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Originally posted by IPILYA
Back to the explosion...
Having been a mechanic for over 30 years, I have yet to see diesel ignite without a heat and ignition source. Not to say it couldn't happen, but in this case, there doesn't appear to have been those circumstances. Again, I'm hoping witnesses can shed more light on it.
Passengers in the car hit said there was what amounted to a sheet of fire upon impact. That car was destroyed, and the following car heavily damaged. It should be noted that those cars do not have anything that would cause a firey explosion on impact, nor would the truck, a diesel. Diesel fuel will not explode in a sheet of flames, it must be heated to ignition point for that to happen.
Nev. judge orders Amtrak crash evidence protected
RENO (AP) — A judge handling the first lawsuit in a deadly Amtrak crash in Nevada issued a protective order Wednesday prohibiting the destruction or disposal of any evidence tied to last week's fiery collision between a truck and a passenger train that left six dead at a rail crossing in the high desert.
Amtrak sues NV truck firm over crash that killed 6; $10M in damage to Calif-bound train
RENO, Nev. — Amtrak is suing a Nevada trucking company for negligence in the hiring of a driver who drove a semi-trailer truck into the side of a passenger train last week in a fiery crash that killed six and injured more than 20.
No ..simply reported the wreck ..no updates..nothing.
Originally posted by IPILYA
reply to post by granpabobby
Are they saying anything not already in the thread?
DNA to Hopefully Identify Last Amtrak Crash Victim
The Nevada Highway Patrol says the Washoe County Medical Examiner's officer has sent off a DNA sample in an effort to identify the last body from last Friday's Amtrak semi-truck collision.
The victim was burned so badly authorities haven't been able to identify the body and don't know how long identification by DNA will take.
We've also learned the Nevada Department of Transportation has started a statewide analysis of high-speed crossings to see if more can be done to stop accidents like the one near Fallon.
At 7 a.m. on Sept. 14, 2010, a truck pulling a flatbed loaded with pipe slammed on its brakes and plowed into the guardrail at the railroad crossing on U.S. 95 -- the same crossing where six people were killing in last Friday's crash -- just missing an Amtrak train. The Amtrak engineer said he sees four to five near-misses at that crossing every year. / Nevada Highway Patrol