Whistler40145
Established Member
Thanks for making that clear. I don't have a clue on the systems!
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That would depend on what is meant by "on hire to Virgin."90046 may have had a defect on its TPWS equipment, would this have caused the brakes not to automatically apply themselves when passing the signal protecting the crossover?
If this is found to be the case. This loco is operated by Freightliner, but at present on hire to Virgin, which company would get a roasting for it?
I can't see anything getting the driver off the hook for this one, even if there was a TPWS error which would otherwise have washed off a bit of the speed between the signal and the points. I hope that the driver's union has an officer employed to assist ex-rail workers in finding other employment.
Slow lines open, fast lines still under possession - likely open for Monday morning
There's snow?
There's snow?
Toasty and warm here, thats maybe why I got a £340 gas bill![]()
Toasty and warm here, thats maybe why I got a £340 gas bill![]()
It wouldn't be out running with a fault on the TPWS. Not at speed anyway. As a fail safe system, any TPWS faults break wire 13 and so you won't get the brakes off. I'm sure the real reasons will come out before long...
Insert obvious joke about huskies being used to subzero temperatures.
There is no way TPWS works with diverging routes is there? Once the signal has cleared from approach controlled with the loco approaching, TPWS won't kick in as the signal is green, as the TPWS speed is related to the main route.
So the TPWS on the approach to the signal, with the grids positioned accordingly, couldn't be used for a different 'trigger' speed relating to a speed restriction in advance of the signal. Agree that, if the will was there, some form of TPWS implementation - active only when the diverging route was set - would be possible. In this case though, given the low speed of the crossover, I'd be surprised if the signal cleared before the train had passed over the TPWS loops (happy to be corrected though).It CAN be implemented to work for diverging routes, it's just a question of weather it IS implemented or not, remember that TWPS is only two different frequencies being transmitted certain distances appart to simulate forward speed with a timer...
So the TPWS on the approach to the signal, with the grids positioned accordingly, couldn't be used for a different 'trigger' speed relating to a speed restriction in advance of the signal. Agree that, if the will was there, some form of TPWS implementation - active only when the diverging route was set - would be possible. In this case though, given the low speed of the crossover, I'd be surprised if the signal cleared before the train had passed over the TPWS loops (happy to be corrected though).
185, so you are blaming a Virgin driver without knowing if it was driver error or not? There are any number of reasons why the speed was exceeded.
Just got an axe to grind perhaps.