengers per door, so only 1 in 10 train-car collisions results in fatalities. Being mostly sheet metal with relatively small rigid parts, road cars also present limited danger to the train. Most of these collisions go unnoticed by the public.
Commercial vehicles are more of a problem. Buses specifically are slow to evacuate, typically taking over a minute. Commercial trucks use long thick beams in their chassis, which can be a problem if they get pulled under the train. There have been dozens of fatal accidents involving train-truck collisions. While most train derailments are not Hollywood-grade disasters, with the cars just stopping as their wheels scrape over the sleepers, it's still likely to injure or kill passengers or overturn cargo cars.
The latest such accident happened just a week ago: https://www.thelocal.de/20190508/at-least-20-injured-after-train-and-truck-collide-near-hamburg
The second situation "traffic ahead blocking the way", is a much bigger issue for longer vehicles than shorter ones; I'd suggest that while trucks and buses at crossings may listen for trains because they're stopped anyway, a bigger safety factor is that it's much easier for driver in a stopped truck to judge whether there is enough on the other side for it to clear the intersection than for one in a moving truck to judge whether there will be enough space once the truck gets there.
– supercat
May 15 at 17:12
add a comment
|
As other answers have stated, it's the law.
I'll just add some to the reasons for the law:
Every once in a while, a vehicle crossing the railroad tracks won't make it to the other side in time. The reasons include sudden drivetrain issues, getting stuck, traffic ahead blocking the way, or simple failure to notice the train, due to malfunctioning signals or inattention. This happens roughly 6,000 times a year in the US, or 16 times a day.
When it's a passenger car, including ones their owners call trucks, it's normally not such a big deal. Cars are quick to evacuate, only having 1-2 passengers per door, so only 1 in 10 train-car collisions results in fatalities. Being mostly sheet metal with relatively small rigid parts, road cars also present limited danger to the train. Most of these collisions go unnoticed by the public.
Commercial vehicles are more of a problem. Buses specifically are slow to evacuate, typically taking over a minute. Commercial trucks use long thick beams in their chassis, which can be a problem if they get pulled under the train. There have been dozens of fatal accidents involving train-truck collisions. While most train derailments are not Hollywood-grade disasters, with the cars just stopping as their wheels scrape over the sleepers, it's still likely to injure or kill passengers or overturn cargo cars.
The latest such accident happened just a week ago: https://www.thelocal.de/20190508/at-least-20-injured-after-train-and-truck-collide-near-hamburg
As other answers have stated, it's the law.
I'll just add some to the reasons for the law:
Every once in a while, a vehicle crossing the railroad tracks won't make it to the other side in time. The reasons include sudden drivetrain issues, getting stuck, traffic ahead blocking the way, or simple failure to notice the train, due to malfunctioning signals or inattention. This happens roughly 6,000 times a year in the US, or 16 times a day.
When it's a passenger car, including ones their owners call trucks, it's normally not such a big deal. Cars are quick to evacuate, only having 1-2 passengers per door, so only 1 in 10 train-car collisions results in fatalities. Being mostly sheet metal with relatively small rigid parts, road cars also present limited danger to the train. Most of these collisions go unnoticed by the public.
Commercial vehicles are more of a problem. Buses specifically are slow to evacuate, typically taking over a minute. Commercial trucks use long thick beams in their chassis, which can be a problem if they get pulled under the train. There have been dozens of fatal accidents involving train-truck collisions. While most train derailments are not Hollywood-grade disasters, with the cars just stopping as their wheels scrape over the sleepers, it's still likely to injure or kill passengers or overturn cargo cars.
The latest such accident happened just a week ago: https://www.thelocal.de/20190508/at-least-20-injured-after-train-and-truck-collide-near-hamburg
edited May 15 at 6:44
answered May 15 at 5:46
TheracTherac
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1814 bronze badges
The second situation "traffic ahead blocking the way", is a much bigger issue for longer vehicles than shorter ones; I'd suggest that while trucks and buses at crossings may listen for trains because they're stopped anyway, a bigger safety factor is that it's much easier for driver in a stopped truck to judge whether there is enough on the other side for it to clear the intersection than for one in a moving truck to judge whether there will be enough space once the truck gets there.
– supercat
May 15 at 17:12
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The second situation "traffic ahead blocking the way", is a much bigger issue for longer vehicles than shorter ones; I'd suggest that while trucks and buses at crossings may listen for trains because they're stopped anyway, a bigger safety factor is that it's much easier for driver in a stopped truck to judge whether there is enough on the other side for it to clear the intersection than for one in a moving truck to judge whether there will be enough space once the truck gets there.
– supercat
May 15 at 17:12
The second situation "traffic ahead blocking the way", is a much bigger issue for longer vehicles than shorter ones; I'd suggest that while trucks and buses at crossings may listen for trains because they're stopped anyway, a bigger safety factor is that it's much easier for driver in a stopped truck to judge whether there is enough on the other side for it to clear the intersection than for one in a moving truck to judge whether there will be enough space once the truck gets there.
– supercat
May 15 at 17:12
The second situation "traffic ahead blocking the way", is a much bigger issue for longer vehicles than shorter ones; I'd suggest that while trucks and buses at crossings may listen for trains because they're stopped anyway, a bigger safety factor is that it's much easier for driver in a stopped truck to judge whether there is enough on the other side for it to clear the intersection than for one in a moving truck to judge whether there will be enough space once the truck gets there.
– supercat
May 15 at 17:12
add a comment
|
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