|
NEWCASTLE CENTRAL STATION, ER 30th June 1977
A Newcastle to Newcastle (out via Benton and
returning via Wallsend) 2-car Class 101/2 DMU (51525 & 56081) travelling
under clear signals was running into unoccupied Nº3 Bay Platform when it failed
to stop and collided at 4mph with the buffer-stop, after which it rebounded
about 1 foot. The guard and twenty-three passengers preparing to alight were
injured although no damage was caused to either the buffer-stop or the train.
The accident was primarily attributed to incorrect braking technique on the part
of the driver which led the train to approach the platform too fast after which
an emergency brake application caused the train to skid. As a result of this
accident and a number of similar buffer-stop collisions involving two-car DMUs
(e.g. Stourbridge Town on 2nd April 1977), tests were carried out in 15 cases
where trains had either passed a signal at Danger or a stopping point and where
brake failure had been alleged. Examination revealed that four of the fifteen
cases involved units with one or more defective brake cylinders and a further
four involved DMU sets where the units failed the ‘slow application test’.
Such Brake defects may therefore have been a contributing factor in this
accident.
DOT; b/c; 5pp; f/o location diagram; station
track diagram (A.G.B. King).
Information from Peter Mullen |