Metrolink Plans For Live Brake-Tests of BNSF "Heavy Iron" Train-Sets on Commuter Tracks
On September 26, 2015, Southern California regional  rail passenger carrier  Metrolink  announced a  decision to lease forty  Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNSF) freight locomotives.  As the plan goes into  effect, current high-pollution diesel locomotives
 will continue to provide  head-end power for all outbound Metrolink 
trains. On return trips, BNSF freight  locomotive will provide the 
head-end power. In either direction, one locomotive  will provide 
traction and the other will be deadweight. The cost to lease and  outfit
 the BNSF locomotives with positive train control (PTC) safety systems 
will  exceed $19 million.
Collision vulnerability of  pusher trains, with a cab car up front is widely  known. During a February  2015 Metrolink collision in Oxnard, California, a  Hyundai-Rotem cab car experienced a  catastrophic failure
 of its anti-derailment  “plow”. The loss of the plow beneath the cab 
car may have caused its derailment,  along with the remaining coaches 
and the Metrolink pusher  locomotive #870.
Recently, a source close to the Metrolink investigation told me, “I believe that  the  NTSB informed the railroad
 about the plow failure. It is amazing that they  are replacing the 
Rotem cab cars with (BNSF) engines, using an ‘emergency  provision’ 
related to safety.” Another trusted source told me, “The BNSF freight 
units  are about 50% heavier and have six axles to bear that weight. 
However, in spite of  their horsepower, they have poor acceleration and 
limited top speed. The resulting  longer trains will also complicate the
 operation at storage tracks, some of which  will not be able to 
accommodate an extra vehicle. If instituted, I predict a major service 
meltdown.” 
Diesel
 locomotives utilize two separate braking systems. With dynamic breaking
  engaged, the diesel engine slows to an idle, while the electric motor 
becomes an  electrical generator. The generator provides resistance to 
the drive train, thus  slowing the train’s wheels. All of this takes 
time. On a freight locomotive, the pneumatic system provides faster or 
emergency braking. It uses  pressurized air to actuate cylinders and 
rods, which impinge upon “brake  blocks”. The brake blocks, which are 
analogous to automotive break shoes, apply  friction directly to the 
train’s steel wheels.
It is common knowledge that Metrolink has ceased scheduled   maintenance
 on its decades-old locomotives. If a locomotive fails, they attempt to 
 fix it. Otherwise, Metrolink keeps running each locomotive until the 
next failure. This raises obvious questions about reliability and 
safety. It also  begs the question; does Metrolink still conduct 
scheduled or preventative  maintenance on its locomotive braking 
systems? A simple audit of its maintenance  contractor, Bombardier 
Transit Corporation, would show whether they provide periodic  
maintenance on Metrolink locomotive brake systems.
In
 the newer, Hyundai-Rotem cab cars and coaches, disk brake technology 
now  prevails. Under Rotem’s high-tech scheme, the cab car’s wheels 
support outboard  disks, or rotors as part of the pneumatic braking 
system. Typically, disk brakes act  more efficiently than “brake shoes” 
to slow a moving vehicle. This technology,  which is new to Metrolink, 
comes at a price. That price is what we call “the  learning curve”.
At its home location in South Korea, Hyundai-Rotem reportedly  paid a 
$6.3 million settlement last year over brake defects and mechanical  
malfunctions. Rather than field testing its various consists of coaches,
 cab  cars and locomotives, Metrolink assumed that all of its braking 
systems would be  compatible. Through ignorance or indifference, 
Metrolink failed to perform live  braking trials for their typical, odd 
assortment of coaches.
 Still unknown is how a mixture of old and new braking systems affected the  derailment of all five cars
 during the 2015 Oxnard collision. New technology  braking systems 
installed on the three Rotem coaches may have overwhelmed the  braking 
capacity of the single, obsolete Bombardier bi-level coach.
Still unknown is how a mixture of old and new braking systems affected the  derailment of all five cars
 during the 2015 Oxnard collision. New technology  braking systems 
installed on the three Rotem coaches may have overwhelmed the  braking 
capacity of the single, obsolete Bombardier bi-level coach. 
Even
 after the cab car and other coaches had derailed, a poorly maintained  
Metrolink locomotive kept pushing from the rear. Photographic evidence 
suggests  that slow braking at the pusher-end popped the rigid 
Bombardier coach loose from  both of its couplings. Once the Bombardier 
coach derailed, it traveled farther  off course than even the doomed 
Hyundai-Rotem cab car. Other than the death of  Metrolink Senior 
Engineer Glenn Steele, the most serious injuries occurred  within the 
obsolete Bombardier bi-level coach.
Metrolink’s recent decision to lease forty, six-axle BNSF diesel  
freight locomotives was hasty. If the newly devised train sets cannot 
operate  better than the mixed-consist trains currently in operation, 
both passengers and  motorists may be at additional risk. Riding on four
 axles, current Metrolink  diesel locomotives weigh 280,000 lb. At over 
420,000 lb., the BNSF freight  engines are fifty percent heavier. A 
current five-car Metrolink train weighs  approximately 460,000 lb. By 
adding a freight locomotive at one end, the BNSF train set will weigh 
880,000 lb., an increase of ninety-one percent.
In
 contrast to the diminutive anti-derailment plow on the Hyundai-Rotem 
cab  cars, the BNSF freight locomotives should be able to clear almost 
any vehicle or  debris from the tracks. However, the addition of such 
“heavy iron” on each  Metrolink train raises questions about fuel 
consumption, environmental  pollution, braking systems and overall 
reliability.
Fuel Consumption – A twelve-cylinder, turbocharged two-stroke diesel 
engine  powers each Metrolink EMD F59PH locomotive. None of those 
locomotives is younger  than twenty years. By current standards, they 
are “gas hogs”, inefficiently  providing traction to the drive wheels. 
To get the idea, picture a  1990  Mercedes 190D diesel  automobile spewing nitrogen oxide and particulates into the air as you drive  behind it.
 By
 effectively “dragging” one locomotive or the other at all times, the  
dead weight of the nonfunctional locomotive will drastically increase 
Metrolink fuel  consumption. In the past, some railroads have solved 
lightweight cab car  derailments with old-fashioned innovation. They 
have replaced cab cars with  stripped-down locomotives. With their 
diesel engines and traction motors removed, these  so-called “coffin cars”
 provide sufficient weight upfront to preclude most  derailments. 
Admittedly any "coffin cars" utilized on Metrolink tracks would  require
 addition of Positive Train Control (PTC) safety systems. Still, that  
could cost a lot less than the recently approved $19 million BNSF lease.
By
 effectively “dragging” one locomotive or the other at all times, the  
dead weight of the nonfunctional locomotive will drastically increase 
Metrolink fuel  consumption. In the past, some railroads have solved 
lightweight cab car  derailments with old-fashioned innovation. They 
have replaced cab cars with  stripped-down locomotives. With their 
diesel engines and traction motors removed, these  so-called “coffin cars”
 provide sufficient weight upfront to preclude most  derailments. 
Admittedly any "coffin cars" utilized on Metrolink tracks would  require
 addition of Positive Train Control (PTC) safety systems. Still, that  
could cost a lot less than the recently approved $19 million BNSF lease.
Environmental Pollution – A decade after the newest Metrolink  F59PH 
locomotives came  into service, the U.S. EPA’s 2005 Tier 2 locomotive 
emissions standards took effect. Given their age and power plants,  all 
Metrolink locomotives qualify as pre Tier 2. That designation makes them
 among the worst polluters currently active  on any U.S. passenger 
railroad.
With the recent  deception perpetrated by World Wide Volkswagen Group, the public is now aware  that nitrogen oxide
 is a greenhouse gas (GHG) 300-times more  detrimental than  carbon 
dioxide itself. In this case, even a single Tier 0-1 diesel locomotive  
pollutes the air at a greater rate than hundreds, if not thousands of 
errant  Volkswagen diesel engines.
Braking Power –  Mixed-consist train sets
 require testing to determine how they  will perform under emergency 
braking procedures. Using readily available  metering and measurement 
devices, Metrolink should test each consist of coaches and locomotives. 
 During a full speed test, the locomotive engineer would initiate 
emergency  braking. Although this would not simulate a collision, it 
would “stress test”  both old and the new braking and coupling systems 
in a live environment. Until it provides  results of live emergency 
brake testing, Metrolink’s mismatched train sets may  continue to endanger both passengers and the public.
Reliability
 – Over the years, the uptime of Metrolink locomotives has  
deteriorated. As of 2013, thirty of Metrolink's fifty-two locomotives 
were due  for complete overhaul. By 2015, not one of those obsolete 
locomotives had  received more than a "Band-Aid" overhaul. Instead, as 
it awaits their  replacement with new Tier 4 locomotives, Metrolink is 
running its current fleet  of locomotives until failure.
The agency’s lack of scheduled maintenance reminds me of oil  
exploration on the North Slope of Alaska. There, when an oilfield 
declines, the  operator discontinues periodic maintenance well before 
final closure. In such  cynical, “work until failure” schemes, oil 
companies curtail periodic maintenance  in order to save money. In such 
cases, reliability and safety take a backseat to  corporate profits.
Whether in Alaska oilfields or on Southern California rails, the end of 
periodic  maintenance and overhaul signals a decline in both reliability
 and safety. With an oil field,  the company can wait for repairs, clean
 up any spilled oil and then resume  pumping. With Metrolink, the 
consequences of its current “work until failure” plan  include fewer 
riders, less revenue and potential catastrophic  failure of the Metrolink system.
      
By James McGillis at 05:56 PM | | Comments (0) | Link

 
