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What do different train honks mean?

A long-long-short-long signal means a train is approaching a road. (or grade level) crossing. One long signal means the train is approaching a station. A number of rapid, short toots means that there is livestock on the tracks. One short signal means the locomotive or train is stopping.



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If you hear, two small horns, it means the motorman is asking the guard to direct the railway signal to start the train. In case you hear three smaller horns, it suggests that the motorman has lost control over the train. This also acts as a signal to pull the vacuum break immediately. This signal is rarely heard.

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It is the standard signal used when the train is about to move forward. Two long blasts of the horn are for warning anyone near the train that it is about to move forward.

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One short blast tells other boaters, “I intend to pass you on my left (port) side.” Two short blasts tell other boaters, “I intend to pass you on my right (starboard) side.” Three short blasts tell other boaters, “I am operating astern propulsion.” For some vessels, this tells other boaters, “I am backing up.”

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Three short ones mean that the engineer intends to make a reverse movement. Two long, one short and one long mean trains are approaching a highway or street crossing. And the list goes on. So, while train whistles can sound nostalgic, they do have an important communication role in the railroad industry.

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Two short and one long horn – This horn sound indicates two possibilities, which includes that either a passenger has pulled a chain or the guard has pulled a vacuum break.

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11.Six time short horns If you hear six time short horns, you have to understand that the train is stuck in a dangerous situation.

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By 1938, the Association of American Railroads had adopted the long-long-short-long signal for rail crossings. But whatever the horn pattern, the goal is to warn people well in advance that a train is coming. In 2021, 236 people were killed at highway-rail grade crossings in the US.

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UK diesel and electric locomotives are usually fitted with two-tone horns, sounded sequentially to distinguish them from the horns used on road vehicles, the tones being described as either 'high' or 'low'. In the past, both tones were routinely used.

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European trains hardly ever use their horns and have no bells. I suspect it is due to different fencing and level crossing design practices. In most of Europe, railway lines are continually fenced and most level crossings have gates or barriers.

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So, as you can see from the name, all this honking business is pretty strict and obliges trains to make four blasts approximately 20 seconds before they reach a crossing. But that's not all! Trains whistles and horns are an effective method of communication!

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Under the Train Horn Rule (49 CFR Part 222, issued on August 17, 2006), locomotive engineers must begin to sound train horns at least 15 seconds, and no more than 20 seconds, in advance of all public grade crossings.

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The reason that trains honk their horns so much at night is because it's dark and the trains aren't so easy to see. Even though the lights are on, we sometimes can't see them coming, especially around the many blind curves near or ahead of the train station.

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France is an exception to this rule. Cars drive on the right, but trains run on the left. This is because the early railways were mainly built using British expertise and standard equipment “out of the box”.

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Property rights. One of the most expensive parts of building new rail lines these days is securing land along a relatively straight path (you can't run trains at high speeds along too sharp a curve). The U.S. has strong property rights which makes securing land exceedingly expensive.

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A Deutsche Bahn spokesperson blamed the delays on rising traffic, aging infrastructure and construction projects. “We expressly regret this,” he said. The delays are forcing Germans, who learn from a young age that “pünktlichkeit (punctuality) is the politeness of kings,” to make ever-more-complex travel plans.

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