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Journal Article

Citation

Halkias JA, Eck RW. Transp. Res. Rec. 1985; 1010: 101-116.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1985, Transportation Research Board, National Research Council, National Academy of Sciences USA, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The study objective was to determine the influence of road classification, angle of crossing, and train speed on the effectiveness of fixed-distance and constant-warning-time systems at public rail-highway grade crossings. Data were acquired from the U.S. Department of Transportation-Association of American Railroads Crossing Inventory File and the FRA Accident/Incident Reporting System for the period January 1, 1975, through December 31, 1982. Fixed-distance and constant-warning-time systems revealed similar effectiveness values (82 and 85 percent, respectively) when changed from passive devices. For changes from fixed-distance to constant-warning-time systems, the effectiveness value was 26 percent. This result tended to confirm the hypothesis that constant-warningtime systems have greater credibility with motorists than do fixed-distance systems. Functional class of road had no apparent influence on the effectiveness of warning systems for upgrades to fixed-distance systems and constantwarning-time systems. The effectiveness of upgrades in the fixed-distance-toconstant-warning-time class was greatest for the angle-of-crossing category of 0 to 29 degrees (68 percent). For passive-to-fixed-distance and passive-toconstant-warning-time upgrades, effectiveness values in the 60-to-90-degreeangle category were essentially equal to those in the oblique-angle categories (82 percent). For constant-warning-time systems, effectiveness increased with increase in variation of train speed. Train speed, as measured by the concepts of speed ratio and speed difference, had no apparent influence on warning system effectiveness for either system.


Language: en

Keywords

HIGHWAY SYSTEMS - Accident Prevention; RAILROAD PLANT AND STRUCTURES; RAILROAD SIGNALS AND SIGNALING - Speed Control

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