Oh yes, a steel thermos.
Have droped mine from a moving train, it lived.
Its been used as a hammer, a door chock, paper weight and foot rest, and to hold coffee, every once in a while.
Last piece of advice, (trust me, there is tons of it on the way)
Never, ever, put yourself in harms way trying to save a car, or prevent a run through of a switch.
They are only cars, and if they get banged up, well, you can always get them welded back together.
You, on the other hand, dont take too kindly to being welded on, it hurts and smells real bad, so dont let the impluse to try and straighten a drawbar out on a moving car, or beat a moving car to a switch, make you do something unsafe, because as sure as you do, the car will split the switch just as you get your hands on the throw handle, and the thing will snap up and over and knock your teeth out.
All this stuff outweighs you a thousand times over, once its running free, there aint a darn thing you can really do to stop it.
Nothing, absolutly nothing out there is worth geting hurt over, not a single thing.
By passed knuckles happen all the time, and can be fixed, split switches can be repaired, hand rails and grab irons are cheap, compaired to you losing a hand, or your life.
No locomotive, no railcar, no switch is worth you spending one minute in the hospital, ever.
And when the old heads give you a ration of crap about a simple question, remember, not a one of them were born knowing anything more about railroading than you do now.
Let it slide, and get on with your job.
CSX told you already, you will find engineers that make your job sweet, and engineers that make your job twice as hard as it needs be.
When you hook up with a good one, listen to what he tells you, because to get to the seatbox, he already did what you are doing now, and most likely knows the best, and safest way to go about it.
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