And I thought I had it bad when a train blew past Melrose Highlands due to slippery rail. IIRC, it slid one mile past the station, with sparks trailing behind the locomotive as it tried its hardest to ground to an immediate halt. They had to back it up very slowly.
It left the handful of us on the platform stunned and confused.
He must have been on the 806 from Wickford Junction. That train is scheduled to stop at 128 at 7:24. The only train in the morning that doesn't stop is the 808 express which was the engineer's next route into Boston after the return trip.
They typically turn their bells on when backing up.
Maybe this guy needs a bell to wake him up!
(Granted - maybe he just walked to the other end and ran it "forward" from the other cab? The bells could be really annoying for 5 miles on top of it being a safety issue)
Someone has to be on the leading end whenever a train is backing up, usually the conductor, in constant radio contact with the engineer, and proceeding at restricted speed.
The engineer likely did not walk back to the cab car, because I believe he would have then needed to do a new brake test, among other things which take time (~15 mins or more).
And, as anyone who rides commuter rail regularly, especially in the fall and winter, should know, missing stops happens every now and then.
MBCR in the twitter account took notice and said the train only lost 3 minutes of time. If correct, 5 miles is a bit of an exaggeration. Or the engineer understated his time lost (I think that's harder to pull off considering it would continue to show down to the next stations). ...Or he reversed at 100 miles per hour. Now that's speed.
I was near the front of that train and I'm pretty sure we were just past the Neponset marsh when we started backing up. Still an add thing to happen. I've been on trains that have overshot by a few dozen feet, but never one where the engineer forgot to stop!
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And I thought I had it bad
And I thought I had it bad when a train blew past Melrose Highlands due to slippery rail. IIRC, it slid one mile past the station, with sparks trailing behind the locomotive as it tried its hardest to ground to an immediate halt. They had to back it up very slowly.
It left the handful of us on the platform stunned and confused.
How can you possibly miss 128?
It's not like the station is a just sign and a stepstool.
Easy
You can easily go right past it if you forget that the station is on your schedule. Some trains likely skip over that stop.
He must have been on the 806
He must have been on the 806 from Wickford Junction. That train is scheduled to stop at 128 at 7:24. The only train in the morning that doesn't stop is the 808 express which was the engineer's next route into Boston after the return trip.
http://www.mbta.com/schedules_and_maps/rail/lines/?route=PROVSTOU
128 is a major station, I'm
128 is a major station, I'm surprised that there's any train which skips it. OTOH, there is that mid-day Acela that doesn't stop in New Haven.
Train 806 runs from 5:58 am
Train 806 runs from 5:58 am to 7:45 am. Train 808 runs from 6:37 to 8:16. There's no way the same engineer could run both.
Bells not beepers
They typically turn their bells on when backing up.
Maybe this guy needs a bell to wake him up!
(Granted - maybe he just walked to the other end and ran it "forward" from the other cab? The bells could be really annoying for 5 miles on top of it being a safety issue)
Curious if any other trains
were delayed while this guy backed up for five miles.
Someone has to be on the
Someone has to be on the leading end whenever a train is backing up, usually the conductor, in constant radio contact with the engineer, and proceeding at restricted speed.
The engineer likely did not walk back to the cab car, because I believe he would have then needed to do a new brake test, among other things which take time (~15 mins or more).
And, as anyone who rides commuter rail regularly, especially in the fall and winter, should know, missing stops happens every now and then.
Brake tests
FRA requires a minimum of 5 minutes for a test.
I'm impressed that he got the OK to back up that far. Things like that almost never happen.
"Do trains have back-up beepers?"
Ya when the orange line arrives at forest hills it turns around.
MBCR in the twitter account
MBCR in the twitter account took notice and said the train only lost 3 minutes of time. If correct, 5 miles is a bit of an exaggeration. Or the engineer understated his time lost (I think that's harder to pull off considering it would continue to show down to the next stations). ...Or he reversed at 100 miles per hour. Now that's speed.
must be hyperbole
At 5 miles from the station, you would probably be between Cummins Highway and Blakemore Street in Roslindale.
More like half a mile, I'd say
I was near the front of that train and I'm pretty sure we were just past the Neponset marsh when we started backing up. Still an add thing to happen. I've been on trains that have overshot by a few dozen feet, but never one where the engineer forgot to stop!