red91inWA said:
What gets me, is that in Portland, the lovely city that it is, has commuter trains that run on an overhead rail. Makes a very distinct sound as it comes down the tracks.
If you know what the SOUND is...you know its coming. HOW THE HELL do you not see, or hear a NORMAL train ?
Look , Listen, Live. BINGO Rev.
In Houston, they didn't want those unsightly overheads so they put their new commuters at ground level, right next to the sidewalk. The silly things are electric, intentionally quiet, and nobody pays any damn attention to them at all. Cars and pedestrians get wacked 3 or 4 times a week. They got lights along the street that tell you not to turn when a train is approaching, and cross-gaurds where the track crosses over, but nobody figures anybody else has got any right to tell them where to drive or walk. The trains have cameras and it's funny as hell to watch all the dumb a$$es get themselve run over, but it was really dumb of the city to think that people were any smarter than they are. As it is, with the signs and the cameras and the cross gaurds, I don't think Houston has paid out to anybody. The news interviewed a cop after one train/car accident. They asked if the train situation wasn't inherently dangerous. He looked straight into the camera and said, "Hey! The signs are explicit and in plain view. Don't get in front of these trains!" End of interview :laugh3: .
Hell, they had a festival down town and so many drunks were walking around on the tracks that the cops shut the commuter lines down. Then people were bitching that they couldn't get back home! Go figure. They shoulda let the drunks get run over. Teach 'em to stay off the tracks.
As to not hearing a freight train? Like DrMoab said: Out in open country they can sneak up on you. If you depend on hearing a train while you're driving 50-60 mph on a chip-seal county road with 10' corn on either side, you will get run over some day.
There was one time, though, before they welded the rails, that a chunck of rail broke off the end of one section. Holy cripes what a noise. Our house was a quarter-mile away and that woke everybody up. KABAM, KABAM....KABAM, KABAM....on and on for a 110-car coal train and 2 80-car freight trains before they came out and fixed it the next day. Nobody slept that night!!!