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How do trains get rid of sewage?

The traditional method of disposing human waste from trains is to deposit the waste onto the tracks or, more often, onto nearby ground, using what is known as a hopper toilet. This ranges from a hole in the floor to a full-flush system (possibly with sterilization).



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In the USA, staff were instructed to lock toilets when the train was stopped in a station and unlock them when the train was again underway. Mercifully, new trains no longer dump waste on the tracks. Instead, trains are fitted with chemical holding tanks.

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Some trains may have composting toilet tanks, which use bacterial action to break down solid and liquid waste. Only the broken down clean liquid is released to the trackbed after sterilisation. The solid waste only has to be emptied every half year.

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Where does poop go when you flush it on an Amtrak? Wastewater goes into a holding tank that is emptied at a discharge facility. Railroads are no longer permitted to discharge human waste onto the right of way. Older passenger cars discharged human waste directly onto the tracks.

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Bathrooms start out clean, but honestly get pretty much like your typical public restroom near the end. To be completely fair, cleaning these bathrooms on a moving train would be difficult, and Amtrak probably doesn't think a stop for cleaning is worth driving up the transit time even more than it already is.

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Yes, locomotive engines typically have a toilet, also known as a lavatory or restroom, for the use of the crew members who operate the train.

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Every 6,000 miles, or roughly once a month, trains are cleaned thoroughly—just like in the 45-day bus wash. The windows and surfaces are cleaned with detergents and disinfectants and the floor is vacuumed and mopped. The seats are cleaned with an upholstery extractor and damaged seats and seat backs are replaced.

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More modern trains had (and have) chemical toilets with retention tanks. Older trains' toilets emptied right onto the ballast _which makes a fine septic firld by the way.

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Properly-designed drop chute toilets will draw air like a chimney, pulling air through the lavatory door vents and down and out through the toilet, reducing odor. Hopper toilets are similar to old-fashioned sea toilets in that they release the excreta directly to the environment, untreated.

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Neither the conductor nor the engineer is allowed to sleep on the train. They must be awake and alert throughout their entire shift. So, where do they sleep? After their shift, conductors and engineers sleep either at home or in a motel at an away terminal.

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Is it safe to use train toilet? The reason that use of lavatory is not recommended on or near the stations because the rails and sleepers are held together in place by the use of ballast in the tracks. The frequent droppings are one of the major contributors to the deterioration of ballast.

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Other than a refrigerator/watercooler and a bathroom there are almost zero ammenities on a locomotive. Only way a engineer can go to bathroom is by stopping his train or if the conductor is a certified engineer he could run for while.

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Mathews points to research showing that trains emit the lowest of CO2 per passenger mile at 177 grams per passenger mile. Buses come in at 299 grams per mile, second-worst only to cars at 371 grams.

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If we take an overall view of the transport sector, 71% of transportation related carbon emissions come from road users, whereas only 1.8% of emissions stem from rail travel. So in absolute terms, trains are responsible for a lot less emissions than cars.

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Only sleeper car passengers have access to the showers. They are located in the sleeper cars on the lower level in Superliner train cars on down the hall on the Viewliner train cars. Amtrak provides a few items for you and the room attendant keeps the shower clean.

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These will block the cruise ship toilet and as the toilets are all linked together, if you block your toilet, it's likely to affect other cabins. The following items cannot be put in cruise ship toilets: Wipes. Paper towels (kitchen towels for example), toilet paper is fine!

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