Pushing The Envelope, Part IV: Train Wrecks

The human being has always pushed the envelope into and beyond the realms of danger. This is the fourth of various Sunday postings displaying how restless Man is with the mundane and how he purposely crosses the threshold into danger willingly — and sometimes unwillingly.

The above video is taken from the window-cam of a diesel-electric locomotive. I am unable to tell if the engineer and conductor were still in the cab of this locomotive when the collision occurred. However, if you look closely at the oncoming locomotive, a BNSF engine, you’ll notice that at around :40 you can see one of its crew leaping away onto the ground prior to the impact. This occurred at the Kismet Siding in California, 2006. The westbound (oncoming) train ignored signal indications. Below is a photo of the oncoming first unit. Amazingly enough, no one died in this collision.

At EVOC we have a theorem called the Lug Nut rule, which goes something like this: in an accident, 5 lug nuts beat 4, 10 lug nuts beat 6, cleated tracks beat all lug nuts and rail beats everything.

Here, you can see that, even with older diesel-electric locomotives of roughly 3,500 hp, any vehicle will lose to a train. Also, please note that, in these tests archived by Pentrex, the units involved were able to stop in remarkably short distances. An average unit train roughly 1 or 1.25 miles long (about 90 to 120 cars), for example, traveling around 55 mph will need at least a mile to stop with the braking systems in full emergency. Remember, the contact patch of a locomotive or car wheel (that portion of the wheel actually touching the rail) is the size of a dime.
Train vs. semi-truck? No contest.

The horrible results of not lining the switch back for the main, after having taken your train off on a siding:

Any time you potentially clash or cross paths with a train or a locomotive, you are most definitely pushing the envelope.

BZ

Brett Favre: Minnesota Vikings Push The Superbowl


Up front, I have to admit to a singular bias:

I am a Green Bay Packer fan, and have been so for many years. I wrapped my fan-dom around Brett Favre, an exquisite player who — ahem — may have made some mistakes in terms of premature retirements — but certainly not in terms of his playing abilities. He’s the first NFL player to win games against all 32 teams in the league!
After retiring from the Packers in 2008, he played one contentious year for the New York Jets.
He then ended up quarterbacking the Minnesota Vikings for the 2009 season.

Now, on the way to the NFC championship, the Vikings killed the Cowboys this past weekend with a 34 to 3 score.
This Sunday, at 3:30 PST, the Vikings take on the New Orleans Saints.
For Brett, for the Elders, I’d really like to see the Vikings in the Super Bowl this year.
BZ

The Silence of the Left


One year after the election of Barack Hussein Obama, the Demorats had their world rocked by the election of a Republican into the bluest of blue political appointments, in the bluest of blue states, ruled for more than half a century by the bluest of Liberals.

The people have made a statement and that is this: we don’t much care for the path currently taken by those installed in power; we don’t much care for the potential of ObamaKare and we don’t much care for the incessant spending. We know the Republicans spent terribly; this current administration spends ever more. Mr Obama spent $1.7 trillion dollars in his first month alone.
There is a lot of anger. And the anger is with Washington, DC.
The Demorats are completely, unsparingly, unapologetically Tone Deaf. Their mantra still continues to be “we know better than you what you want, what you need.” They believe: “you are the Great Unwashed. You are the Groundlings.” The GOP has an amazing opportunity.
Further evidence? ONE day after the trouncing in Massachusetts, the Obama Administration announced:

WASHINGTON – Senate Democrats on Wednesday proposed allowing the federal government to borrow an additional $1.9 trillion to pay its bills, a record increase that would permit the national debt to reach $14.3 trillion.

The unpopular legislation is needed to allow the federal government to issue bonds to fund programs and prevent a first-time default on obligations. It promises to be a challenging debate for Democrats, who, as the party in power, hold the responsibility for passing the legislation.

Ladies and gentlemen, how is it that I can see the Writing On The Wall, but no one in Washington can? We cannot keep spending as we do. Again, no more than 24 hours after the election in Massachusetts, Obama wants the Fed to take over national student debt. Is he insane?
One day, one fine day, China will step back. The world will step back. They will refuse to hold the American Dollar. Russia is already starting to diversify into the Canadian dollar.
So: what did the Demorats learn from yesterday? Words from Pelosi? Words from Reid? No. Stunning silence.
I submit: the Demorats learned mostly nothing at all.
BZ

P.S.
Scott Brown, the Keith Olbermann Anti-Christ:

Guess what, Keith: consider him SENT.