My Mom's 2nd husband is a retired railroader, and one of the things he says he always found curious was the number of vehicles he has seen that collide with trains, not by getting hit by the locamotive at the front, but running flat into the side of the train. He said its even common for people to T-bone a stopped train sitting across the road.
Worst thing that ever happened to the train: a minor derailment. Usually just some bent handrails and scratched paint.
He did say that besides intensely cold weather screwing up tracks and switches, that collisions at uncontrolled crossings are the most common cause of delay. The less crossings along a given line, the higher the chances the trains on it will run on time.
He said that they don't even bother to try a panic stop. All they can really do is lay on the horn and maybe start the process of slowing down. If they actually hit somebody, then they come to a normal stop. Sometimes, in the case of people running into the side of the train, the guys on the train don't even know about it until somebody tells them on the radio...
Worst thing that ever happened to the train: a minor derailment. Usually just some bent handrails and scratched paint.
He did say that besides intensely cold weather screwing up tracks and switches, that collisions at uncontrolled crossings are the most common cause of delay. The less crossings along a given line, the higher the chances the trains on it will run on time.
He said that they don't even bother to try a panic stop. All they can really do is lay on the horn and maybe start the process of slowing down. If they actually hit somebody, then they come to a normal stop. Sometimes, in the case of people running into the side of the train, the guys on the train don't even know about it until somebody tells them on the radio...