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Head-on collision

A head-on collision is a traffic collision where the front ends of two vehicles such as cars, trains, ships or planes hit each other when travelling in opposite directions, as opposed to a side collision or rear-end collision.

Head-on collision with two cars involved
Standard wrong-way sign package used on all freeway off-ramps in the state of California to prevent head-on collisions.[1]

Rail transport

 
 
A part of a R. R. Reck (Wreck) on the Houston and Sreaves Poart (Shreaveport) R. R. 8 Miles North of Lufkin, Texas 27 February 1895.[2]

With railways, a head-on collision occurs most often on a single line railway. This usually means that at least one of the trains has passed a signal at danger, or that a signalman has made a major error. Head-on collisions may also occur at junctions, for similar reasons. In the early days of railroading in the United States, such collisions were quite common and gave to the rise of the term "Cornfield Meet".[3] As time progressed and signalling became more standardized, such accidents became less frequent. Even so, the term still sees some usage in the industry. The origins of the term are not well known, but it is attributed to accidents happening in rural America where farming and cornfields were common. The first known usage of the term was in the mid-19th century.

The distance required for a train to stop is usually greater than the distance that can be seen before the next blind curve, which is why signals and safeworking systems are so important.

List of collisions

Note: if the collision occurs at a station or junction, or trains are travelling in the same direction, then the collision is not a pure head-on collision

Date Name Location Cause Deaths Injuries Ref
10 September 1874 Thorpe rail accident Thorpe St Andrew, Norfolk, England Single-line telegraphic working error 25 75
7 August 1876 Radstock rail accident Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway, England Single-line telegraphic working error 15
15 September 1896 Crash at Crush "Crush", McLennan County, Texas, United States Intentional publicity stunt to dispose of obsolete engines 2 6+
24 September 1904 New Market train wreck New Market, Tennessee, United States Engineer error 56 - 113 106
9 July 1918 Great Train Wreck of 1918 Nashville, Tennessee, United States Human error 101 171
26 January 1921 Abermule train collision Abermule, Montgomeryshire, Wales Single-line token error 17 36
20 October 1957 Yarımburgaz train disaster Yarımburgaz, Küçükçekmece, İstanbul Allowing two trains into same occupied block section by signalmen 95 150
16 November 1960 Stéblová train disaster Stéblová, Czechoslovakia Collision 118 110
7 February 1969 Violet Town rail accident Violet Town, Victoria, Australia Driver heart attack 9 117
27 May 1971 Dahlerau train disaster Dahlerau, Radevormwald, West Germany Not determined 46 25
4 May 1976 Schiedam train disaster Near Schiedam, Netherlands Error by the chief conductor

and the driver of Stoptrein 4116, lack of ATB

24
28 August 1979 Nijmegen train collision Between Wijchen and Nijmegen, Netherlands 8 36
25 July 1980 Winsum train collision Winsum, Groningen Head-on-collision 9 21
11 September 1985 Moimenta-Alcafache train crash Mangualde, Portugal Collision 49
8 February 1986 Hinton train collision Dalehurst, Alberta, Canada Locomotive engineer fatigue

Conductor error

23 71
17 February 1986 Queronque rail accident Limache, Marga Marga Province, Chile Human error 58+ 510
19 October 1987 1987 Bintaro train crash Bintaro, Tangerang, Indonesia Human error 156 ± 300
6 March 1989 Glasgow Bellgrove rail crash Bellgrove, Glasgow, Scotland Signal Passed At Danger 2
21 July 1991 Newton (South Lanarkshire) rail accident Newton, South Lanarkshire, Scotland Signal Passed At Danger, inadequate junction layout 4 22
15 October 1994 Cowden rail crash Cowden railway station, Kent, England Signal Passed At Danger 5 13
14 January 1996 Hines Hill train collision Hines Hill, Western Australia Signal Passed At Danger 2
12 August 1998 Suonenjoki rail collision Suonenjoki, Finland Misinterpretation of signals, possible signal malfunction 0 26
2 August 1999 Gaisal train disaster Gaisal, Uttar Dinajpur, West Bengal, India Human error 285 >300
5 October 1999 Ladbroke Grove rail crash Ladbroke Grove, London, England Signal Passed At Danger 31 417
4 January 2000 Åsta accident Åsta, Åmot, Norway 19
7 January 2005 Crevalcore train crash Crevalcore, Italy
22 September 2006 Lathen train collision Lathen, Germany Human error 23 11 [4]
11 October 2006 Zoufftgen train collision Zoufftgen, Lorraine, France Human error 6 20
12 September 2008 2008 Chatsworth train collision Los Angeles, California, United States Signal Passed At Danger 25 135
15 February 2010 Halle train collision Buizingen, Halle, Belgium Running of a red signal 19 171
29 January 2011 Hordorf train collision Hordorf, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany 10 23
21 April 2012 Sloterdijk train collision Westerpark, Amsterdam, Netherlands Suspected Signal Passed At Danger 1 116
9 February 2016 Bad Aibling rail accident Bad Aibling, Bavaria, Germany Signalman's error 12 85
12 July 2016 Andria-Corato train collision Andria, Apulia, Italy Under investigation; possible human error 23 54
15 November 2017 Joo Koon rail accident Joo Koon MRT station, Singapore Software-related issue 0 38
24 May 2021 2021 Kelana Jaya LRT collision Between Kampung Baru LRT station and KLCC LRT station, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Human error 0 213
28 February 2023 Tempi train crash Tempi, Larissa, Thessaly, Greece Unknown TBD TBD [5]

Sea transport

With shipping, there are two main factors influencing the chance of a head-on collision. Firstly, even with radar and radio, it is difficult to tell what course the opposing ships are following. Secondly, big ships have so much momentum that it is very hard to change course at the last moment.

Road transport

 
A Ford Escort automobile that has been involved in a head-on collision with a sport utility vehicle.
 
A Honda Civic that has been involved in a head-on collision with a Fiat Panda

Head-on collisions are an often fatal type of road traffic collision. The NHTSA defines a head-on collision thusly:

Refers To A Collision Where The Front End Of One Vehicle Collides With The Front End Of Another Vehicle While The Two Vehicles Are Traveling In Opposite Directions.[6]

In Canada, in 2017, 6,293 vehicles and 8,891 persons were involved in head-on collision, injuring 5,222 persons and killing 377 other.[7]

U.S. statistics show that in 2005, head-on crashes were only two per cent of all crashes, yet accounted for ten per cent of U.S. fatal crashes. A common misconception is that this over-representation is because the relative velocity of vehicles travelling in opposite directions is high. While it is true (via Galilean relativity) that a head-on crash between two vehicles traveling at 50 mph is equivalent to a moving vehicle running into a stationary one at 100 mph, it is clear from basic Newtonian Physics that if the stationary vehicle is replaced with a solid wall or other stationary near-immovable object such as a bridge abutment, then the equivalent collision is one in which the moving vehicle is only traveling at 50 mph.,[8] except for the case of a lighter car colliding with a heavier one. The television show MythBusters performed a demonstration of this effect in a 2010 show.[9]

In France, in the years 2017 and 2018, 2563 and 2556 head-on collisions (collision frontales) outside built-up area outside motorways killed 536 and 545 people respectively.[10] They represent about 16% of all the fatalities including the ones on motorways and within built-up area.

In Quebec, head-on collisions are involved in eight per cent of work-related issues, but this figure rises to 23 per cent when the vehicles involved are in a rural zone where the maximum speed is greater than 70 km/h (43 mph).[11]

 
2+1 road with cable barrier, on the European route E20 near Skara, Sweden. The first median barrier on a 2+1 road installed in 1998 helped to avoid many head-on collisions[12]

Head-on collisions, sideswipes, and run-off-road crashes all belong to a category of crashes called lane-departure or road-departure crashes. This is because they have similar causes, if different consequences. The driver of a vehicle fails to stay centered in their lane, and either leaves the roadway, or crosses the centerline, possibly resulting in a head-on or sideswipe collision, or, if the vehicle avoids oncoming traffic, a run-off-road crash on the far side of the road.

Preventive measures include traffic signs and road surface markings to help guide drivers through curves, as well as separating opposing lanes of traffic with wide central reservation (or median) and median barriers to prevent crossover incidents. Median barriers are physical barriers between the lanes of traffic, such as concrete barriers or cable barriers. These are actually roadside hazards in their own right, but on high speed roads, the severity of a collision with a median barrier is usually lower than the severity of a head-on crash.

The European Road Assessment Programme's Road Protection Score (RPS[permanent dead link]) is based on a schedule of detailed road design elements that correspond to each of the four main crash types, including head-on collisions. The Head-on Crash element of the RPS measures how well traffic lanes are separated. Motorways generally have crash protection features in harmony with the high speeds allowed. The Star Rating results show that motorways generally score well with a typical 4-star rating even though their permitted speeds are the highest on the network. But results from Star Rating research in Britain, Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden have shown that there is a pressing need to find better median (central reservation), run-off and junction protection at reasonable cost on single carriageway roads.

Another form of head-on crash is the wrong-way entry crash, where a driver on a surface road turns onto an off-ramp from a motorway or freeway, instead of the on-ramp. They can also happen on divided arterials if a driver turns into the wrong side of the road. Considerable importance is placed on designing ramp terminals and intersections to prevent these incidents. This often takes to form of special signage at freeway off-ramps to discourage drivers from going the wrong way. Section 2B.41 of the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices describes how such signs should be placed on American highways.

Neither vehicle in a head-on collision need be a "car"; the Puisseguin road crash was between a truck and a coach.

Sideswipe collisions

Sideswipe collisions are where the sides of two vehicles travelling in the same or opposite directions touch. They differ from head-on collisions only in that one vehicle impacts the side of the other vehicle rather than the front. Severity is usually lower than a head-on collision, since it tends to be a glancing blow rather than a direct impact. However, loss of control of either vehicle can have unpredictable effects and secondary crashes can dramatically increase the expected crash severity.

See also

References

  1. ^ California Department of Transportation (2014). California Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (Section 2B.41). Sacramento: State of California. pp. 162–165. (PDF) from the original on 29 June 2021. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
  2. ^ Railroad Gazette April 5, 1895 p.214. Railroad gazette. 1895. from the original on 3 March 2023. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  3. ^ "LC Catalog - No Connections Available". catalog.loc.gov.
  4. ^ agencies, Staff and (22 September 2006). "Mag-lev crash kills 23". the Guardian. from the original on 7 November 2022. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
  5. ^ "Tempi train crash", Wikipedia, 3 March 2023, from the original on 3 March 2023, retrieved 3 March 2023
  6. ^ "FARS Encyclopedia: Help - Terms". from the original on 20 December 2019. Retrieved 20 December 2019.
  7. ^ "National Collisions Database Online, Error - National Collision Database Online 1.0 - Transport Canada". 11 August 2021. from the original on 3 March 2023. Retrieved 20 December 2019.
  8. ^ "PhysicsLab: Head-on Collisions 2". from the original on 15 August 2011. Retrieved 9 May 2012.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 May 2010. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  10. ^ ONISR source
  11. ^ Archived copy 15 December 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 June 2019. Retrieved 15 December 2019.

head, collision, single, found, glory, head, collision, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspa. For the single by New Found Glory see Head on Collision This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Head on collision news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message A head on collision is a traffic collision where the front ends of two vehicles such as cars trains ships or planes hit each other when travelling in opposite directions as opposed to a side collision or rear end collision Head on collision with two cars involvedStandard wrong way sign package used on all freeway off ramps in the state of California to prevent head on collisions 1 Contents 1 Rail transport 1 1 List of collisions 2 Sea transport 3 Road transport 3 1 Sideswipe collisions 4 See also 5 ReferencesRail transport Edit A part of a R R Reck Wreck on the Houston and Sreaves Poart Shreaveport R R 8 Miles North of Lufkin Texas 27 February 1895 2 With railways a head on collision occurs most often on a single line railway This usually means that at least one of the trains has passed a signal at danger or that a signalman has made a major error Head on collisions may also occur at junctions for similar reasons In the early days of railroading in the United States such collisions were quite common and gave to the rise of the term Cornfield Meet 3 As time progressed and signalling became more standardized such accidents became less frequent Even so the term still sees some usage in the industry The origins of the term are not well known but it is attributed to accidents happening in rural America where farming and cornfields were common The first known usage of the term was in the mid 19th century The distance required for a train to stop is usually greater than the distance that can be seen before the next blind curve which is why signals and safeworking systems are so important List of collisions Edit Note if the collision occurs at a station or junction or trains are travelling in the same direction then the collision is not a pure head on collision Date Name Location Cause Deaths Injuries Ref10 September 1874 Thorpe rail accident Thorpe St Andrew Norfolk England Single line telegraphic working error 25 757 August 1876 Radstock rail accident Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway England Single line telegraphic working error 1515 September 1896 Crash at Crush Crush McLennan County Texas United States Intentional publicity stunt to dispose of obsolete engines 2 6 24 September 1904 New Market train wreck New Market Tennessee United States Engineer error 56 113 1069 July 1918 Great Train Wreck of 1918 Nashville Tennessee United States Human error 101 17126 January 1921 Abermule train collision Abermule Montgomeryshire Wales Single line token error 17 3620 October 1957 Yarimburgaz train disaster Yarimburgaz Kucukcekmece Istanbul Allowing two trains into same occupied block section by signalmen 95 15016 November 1960 Steblova train disaster Steblova Czechoslovakia Collision 118 1107 February 1969 Violet Town rail accident Violet Town Victoria Australia Driver heart attack 9 11727 May 1971 Dahlerau train disaster Dahlerau Radevormwald West Germany Not determined 46 254 May 1976 Schiedam train disaster Near Schiedam Netherlands Error by the chief conductor and the driver of Stoptrein 4116 lack of ATB 2428 August 1979 Nijmegen train collision Between Wijchen and Nijmegen Netherlands 8 3625 July 1980 Winsum train collision Winsum Groningen Head on collision 9 2111 September 1985 Moimenta Alcafache train crash Mangualde Portugal Collision 498 February 1986 Hinton train collision Dalehurst Alberta Canada Locomotive engineer fatigue Conductor error 23 7117 February 1986 Queronque rail accident Limache Marga Marga Province Chile Human error 58 51019 October 1987 1987 Bintaro train crash Bintaro Tangerang Indonesia Human error 156 3006 March 1989 Glasgow Bellgrove rail crash Bellgrove Glasgow Scotland Signal Passed At Danger 221 July 1991 Newton South Lanarkshire rail accident Newton South Lanarkshire Scotland Signal Passed At Danger inadequate junction layout 4 2215 October 1994 Cowden rail crash Cowden railway station Kent England Signal Passed At Danger 5 1314 January 1996 Hines Hill train collision Hines Hill Western Australia Signal Passed At Danger 212 August 1998 Suonenjoki rail collision Suonenjoki Finland Misinterpretation of signals possible signal malfunction 0 262 August 1999 Gaisal train disaster Gaisal Uttar Dinajpur West Bengal India Human error 285 gt 3005 October 1999 Ladbroke Grove rail crash Ladbroke Grove London England Signal Passed At Danger 31 4174 January 2000 Asta accident Asta Amot Norway 197 January 2005 Crevalcore train crash Crevalcore Italy22 September 2006 Lathen train collision Lathen Germany Human error 23 11 4 11 October 2006 Zoufftgen train collision Zoufftgen Lorraine France Human error 6 2012 September 2008 2008 Chatsworth train collision Los Angeles California United States Signal Passed At Danger 25 13515 February 2010 Halle train collision Buizingen Halle Belgium Running of a red signal 19 17129 January 2011 Hordorf train collision Hordorf Saxony Anhalt Germany 10 2321 April 2012 Sloterdijk train collision Westerpark Amsterdam Netherlands Suspected Signal Passed At Danger 1 1169 February 2016 Bad Aibling rail accident Bad Aibling Bavaria Germany Signalman s error 12 8512 July 2016 Andria Corato train collision Andria Apulia Italy Under investigation possible human error 23 5415 November 2017 Joo Koon rail accident Joo Koon MRT station Singapore Software related issue 0 3824 May 2021 2021 Kelana Jaya LRT collision Between Kampung Baru LRT station and KLCC LRT station Kuala Lumpur Malaysia Human error 0 21328 February 2023 Tempi train crash Tempi Larissa Thessaly Greece Unknown TBD TBD 5 Sea transport EditWith shipping there are two main factors influencing the chance of a head on collision Firstly even with radar and radio it is difficult to tell what course the opposing ships are following Secondly big ships have so much momentum that it is very hard to change course at the last moment Road transport EditThe examples and perspective in this section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message A Ford Escort automobile that has been involved in a head on collision with a sport utility vehicle A Honda Civic that has been involved in a head on collision with a Fiat PandaHead on collisions are an often fatal type of road traffic collision The NHTSA defines a head on collision thusly Refers To A Collision Where The Front End Of One Vehicle Collides With The Front End Of Another Vehicle While The Two Vehicles Are Traveling In Opposite Directions 6 In Canada in 2017 6 293 vehicles and 8 891 persons were involved in head on collision injuring 5 222 persons and killing 377 other 7 U S statistics show that in 2005 head on crashes were only two per cent of all crashes yet accounted for ten per cent of U S fatal crashes A common misconception is that this over representation is because the relative velocity of vehicles travelling in opposite directions is high While it is true via Galilean relativity that a head on crash between two vehicles traveling at 50 mph is equivalent to a moving vehicle running into a stationary one at 100 mph it is clear from basic Newtonian Physics that if the stationary vehicle is replaced with a solid wall or other stationary near immovable object such as a bridge abutment then the equivalent collision is one in which the moving vehicle is only traveling at 50 mph 8 except for the case of a lighter car colliding with a heavier one The television show MythBusters performed a demonstration of this effect in a 2010 show 9 In France in the years 2017 and 2018 2563 and 2556 head on collisions collision frontales outside built up area outside motorways killed 536 and 545 people respectively 10 They represent about 16 of all the fatalities including the ones on motorways and within built up area In Quebec head on collisions are involved in eight per cent of work related issues but this figure rises to 23 per cent when the vehicles involved are in a rural zone where the maximum speed is greater than 70 km h 43 mph 11 2 1 road with cable barrier on the European route E20 near Skara Sweden The first median barrier on a 2 1 road installed in 1998 helped to avoid many head on collisions 12 Head on collisions sideswipes and run off road crashes all belong to a category of crashes called lane departure or road departure crashes This is because they have similar causes if different consequences The driver of a vehicle fails to stay centered in their lane and either leaves the roadway or crosses the centerline possibly resulting in a head on or sideswipe collision or if the vehicle avoids oncoming traffic a run off road crash on the far side of the road Preventive measures include traffic signs and road surface markings to help guide drivers through curves as well as separating opposing lanes of traffic with wide central reservation or median and median barriers to prevent crossover incidents Median barriers are physical barriers between the lanes of traffic such as concrete barriers or cable barriers These are actually roadside hazards in their own right but on high speed roads the severity of a collision with a median barrier is usually lower than the severity of a head on crash The European Road Assessment Programme s Road Protection Score RPS permanent dead link is based on a schedule of detailed road design elements that correspond to each of the four main crash types including head on collisions The Head on Crash element of the RPS measures how well traffic lanes are separated Motorways generally have crash protection features in harmony with the high speeds allowed The Star Rating results show that motorways generally score well with a typical 4 star rating even though their permitted speeds are the highest on the network But results from Star Rating research in Britain Germany the Netherlands and Sweden have shown that there is a pressing need to find better median central reservation run off and junction protection at reasonable cost on single carriageway roads Another form of head on crash is the wrong way entry crash where a driver on a surface road turns onto an off ramp from a motorway or freeway instead of the on ramp They can also happen on divided arterials if a driver turns into the wrong side of the road Considerable importance is placed on designing ramp terminals and intersections to prevent these incidents This often takes to form of special signage at freeway off ramps to discourage drivers from going the wrong way Section 2B 41 of the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices describes how such signs should be placed on American highways Neither vehicle in a head on collision need be a car the Puisseguin road crash was between a truck and a coach Sideswipe collisions Edit Main article Side collision Sideswipe collisions are where the sides of two vehicles travelling in the same or opposite directions touch They differ from head on collisions only in that one vehicle impacts the side of the other vehicle rather than the front Severity is usually lower than a head on collision since it tends to be a glancing blow rather than a direct impact However loss of control of either vehicle can have unpredictable effects and secondary crashes can dramatically increase the expected crash severity See also EditCollision Lists of rail accidents Road collision types Train wreckReferences Edit Look up head on collision or cornfield meet in Wiktionary the free dictionary California Department of Transportation 2014 California Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices Section 2B 41 Sacramento State of California pp 162 165 Archived PDF from the original on 29 June 2021 Retrieved 27 May 2021 Railroad Gazette April 5 1895 p 214 Railroad gazette 1895 Archived from the original on 3 March 2023 Retrieved 4 June 2020 LC Catalog No Connections Available catalog loc gov agencies Staff and 22 September 2006 Mag lev crash kills 23 the Guardian Archived from the original on 7 November 2022 Retrieved 7 November 2022 Tempi train crash Wikipedia 3 March 2023 archived from the original on 3 March 2023 retrieved 3 March 2023 FARS Encyclopedia Help Terms Archived from the original on 20 December 2019 Retrieved 20 December 2019 National Collisions Database Online Error National Collision Database Online 1 0 Transport Canada 11 August 2021 Archived from the original on 3 March 2023 Retrieved 20 December 2019 PhysicsLab Head on Collisions 2 Archived from the original on 15 August 2011 Retrieved 9 May 2012 MythBusters Mythssion Control Head on Collision Experiment Archived from the original on 4 May 2010 Retrieved 6 May 2010 ONISR source Archived copy Archived 15 December 2019 at the Wayback Machine Road Safety Vision Zero on the move PDF Archived from the original PDF on 4 June 2019 Retrieved 15 December 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Head on collision amp oldid 1170886922, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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