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Do these new locomotives have outlets for employees to charge smartphones?
Since employees are not allowed to use a smartphone while on duty, save the special iPhones that conductors use for eTicketing, there would be no reason to design an engine to allow an employee to plug in a smartphone.

This is not to say that the engine doesn't have an outlet that might well get used to charge a smartphone; simply that the outlet wasn't put in for that reason.
 
Smartphones must be off while the train is in operation, so they wouldn't need outlets for them since they are not using power while they are off.
 
Do these new locomotives have outlets for employees to charge smartphones?
Since employees are not allowed to use a smartphone while on duty, save the special iPhones that conductors use for eTicketing, there would be no reason to design an engine to allow an employee to plug in a smartphone.This is not to say that the engine doesn't have an outlet that might well get used to charge a smartphone; simply that the outlet wasn't put in for that reason.
Right, the outlet is not there for smartphones. An outlet is needed for maintenance equipment and tools.
 
I mean an employee could probably charge their smartphone or laptop or iPad, I know a boston engineer that always gave his personal stuff to the conductor who would plug it into charge in the conductors office on the Acela consists.
 
I cant wait to operate these motors, I heard so many good things about them. They honestly look like a more advanced ALP46
 
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Smartphones must be off while the train is in operation, so they wouldn't need outlets for them since they are not using power while they are off.
They totally do use power when they're off. Most of them are "smart" enough that they won't go dead in 8 hours, though.
 
Just plug your smartphone in on the other end. As long as your electronic device is not on your persons then your fine.
 
The Amtrak blog website has a post today on the training for the ACS-64s: Whats It Like: Amtrak Cities Sprinter Engineer Training. Has 2 short video clips.

With the addition of the 70 new Amtrak Cities Sprinter (ACS-64) locomotives, comes new equipment to learn. Thats why the 450 Amtrak engineers on the Northeast Corridor have been participating in multi-day locomotive training. Heres your glimpse into how they are preparing for the arrival of the new equipment.

Each training is facilitated by an Amtrak road foreman who instructs eight engineers. During the comprehensive training sessions, participants receive classroom and operational training as well as software-based and simulation training. At the culmination of the training, the engineers are observed by their supervisor for a qualification to operate the locomotive.

Jonathan Hines, Amtrak System General Road Foreman, is responsible for training the engineers and has received great feedback from them, Response from participants has been very very positive, he said. They have been excited to see what the equipment can do and are quite impressed with what they are getting.

By the end of February, all Northeast Corridor engineers will have completed the training and will be qualified to operate the new Amtrak Cities Sprinter.
If they are that close to having all the NEC engineers qualified, entry into revenue service can't be far off.
 
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