The Day

Amtrak engineer recalls opening throttle

Philadelph­ia derailment details released by NTSB

- By JOAN LOWY and MICHAEL R. SISAK

Washington — The last thing Amtrak engineer Brandon Bostian remembers before last May's fatal crash in Philadelph­ia is pushing the throttle forward to pick up speed and then braking when he felt the train going too fast into a sharp curve, according to a transcript of his interview with federal accident investigat­ors.

When he realized the train was about to derail, Bostian said he was holding tightly to the controls and thinking, “Well, this is it, I'm going over.”

The transcript was among more than 2,200 pages of documents released Monday by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board. The documents don't come to any conclusion­s on the cause of the crash but offer a glimpse into what investigat­ors have learned thus far.

Among the most illuminati­ng are two transcript­s of interviews Bostian had with investigat­ors, one immediatel­y after the May 12 crash that killed eight people and injured nearly 200 others, and the second in November.

In the later interview, Bostian provided investigat­ors with a vivid account of what he believes happened in the seconds before Train 188 left the tracks — a sharp contrast from his first interview, where he said he remembered little.

Bostian cautioned that there were “several gaps” in his recollecti­on but that “a couple of prominent scenes” had come back to him since the previous interview.

The train's data recorder shows that at about 55 seconds — a mile and a half — before the Frankford Junction curve, one of the sharpest in Amtrak's Northeast Corridor, Bostian applied full throttle and held it there for about 30 seconds. The train reached a speed of about 95 mph.

He then slightly lowered the throttle for 2 seconds before returning to full throttle and holding it there for another 20 seconds. Three seconds before the train derailed, at a speed of 106 mph, Bostian applied the emergency brake.

That reduced the speed to 102 mph, but by then it was too late. Four of the train's seven cars and its locomotive derailed in a tangled heap.

The speed limit for the curve is 50 mph. The limit for the stretch of track prior to the curve is 80 mph.

Bostian, who suffered a head injury in the crash, said he remembers pushing the throttle to bring the train up to speed in an 80 mph zone after first thinking the limit there was 70 mph.

“Once I pushed the throttle forward in an attempt to bring the train up to 80 miles an hour, I don't have any other memories until after the train was already in the curve,” Bostian said in the November interview.

The engineer told investigat­ors that his practice for accelerati­ng trains is to “gradually increase the throttle. I don't slam it all the way open when I'm going slow. But if you're going kind of fast, it's okay to slam it open. But I typically accelerate in full throt- tle and then back off as I approach the maximum speed.”

It's difficult at night to see where the curve starts but there are visual cues that it's coming up, Bostian told investigat­ors, including track signals and a nearby elevated subway bridge where he said he would normally start braking to bring the train down to 50 mph. He said he did not look for speed restrictio­n signs because they are sometimes missing or wrong.

“As that track curves to the left, it kind of, you're looking into somewhat of a black abyss,” Bostian said.

An NTSB official described Bostian as “extremely cooperativ­e” with investigat­ors. The official, who wasn't authorized to speak publicly, talked to reporters on condition of anonymity shortly before the board released the documents.

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