Adlington
Member
- Joined
- 3 Oct 2016
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- 1,043
A train driver relates his story to BBC Radio 5 Live:
You may wish to compare it with a Mobile Operations Manager's story, elsewhere in this forum."I can remember every second of it. At 125 mph (200 km/h), by the time you see something, it's virtually impossible to stop. When you see that person standing in front of your train you do everything you possibly can to encourage them to move out the way. You're blowing the horn, you put the emergency brake on. But then, you just sit looking at what's coming and everything goes into slow motion.
Your training kicks in and you deal with the signallers, you contact the police, you deal with the incident. You make sure the train's safe and the passengers on the train are safe and nothing's going to happen. Then you sit there and you wait for help to come. You're spoken to and reports are taken. It takes several hours for the incident to be dealt with and then you're taken home.
You've got to go and drive the same trains over the same section of track, day in and day out. The impact wears away but it's always still there.I still drive over the same piece of track now. There's still days where it's the same sort of light, the same sort of day, then it comes flying back to you. You remember it.