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Author Topic: Derailment near Oban - Sun 06 Jun 2010  (Read 19851 times)
JayMac
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« Reply #45 on: July 16, 2011, 15:25:23 »

From the BBC» (British Broadcasting Corporation - home page):

Quote
Rock fall calls after Argyll train derailment

Rail accident investigators have said procedures for identifying and guarding against rock falls should be tightened after a train derailment in Argyll.

ScotRail's Glasgow to Oban service came off the tracks on 6 June last year after hitting a boulder near the Falls of Cruachan power station by Loch Awe.

Some 60 passengers were led to safety after both carriages came to rest over a 15m embankment.

In a report, investigators have issued six recommendations to improve safety.

The Rail Accident Investigation Branch (RAIB (Rail Accident Investigation Branch)) report said that the derailment had been caused by the train hitting a boulder which had become dislodged from the slope above the track.

It said the boulder had become dislodged through "natural processes that included root jacking and soil erosion".

The report said, however, it was possible another causal factor may have been that "the examination and evaluation system did not identify the boulder hazard on the soil slope between the rock face and the railway boundary".

Clearing vegetation

This prompted inspectors to issue six recommendations - five of which applied to track operator, Network Rail, and one to train operator, ScotRail.

It was advised that Network Rail "should review its existing arrangements for the clearance of vegetation (on track side slopes) to enable examinations and evaluations of earthworks to be carried out".

It was recommended that "examination results are reported for both the soil and rock materials" and "that any inconsistencies between condition ratings from successive examinations should be identified and resolved".

Network Rail was also advised to "review the process for planning remediation works" and review its methodology for calculating "rock slope hazard".

The sixth recommendation was that ScotRail "should assess the risk of lighting diffusers ... in the interiors of trains" so that in the event of another derailment they do not cause injuries to passengers.
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"Good news for regular users of Euston Station in London! One day they will die. Then they won't have to go to Euston Station ever again." - David Mitchell
Chris from Nailsea
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« Reply #46 on: November 05, 2013, 23:22:03 »

From RailNews:

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New role for train driver who averted disaster



Railway veteran Willie Dickson has been appointed president of REPTA ^ the Railway Employees and Public Transport Association.

The ScotRail train driver, who lives in Grangemouth and has worked in the railway for more than three decades, has been a member of REPTA since 1980.

Willie was at the controls of a train in June 2010 when he unexpectedly came upon ^two huge rocks^ on the Glasgow-Oban line as the result of a landslip. He made an emergency brake application and stayed at the controls until the train stopped. Then he helped with the evacuation of the train, which had come to rest on a 15m embankment over the A85 road.

His actions were universally praised because they prevented a more serious incident following the landslip. They led to him being honoured as Frontline Employee of the Year at the 2010 Scottish Transport Awards.

Willie, who is based at Glasgow Queen Street station, went to his first national REPTA AGM (Annual General Meeting) in 1989 and has attended every one since then. He became vice-president of REPTA in 2012, and is now president.

The 64-year-old said: ^Being appointed president of REPTA is not only an honour for me, but for my family too. I hope to uphold the good name of REPTA and promote the benefits of becoming a member.^

Peter Davies, general secretary of REPTA, congratulated the grandfather-of-two. He said: "I am really pleased that Willie Dickson has been elected as the new national president. I am sure he will do all he can to extend a welcome to all active and retired members of ScotRail to join or re-join ^The Circle of Good Fellowship^ ".
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William Huskisson MP (Member of Parliament, or Mile Post - a method of measuring the railway in miles and chains from a starting point - usually London, depending on context) was the first person to be killed by a train while crossing the tracks, in 1830.  Many more have died in the same way since then.  Don't take a chance: Stop, Look, Listen.

"Level crossings are safe, unless they are used in an unsafe manner."  Discuss.
Chris from Nailsea
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« Reply #47 on: June 29, 2014, 18:16:47 »

From The Scotsman:

Quote
Rail warning system ^ears^ can hear landslide


A train derailed near the Falls of Cruachan power station after hitting a boulder. Picture: PA (Public Address (broadcast loudspeaker announcements) or Passenger Assist (railway staff providing physical assistance to passengers with mobility issues), depending on context)

Electronic ^ears^ have been installed along one of Scotland^s most landslide-prone train lines in a pioneering project that could protect rail tracks and roads across Scotland.

The fibre-optic cables are a modern-day replacement for a Victorian rockfall warning ^system in the steep-sided Pass of Brander on the Glasgow-Oban line.

The UK (United Kingdom) first is being tested on the route below Ben ^Cruachan, where in 2010 a ScotRail train nearly plunged down a 50ft embankment after hitting a fallen boulder and^ derailing.

A tripwire system built by engineer John Anderson in 1882, in which falling rocks trigger line-side signals, did not detect the boulder because it fell from lower down the slope.

The ^stone signals^ a vertical screen of ten horizontal steel wires ^ are known as ^Anderson^s Piano because of the humming sound of the wires in the wind.

In 2012, a ScotRail train hit debris from a nearby landslide ^ one of two incidents in Scotland the same day. Three weeks earlier, a freight locomotive crashed down a hillside near Corrour in the Highlands after hitting landslip debris.

Network Rail Scotland said its novel ^distributed acoustic sensing^ (Das) scheme could also be deployed to warn of trees falling on tracks, and landslides on roads such as at the landslide-stricken Rest and Be Thankful on the A83 in ^Argyll.

In 2012, dozens of trees were blown on to a 300-yard stretch of line at Markinch in Fife.

The Das scheme involves ^cables being buried just below the surface on either side of the single-track line for six miles between near Falls of Cruachan and Loch Awe ^stations.

The track firm said the system, which is monitored from a signalling centre, was sensitive enough to distinguish between obstacles falling on the line and other noises such as trains, deer and hailstones.

It said the new technology could offer a cheaper alternative to maintaining Anderson^s Piano and other anti-landslide measures such as netting slopes and removing rocks, which often require line ^closures.

Alan Ross, director of route asset management, said: ^Rockfalls and landslips are one of the railway^s longest-standing risks and we are ^always looking at ways we can use new technology to solve old problems. The new acoustic monitoring technology on trial offers us a potential solution to a problem which has affected the West Highland lines since they were built by the ^Victorians. If successful, this new ^system will help us provide an even safer and more reliable railway on a line vital to both the local communities it serves and to Scotland^s tourist trade.^

A ScotRail spokeswoman said: ^We are aware Network Rail has begun trials of a new acoustic system. We welcome this initiative as, if successful, it will aid in the delivery of a more reliable, consistent and safe railway.^

The Office of Rail Regulation has previously instructed ^Network Rail to improve its ^assessment of landslide risks to speed up its response to ^incidents.

A spokesman for the watchdog said ^The ^regulator ^supports Network Rail^s work to develop, and ^introduce, new technology for monitoring the condition of its infra^structure. That is why we approved ^95 million of funding for the implementation of remote condition testing for earthworks, signalling equipment, level crossings and other ^assets over the next five years.^

A spokeswoman for the ^Scottish Government^s ^Transport Scotland agency, which is responsible for the Scottish trunk road network, said: ^We are aware of the work at the Pass of Brander. We are interested in any technique that improves detection of falling rocks.^
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William Huskisson MP (Member of Parliament, or Mile Post - a method of measuring the railway in miles and chains from a starting point - usually London, depending on context) was the first person to be killed by a train while crossing the tracks, in 1830.  Many more have died in the same way since then.  Don't take a chance: Stop, Look, Listen.

"Level crossings are safe, unless they are used in an unsafe manner."  Discuss.
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