Car crashes into steam locomotive in Norfolk

Michael Holden - Editor 4 comments 1 Min Read
Credit: Norfolk Constabulary

The M&GN Joint Railway Society has announced that one of their locomotives has been involved with a collision at the today (17th November 2018).

The resident Y14 locomotive was involved in the collision with the silver car as it made its way along the heritage railway today.

The accident happened at the crossing by Sheringham Golf Club, with the road closed for an hour or so.

All crew of the locomotive, passengers on the train, and the car driver are said to be ok.

The locomotive has escaped damage bar from a scratch on the buffer beam, however, the car is a complete write-off.

We do not have any information apart from this, and the M&GN Joint Railway Society do not want to discuss anything further until a full report is completed. We must respect this!

Where Next?

News Homepage
   For the Latest Railway News
RailAdvent Online Shop
   Framed Prints, DVD's / Blu-Ray's and more
LocoStop – The RailAdvent Community
   Come and share your railway pictures

Share This Article
4 Comments
  • “The locomotive has escaped damage bar from a scratch on the buffer beam, however, the car is a complete write-off.”

    this has very much proven that steam locomotives are much better than these modern car s***s

  • I probably would say that the driver in the Mercedes Benz is at fault because the driver didn’t see the train coming until it was too late. Or must of jumped the red signal and without warning crashed into the steam locomotive.

    • Andrew, as usual, offers a glimpse of the blindingly obvious. For the record, trains have priority at crossings so, ipso facto, the car driver is at fault.
      In other incidents, the car driver’s insurance has had to pay for damage to the train, the crossing fittings etc.
      There have been rare incidents where a train has reached a crossing but the lights or barriers have not worked; these are wholly exceptional and are subject to an inquiry by the Rail Accident inspectorate.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Exit mobile version
X