between 15-50 for a school bus
25 feet
4' 8 1/2"
You must park more than 50 feet away from rail road tracks. 10 feet from a hydrant. 25 feet from a crosswalk. 50 feet from a stop sign. and more than 20 feet of the driveway entrance to a fire station and over 75 feet on the side opposite a fire station entrance.
Both of them, especially if the hazard gates are down.
Rail is weighed by the yard...( a yard is 3 feet or 36 inches) If you look at the rail and it says 154 on it then it is "154 pound rail". The lighter 138 pound rail is not as heavy duty as the 154 pound rail. There are many different rail weights. In order to "weigh" the rail you would have to see what pound rail you have then measure that by 3 feet then times that by how long the railroad track is that you are trying to weigh.
When stopping for traffic purposes near a railroad track, 50 feet is how far away you're supposed to be, so I assume it's 50 feet or more.
15 and 50 feet
there is track width (measured from mid rail to mid rail) and track gauge (measured from inside rail to inside rail. As that is the most important size of track, that is normally the distances referenced to. normal distance for track gauge is 1435 mm
Sakuma Rail Park ended in 2009.
Albion Park Rail opened in 1887.
Sakuma Rail Park was created in 1991.
Lifting your feet when driving over a railroad track is a common superstition believed to bring good luck. It has no real impact on the car or its performance.