Runaway and derailment of a locomotive, Toton sidings, Nottinghamshire, 30 October 2016

Similar documents
Runaway and derailment of a rail vehicle near Bury, Greater Manchester, 22 March 2016

Signal passed at danger near Ketton, Rutland 24 March 2016

Level crossing collision, near Dymchurch, 10 September 2016

Collision between a train and an engineering trolley, Stowe Hill Tunnel, 7 December 2016

Fire on heritage tram at Gynn Square, Blackpool, 24 September 2016

Report - Safety Investigation Running away of an SNCB/NMBS train between Landen and Tienen on 18 February 2016

RAILWAY OCCURRENCE REPORT

Train Examination (Braking System) Addendum. Lesson Plan and WorkBook

Uncontrolled When Printed Supersedes GERT8000-DC Iss 2 on 01/03/2014. Module DC. GE/RT8000/DC Rule Book. DC electrified lines. Issue 3.

Rail Accident Report. Boiler incident on the Kirklees Light Railway 3 July 2011

Preparation and movement of trains

RAILWAY OCCURRENCE REPORT

Diesel Locomotive Train Driver. Lesson Plan and WorkBook

POWER SYSTEM OPERATING INCIDENT REPORT TRIP OF 220 KV C BUSBAR AT GORDON POWER STATION ON 26 NOVEMBER 2011

Date of occurrence Location name Holland Park station Local time 18:35 Latitude 51:30:26 North

Train Examination (Braking System) Addendum

Diesel Locomotive Train Driver Performance Checklist

RAILWAY INVESTIGATION REPORT R12E0004

Rail Accident Investigation: Interim Report. Fatal accident involving the derailment of a tram at Sandilands Junction, Croydon 9 November 2016

RAILWAY ACCIDENT Report on the Collision that occurred on 24th March 1987 at Frome

Could also be a Near Hit

NZQA registered unit standard version 4 Page 1 of 5

Safety investigation report

Module M4. Floods and snow. GE/RT M4 Rule Book. Issue 1. June 2003

Bulldozer movement kills operator standing on track

Laborer Dies When Caught in Arms of a Skidsteer Loader Incident Number: 03KY087

Investigation Report Worker Run Over by Packer Fatality - July 1, 2013

Section E MOVEMENT OF FREIGHT TRAINS. Contents. Latest Issue

tractors Rollover backwards Age Age specific rates of tractor related fatalities of working persons, Australia 1989 to 1992

RAILWAY OCCURRENCE REPORT

Diesel Locomotive Train Driver. Mentor s Q&A

Service and operate a diesel-electric main line locomotive

MIFACE INVESTIGATION #06MI209

SEGMENT SIXTEEN - Other Risks and Hazards

POWER SYSTEM INCIDENT REPORT: TRIP OF NO 1 AND 2 NEW OSBORNE 66 KV BUSBARS ON 26 SEPTEMBER 2010

Working of Trains - Rules 1 to 45

Compatibility Between Electric Trains and Electrification Systems

The West Lancashire Light Railway OPERATING RULE BOOK

Network Safeworking Rules and Procedures

Driver Fatally Injured by Fall from Truck Date of Incident: March 5, 2007 Type of Incident: Fatality

Table of Contents Air Brake Tests Basic Conductor/Certification Course Basic Conductor/Mechanical (Combination Package) Basic Hazardous Materials

Highway Construction Worker Dies When Struck By Semi-Tractor Trailer Incident Number: 03KY030

TABLE OF CONTENTS SECTION TITLE PAGE NUMBER

The Safe Use of Lorry Loaders DVD. Disc Two Supplement - Multiple Choice Answers

Advice and safety instructions. for Trafikverket track areas

Service and operate an electric main line locomotive

Terminology. Glossary of Railway. Glossary of Railway Terminology

AEROBRIDGE PRACTICAL TRAINING RECORD APRON DRIVE AEROBRIDGE BAY 1 & 5

Railway Accident Investigation Unit Ireland

Module AC. AC electrified lines

Deltic Drone. Recordings of Deltics from 2008 to Burton Coggles, 11 th September 2010:

The Y class tender is lowered into position in the compound at Maldon. Image: Andrew Cockroft CONTRAST MEDIA. Acquisition of a Y Class Tender for V499

POWER SYSTEM OPERATING INCIDENT REPORT MULTIPLE CONTINGENCY EVENT IN NORTH WEST TASMANIA ON 6 APRIL 2012

Tank Truck Explosion Date of Incident: Type of Incident: Double Fatality

CANADA CATTRON RCLS Special Instructions

The Picton/Mittagong line was opened in March 1867 as part of the Main South line.

Guidelines when working near TasNetworks electrical assets

TA20 ARTC Code of Practice for the Victorian Main Line Operations

RAILWAY ACCIDENT. Report on the Collision that occurred on 7th November 1980 at Crewe

Operating Procedures Working of Trains - Procedures 1 to 23

Diesel Traction in Action Volume 3

Ferrymead Railway Safety Case CSP-001

Equipment tug collision with BAe , EI-CMS, 24 May 1999 at Dublin Airport, Ireland.

Locomotive Specific Interface Requirements WOS

Dropped Object Incidents on Chevron operated assets

Standards Manager Web Standards List RSSB-Rail Safety and Standards Board

NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION SAFETY BOARD Public Meeting of February 9, 2016 (Information subject to editing)

Fatality Investigation Report Worker Crushed February 16, 2013

DEPARTMENT OF THE ENVIRONMENT. ccurred IN THE < SCOTTISH REGION BRITISH JAILWAYS LONDON: HER MAJESTY'S STATIONERY OFFICE. llp net

VALVE CONDITION ASSESSMENT USING NEW TECHNOLOGY. Sagar Khadka. ACTEW Water

WOMEN AT WAR: RAILWAY WORKERS

South Tacoma Groundwater Protection District Spill Prevention and Response Plan

Colin Dennis CEng, FIMechE, FSaRS

CPCS renewal test factsheet

1

GUIDE FOR DETERMINING MOTOR VEHICLE ACCIDENT PREVENTABILITY

POWER SYSTEM OPERATING INCIDENT REPORT: TRIP OF 837 TARONG MT. ENGLAND 275 KV LINE AND MT. ENGLAND NO KV BUSBAR ON 30 OCTOBER 2011

Module SP. Speeds. GE/RT8000/SP Rule Book. Issue 5. September 2015

TO: Director, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. FROM: Iowa FACE Program Case No. 2IA24 Report Date: 10/14/2002

Rail Industry Standard for the Design of On- Track Machines in Travelling and Working Modes

Tram Driver. Mentor s Q&A

46 CLASS ELECTRIC LOCOMOTIVES

The Railway Challenge

Operating Procedures Overhead and Electrical Equipment - Procedures 1 to 11

Kotzebue Electric Association Flow Battery Storage Systems Quarterly Report 7/2012 Prepared by Jesse Logan (KEA)

Report No 84 shunting service. fall from wagon. Stillwater. 1 October Abstract

Uncontrolled When Printed Document to be superseded as of 01/06/2013 To be superseded by GORT3056-E Iss 3 published on 02/03/2013

6.0 Vehicles and machinery

IDENT. ar Beattock. the Collision that occ th May 1969 IN THE SCOTTISH REGION BRITISH RAILWAYS MINISTRY OF TRANSPORT

Transport. Farm safety focus on:

INFORMATION FOR OWNERS AND OPERATORS OF HEAVY TRUCKS AND BUSES

Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway Preservation Society Diesel - Hydraulic Locomotive Douglas Ferreira Operating Manual

E17H RAIL WHEEL INSPECTION

Technical Test Theory Telescopic Handler A17

9 Locomotive Compensation

Issue 5. Glossary of Railway Terminology. Glossary of Railway. Terminology

Module DC. DC electrified lines

Protecting Workers on the Track

Issue 4. Glossary of Railway Terminology. Glossary of Railway. Terminology

RCLS Operation -CANAC

Transcription:

Runaway and derailment of a locomotive, Toton sidings, Nottinghamshire, 30 October 2016 1. Important safety messages This incident demonstrates the importance of: drivers and shunters ensuring that a rail vehicle is secured, for example by scotches, before attempting to reconfigure its braking system drivers closely following, and seeking advice when unclear about, an operational procedure involving a safety critical system minimising the need for drivers to isolate safety critical systems (such as brakes) ensuring that the competence management system for drivers adequately covers processes that a driver might be called upon to perform only occasionally. 2. Summary of the accident At 13:40 hrs, Class 70 locomotive number 70804 ran away while it was being prepared to be attached to another train. The locomotive had just arrived in Toton sidings at the rear of a train. The driver and the shunter, who were preparing to move the locomotive, were unable to stop it. It ran down a gradient out of the yard and onto a running line; the independent goods line. The locomotive ran for 6½ minutes and travelled 880 metres before it derailed at trap points at the end of the independent goods line.

The locomotive derailed at the trap points (photo courtesy of Network Rail) 3. Cause of the incident The locomotive ran away because its brakes had been isolated, it was no longer attached to other vehicles and it had not been scotched. The locomotive had been dead hauled (ie with its engine not running) to Toton and had just arrived there. Its parking brakes, which are normally applied by spring force and released by air pressure, had been isolated as part of the procedure for hauling it dead. The train in which the locomotive had been hauled had operated in single piped mode. The term single piped means that the train braking is operated from a single air pipe along the train. This pipe must both supply the air to operate the brakes, and signal when the brakes on a vehicle are to be applied (a pressure of 5 bar releases the brakes fully, lowering the pressure causes the brakes to apply). Just prior to the incident, the driver, having dealt with the locomotive at the front of the train, started the engine on locomotive 70804. He then intended to reinstate the parking brakes. However, he was unsure of the correct steps to take and mistakenly operated the bogie isolation valves thereby isolating the service brakes on each bogie in turn. The two bogie brake isolation valves are positioned on the underframe, one above each bogie. They allow part of the compressed air system, in this case the brakes on a bogie, to be isolated. The locomotive manufacturer s operating manual lists 21 such isolation valves in various parts of the air system; these are provided to isolate parts of it in case of faults (eg an air leak).

The driver did not secure the locomotive before commencing the operation. Because the locomotive had already been uncoupled from the train, he would have had to do this by scotching the wheels. Scotches were provided on the locomotive for this purpose. The locomotive s data recorder shows that he isolated bogie 2 first, then bogie 1. The locomotive then ran away on the slight gradient. Brake pressure and locomotive speed recorded by the locomotive s data recorder The manufacturer s operating manual for the Colas Rail class 70 locomotives includes a number of steps for manually isolating the parking brake when preparing a locomotive to be hauled dead in a single piped train. These include: Ensure that the locomotive is prevented from moving when its brakes are released (ie by scotching its wheels or coupling it to a train with brakes applied) Apply the parking brake and release the service brakes Release the parking brakes by pulling on the release handles on the brake units. The parking brake units are situated on each side of each bogie and there are two such units on each bogie (four in total). The driver must get down onto the track to operate these handles.

Location of parking brake isolation handle (circled bottom) and bogie brake isolation valve (circled top) The manual also states that to reinstate the parking brakes, air pressure at 7 bar (ie main reservoir pressure) must be applied to the parking brake units (this is done using the parking brake control valve in cab 1), then the release handles on the bogies must be manually pushed back to their normal positions. The RAIB observed that a printed copy of this manual was present in cab 1 after the incident. Colas Rail produced a Class 70 Traction Digest on the isolation of parking brakes on class 70 locomotives. This, although very similar to the manual produced by the manufacturer, included the following additional steps: Operate the bogie brake isolation valve on each bogie to drain the air from the bogie brakes (after isolating the parking brakes) Open the bogie brake isolation valve to reapply the bogie brakes Attach a reminder to the parking brake handle in the cab. Although it also included a warning against isolating the brakes on both bogies at the same time, the RAIB observes that these additional steps increase the risk of a runaway (if wrongly implemented). The isolation of service brakes on rail vehicles is normally only permitted when it is necessary to isolate a failure, or in case of emergency. Colas has stated that it added these steps to the procedure for isolating the parking brake so as to make it suitable for use in cases where the locomotive is to be prepared remotely from a train to which it is to be attached. It may not be safe

to carry out this isolation at the site where the attachment is to take place due to site hazards (eg there may be a conductor rail present). The process to reinstate the parking brake was the same as that described in the manufacturer s manual. It is possible that, when attempting to reinstate the parking brakes, the driver may have incorrectly applied the additional steps in the class 70 traction digest for isolating the parking brake. The shunter who was assisting the driver saw that the locomotive was moving without the driver on board and, as it passed him, he climbed into the cab to attempt to stop it. He tried operating various controls but was unable to do so because all of its air brakes had been isolated. He then got off the locomotive. The driver had worked for Colas Rail since 2006 and was trained to operate class 70 locomotives in 2014. As part of the Colas Rail competence management system for its drivers, he successfully underwent a driving skills assessment in September 2016 and had a refresher on the class 70 locomotive on 25 September 2016. However, he normally operated other types of locomotive and did not often drive class 70 locomotives. 4. Previous similar incidents The need to ensure that trains are appropriately secured when working on their braking systems, including the use of wheel scotches, was covered in the RAIB Safety Digest on the runaway and derailment of a rail vehicle near Bury, Greater Manchester, on 22 March 2016. A locomotive that had not been adequately secured ran away from Quorn station on the Great Central heritage railway on 14 May 2014 (RAIB report 04/2015). It had not been scotched securely and its parking brake was not applied. It ran away towards Loughborough station where it collided with stationary vehicles.