They could have been and probably were on an OA crossing I suspect.....
IE like a farm crossing with gates and a phone. This could have so easily happend at Sandy lane (Stoke Canon) a while back
You could quite legally ride a non road legal bike over (on) the railway, as there are many, OA crossings joining feilds etc on opposite sides of the line eg the Exeter to Barnstaple line has 25 + of them.
-- Edited by jt on Thursday 4th of October 2012 04:57:43 PM
If it has lights and or barrier obay them, if it has a gate and phones USE THEM it, if it doesn't have phones then don't take your bike over.......I can't think of a crossing near wellington with no phones that has vech rights - whats the lane number? and you have ridden over sandy lane and survived then your lucky and frankly bonkers.
Having seem the aftermath of many Person, car, tractor, cow, sheep etc etc V train incidents over the years then i can assure you that the 30 ft of 'lane' over the railway just aint worth it
-- Edited by jt on Thursday 4th of October 2012 05:06:37 PM
Because (you numpty) cars in general don't come round the bend at 100+MPH and don't take a mile to stop.......calling after the bike had got stuck would be sod all use cause time the signaller put the signals back (and if the train had not already passed the one before the crossing) and then the train stops (which at 100+ can take upto a mile) your bike would be in 100 bits and could well derail the train.....
I can show you some pics of remains of folks that had the same stupid bloody attitude as you sometime if you like
-- Edited by jt on Thursday 4th of October 2012 07:27:59 PM
Hmmmm, sounds like illegal riding to me. Even if not a motox bike and fully road legal they should not have been on a railway line. Could of course be a tragic accident......
If it has lights and or barrier obay them, if it has a gate and phones USE THEM it, if it doesn't have phones then don't take your bike over.......I can't think of a crossing near wellington with no phones that has vech rights - whats the lane number? and you have ridden over sandy lane and survived then your lucky and frankly bonkers.
Grid ST 05732 15155 - End of 181-033
-- Edited by jt on Thursday 4th of October 2012 05:06:37 PM
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Culmstock area - Devon TRF Group member - KTM 690 Enduro
That's the thing with railways, they get off lightly in terms of regulatory pressure. I doubt much will happen about where the MX guy got killed, whereas in my industry we'd be expected to spend millions to do something about it. It does get my goat that despite all the railway TV ads and stuff about the dangers (and i'm not saying this is wrong), some crossings are little more than two holes in a fence.
I'm happy to cross a road junction without having to phone someone to tell me it's clear. If I can see that it is clear for a fair distance either side then I'd just cross.
If for some reason my bike became stuck on the track (and couldn't be moved) I'd be striaght on the phone.
I'm happy to cross a road junction without having to phone someone to tell me it's clear. If I can see that it is clear for a fair distance either side then I'd just cross.
If for some reason my bike became stuck on the track (and couldn't be moved) I'd be striaght on the phone.
I used the crossing at SC a year or so ago and the speed and suddenness of the approach of a train around the curve of the track scared the cr*p out of me
It appeared out of nowhere and passed us like it was jet propelled
Nah, I'll take your word for it. I guess I just thought all/most trains just do about 45 mph, the ones I use to take into London barely got above that speed before stopping.
Having seem the aftermath of many Person, car, tractor, cow, sheep etc etc V train incidents over the years then i can assure you that the 30 ft of 'lane' over the railway just aint worth it
Train versus whatever: the train never loses. Seen lots of photos of the aftermath and it can be very difficult indeed to tell what kind of creature it used to be before the train came along. Scattering the contents of a butchers shop around would look nothing like it, far too clean and tidy.
Stop look and listen. The rails make a very distinctive noise before the train comes along into view. If you can hear it then you do not have time, and remember the train isn't in view yet.....
Nah, that ad wasn't visually shocking enough to me. By the sound of that train I'd say it was only going about 45 mph, in which case it'd be safe for you to judge it's approach without calling.
Like you know I would of been involved with trains vs people its not very nice the incidents I've covered are when folk try and stop a high speed train ,you know the ones that jump out and say boo train norm doesn't stop ! Scary moment TRF run out with Harty crossing the intercity Line although we could see in each direction for miles pushing my bike across the line gave me the ebbe jebbees Just thinking about a train bearing down on you at over 100 mph /////so I've wrote this and thought all gathered here pass comment and debate subjects but lets hope it doesn't ever happen to one of us or one our own, tends to put a diff perspective when its personal loss so take care everyone
-- Edited by Lost on Friday 12th of October 2012 07:24:47 AM
And I also think a lot of people wont understand nor appreciate exactly how a train can suddely appear. All very well saying Rich and the likes are a numpty (and I tend to agree that about rich myself ) but I think that would then be true of most of the public in this particular case. If we can stand quietly at a track and look left and look right and listen then most of us would consider that would be enough to determine if we could walk across a few meters of line. It's scarey to think that these things can happen quite as quickly as they do.
Personally if I had good visability and there was no gate I still doubt whether I would pick up the phone (all fool me). But if I had to open/close a gate then I definately would use one.
That's the thing with railways, they get off lightly in terms of regulatory pressure. I doubt much will happen about where the MX guy got killed, whereas in my industry we'd be expected to spend millions to do something about it. It does get my goat that despite all the railway TV ads and stuff about the dangers (and i'm not saying this is wrong), some crossings are little more than two holes in a fence.
That statement carries some weight.
In this day and age there is no excuse not to have a least some form of train approach warning at all unmanned crossings but I guess as usual it comes down to cost although really the cost is very small and it would be money well spent.
Having made a rare for me train journey I was amazed at the amount of (scrap?) rails laying by the line. Maybe if they flogged the scrap off they could fund some warning systems.
Simply put if railways didn't exist and someone wanted to build one today they would have to put in underpasses, bridges, adequate fencing, gates and warning systems, crossings for wildlife and livestock and adhere to draconian laws and regulations before even a wheel was turned. Because its already there it gets the green light regardless of the carnage it creates.
Railways have always been dangerous places, but the high speeds and low noise approach of trains make crossing a risky business when really there is solution, but I guess a bucket and broom is far cheaper.
In this day and age there is no excuse not to have a least some form of train approach warning at all unmanned crossings but I guess as usual it comes down to cost although really the cost is very small and it would be money well spent.
The cost is quite significant actually as if you put something in it needs to be 'failsafe', however the point is that (and Rich makes the point well) that even when 'equipment' is provided people don't use it they don't use the phones, ignore lights and jump barriers.....