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by AnimalMuppet
3883 days ago
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I don't think they have to put something on every (railroad) car. I think they have to put something on every engine, and on every switch. What they put on every switch has to talk to a network. There's a lot of switches, and some of those switches are in pretty remote places. > Positive Track Control is the train safety technology at issue here. I believe it's Positive Train Control. > The government can't make it happen by creating a regulation and a deadline. Very much true, and a big surprise to too many regulators. |
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As a point, PTC works in both dark territory and controlled territory, because it focuses on the train itself (but it isn't as reliable in dark territory). Yes in controlled territory it has greater information but it doesn't require every switch to be modified. Even back in the late 90's every controlled switch reported back its status to CAD extremely quickly and CAD could control the switches remotely. Yes, dark territory is different, but PTC had some benefits even in dark territory. It was the long term goal to have near zero dark territory where a switch, siding or other similar factor would be able to cause a collision.
And just as a point, even when a train leaves one CAD controlled territory (say Union Pacific territory) and enters another (say ran by BNSF) the CAD operators hand off control, much like air traffic control. So the issue of interoperability is minimal as it already is in place in at least a fairly common form. Not saying it isn't without fault or couldn't be better, but the world doesn't have to change overnight, just keep making progress on each part making it better and better.