Miner Dave wrote:
LOL! that sucks. What would you do if you didn't have a loco on an adjacent track? or no adjacent track for that matter?
Whoops missed seeing this bit, well any thinking crew wouldn't shut the unit down if they knew the batteries were sus, but that said....(!) it probably did happen. We on the old NZR didn't leave locos running like the Americans did. The GE U-26C's were bad at running cold when idling for a period of time so mods were made to run up the primemover every so often. Nowadays they have all sorts of gismos to save fuel.
Now if you didn't have another unit around for a jumpstart then another unit would have to be scrounged off the first train passing or another unit sent out to rescue. And if there were no side tracks, unless the cables were long enough to get units nose to nose then the dead unit would be towed to the first siding I guess. Loco's were more likely to be towed in because of traction motor flashovers than ever any had flat batteries and the only time I had a Diesel fail on the road was the fan speed increaser clutch coupling failed( the G-12's had EMD switchengine radiator drives). We just got cancelled and sent home on the Passenger.
Chris
in New Zealand