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NS implements new tech

Installs train inspection portal in Columbiana County

LEETONIA — During Alan Shaw’s first sitdown interview with local media in March following the Feb. 3 train derailment, the Norfolk Southern CEO said the railroad would continue to invest in technology and talked about a machine-visioning inspection portal that was in development. Shaw pledged that when the innovative inspection tool was ready to be implemented, it would be done so “just outside of East Palestine.”

On Wednesday, Shaw made good on that promise when Norfolk Southern deployed its first Digital Train Inspection Portal in Leetonia, just 11 miles from the derailment site.

“We are a safe railroad, and we’re going above and beyond to become even safer,” Shaw said. “These new portals combine advanced technology with human expertise, giving our people and the public further confidence in Norfolk Southern’s safe operations. It’s all part of our promise to become the gold standard of safety in the rail industry.”

The portal was developed in concert with the Georgia Tech Research Institution and uses advanced machine-visioning technology and artificial intelligence to find potential defects on moving trains.

“This is technology that is truly next generation that supercharges Norfolk Southern’s safety infrastructure,” Mabby Amouie, Norfolk Southern Chief Data Scientist said. “There are three components that make up this state-of-the-art technology. There is a hardware component, there is a software component and then it’s followed by people.”

While the technology and science behind the portal is complex, the concept is simple. As a train passes through the portal — which resembles a modern highway tollbooth housed in a tunnel-like structure with high-powered stadium lighting — 38 high-resolution cameras capture over 1,000 images of each rail car from different angles for a full 360-degree view while the train is at full speed. AI then analyzes the images for potential defects in practical real time. If a defect is detected, the information is relayed to the network operating center and passed on to train crews in a matter of minutes. Depending on that information and specific suspected defect, proper safety protocol is put into swift action, and hopefully, a potential disaster prevented.

While Georgia Tech engineered the hardware and provided the machine-visioning expertise to capture the images, Norfolk Southern’s Data Science / Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Mechanical teams developed the software.

“Not only is it important to take those 1,000 pictures per railcar, it is important to have an AI algorithm to find defects and it is critical to have an AI algorithm that has a high defect detection rate with low false alarms,” Amouie said.

Amouie stressed the portal is meant to augment, not replace, crew inspection of trains, nor is it meant to replace hotbox detectors that track components thermally, calling the portal “another level of safety and confidence.”

Norfolk Southern’s John Fleps said the railroad plans to install 17 portals along its nearly 19,000-miles of track — one every thousand miles or less — by early 2025. Currently five portals are under construction and near completion along the eastern United States.

The portals have been in development for years, but were fast-tracked following February’s rail disaster. Originally, the portal’s pilot site was located in Atlanta near the corporation’s headquarters but the decision was later made to launch the prototype in Columbiana County.

“In the wake of EP, it made sense to come up here. Another justifying factor was that this is our high-density line segment across our entire network,” Fleps explained. “There are upwards of 80 to 90 trains a day that traverse this line. This is our premier corridor. It was an easy decision when we had a chance to rethink it coming out of EP.”

“We will use this technology to examine every component we can see which includes a wheel bearing. And the preliminary investigation from the NTSB indicates a hot wheel bearing failed in East Palestine,” Fleps said “Our protection system we use to protect against that condition is over 900 wayside detectors and an additional 250 additional since the accident. This will just be another level of safety on top of what is a strong and enhanced wayside detectors network that we’re approving right now. On average, our detectors are 13.9 miles apart, which is an industry-leading gap spacing and we are committed to no distance greater than 15 miles.”

The portals and supplemental hotbox detectors are part of a $50 million investment by Norfolk Southern in the wake of the derailment. That investment also includes other wayside equipment, including acoustic detectors that would have picked up the likely cause of the East Palestine derailment, as well as expanding employee training and advancing technology to survey the integrity of infrastructure — track, bridges and tunnels on the Norfolk Southern network.

Norfolk Southern became the first North American freight railroad to develop and deploy the autonomous track inspection system in 202, and Felps said the railroad is working on technology to enhance “train operation in the cab of locomotives.”

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