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Why do I keep hearing a train horn at night?

At night, the air near the ground can have a different temperature than air only a few hundred feet above1. This affects the transmission of sound waves. There is usually less ambient noise after dark, so the distant train sounds louder. As pointed out elsewhere, maybe the trains don't use the horn in daytime.



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Train horns are installed on locomotives to warn motorists or pedestrians of an approaching train at a highway-rail grade crossing.

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At night, the air near the ground can have a different temperature than air only a few hundred feet above1. This affects the transmission of sound waves. There is usually less ambient noise after dark, so the distant train sounds louder. As pointed out elsewhere, maybe the trains don't use the horn in daytime.

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The Bible is literally full of spiritual train whistles intended to warn us of spiritual danger and death. We need to listen to those whistles and heed his loving warnings.

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5.Continuous horn If you hear horn is being blown continuously, you have to understand that the train is passing through stations without any halts. This is to alert passengers.

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In a quiet zone, railroads have been directed to cease the routine sounding of their horns when approaching public highway-rail grade crossings. Train horns may still be used in emergency situations or to comply with other Federal regulations or railroad operating rules.

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Train horns may be sounded in emergency situaons or to comply with other railroad or FRA rules even within a quiet zone. Quiet zone regulaons also do not eliminate the use of locomove bells at crossings.

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It has to do with the height and strength of a temperature inversion just above the ground. On clear, calm nights, it is cooler at the ground than higher up. When air warms with altitude a temperature inversion exists. Sound travels faster in warm air than it does in cool air.

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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. There are other standardized horn signals like three short blasts for the train about to move backward.

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Answer #1: It's a wave of communicating between the train driver and workers on the tracks to acknowledge that the driver has seen them. Answer #2: For safety reasons – to make sure the horn is working before you leave the station.

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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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It is true that the right carpet and drapes can, in fact, work wonders for train noise reduction. While a great carpet can absorb noise from below, heavy drapes and curtains are capable of reducing echoes. It is recommended that drapes be hung on opposite sides of the room to trap even more noise.

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