There’s just no way to get around it, Porsches and trains don’t seem to mix well. Wednesday’s train wreck in Dillenberg Germany brought out a lot of emotion in the online Porsche community. Seeing the finished product of our beloved brand strewn all over the tracks is enough to turn your stomach. However, as most of the pictures in yesterday’s post were shot by an amateur from long distance, they didn’t properly convey the carnage with as much emotion as others may have. I couldn’t help but think back to a wreck from a little more than four years ago in Ventura, California. As luck (can you call it that?) would have it, Wayne (CEO and owner of Pelican Parts) just happened to be traveling on the same road when this incident took place. How many of you remember this one?
VENTURA, Calif. (AP) A car-carrier loaded with vintage Porsches was struck by a freight train Sunday after becoming stranded on railroad tracks, officials said.
The accident occurred about 3:45 p.m. near the Ventura County Fairgrounds, said Lt. David Wilson of the Ventura Police Department, who was at the scene. The car-carrier was “high-centered” on the railroad tracks and the driver was trying to maneuver it off the tracks when Wilson arrived. Wilson said he called to have train traffic stopped, but a northbound freight train came barreling down the track only moments later. “We were able to get the driver out of the cab, luckily,” Wilson said.
The driver suffered minor injuries while fleeing from the impact, Wilson said.
The vintage Porsches “are close to totaled, if not totaled,” Wilson said. “The train center-punched the trailer carrying the cars and split the trailer in half, and the cars went flying,” he said.
No crew members on the train were injured, but the front wheels of the locomotive derailed, said John Bromley, a spokesman for Union Pacific. Debris was being removed from under the locomotive late Sunday night and there was no estimate on when the tracks would be cleared, Bromley said.
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[Picture Source: Pelican Parts]
View Comments (11)
I just viewed the train car carrier pic.
I need to go lie down.
I'll take the seats out of the speedster!
I can't talk ....I'm crying to hard !!
too
@Joe,
It took us years to get over this loss. We're still mourning a bit...
Just seen this .... so sad! :'(
@993C4S:
I was the original owner of the '88 Carrera with the plate '88 cab' when you purchased it from my broker. I bought that car new from Max Dial Porsche in Inglewood, CA. when I was 29 years old and loved that car. NEVER should have sold it! I have truly not recovered from hearing of it's fate. I have MANY stories about that car that would blow your mind but this one took it out! Possibly an ill fated car? Well, I'm still sick about that one but continue to drive 911's daily and await delivery of a 2018 991.2 GT3 Touring...clearly I am not well.
Were all the owners whose cars were destroyed oir damaged in the Ventura incident eventually made whole materially or financially?
@Petah,
It was never posted. I believe that most of the Porsches were owned by one dealer/shop in Costa Mesa California. I'm sure there was some insurance recovery, but given the extent ($$$$) of the damage, the carrier may not have had enough coverage (just speculating).
@993C4S....Thanks - Yes, I know who owned most of the cars and had arranged transportation to the show in Ventura. I asked him about it a few years later and he'd say only that the case was in litigation. He prefers not to discuss the matter, but I suspect he sued the shorts off the hauler. Collecting, unfortunately, is another matter.
i purchased the 1988 cabrio. new and sold it to the owner of all the other cars...
the '88 cab (a personalized plate i ordered when the car was new) was flawless, low mileage, always garaged, so cali car. i am just sick this is what happened to it!
marc