Railinc, Duke University Collaborate on Innovation to Advance Freight Rail Efficiency
The collaboration, the partners say, aims to solve a common challenge in the rail industry: billing for railcar repairs. Railcar repairs are governed by hundreds of conditional rules designed to ensure safe operations. However, the complexity of these rules often results in mechanical teams spending significant time referencing lengthy manuals and correcting paperwork errors.
To address this, Railinc developed CarLogix, an intelligent railcar repair application that guides mechanical staff through the repair recording process. CarLogix checks repair records against hundreds of industry rules in real-time, “ensuring accuracy and eliminating rework,” the company noted.
Duke students will explore how applying AI (Artificial Intelligence), mobile devices, and social media-style technologies could further improve mechanical team efficiency and knowledge sharing. This, the partners say, is especially critical for teams performing minor repairs outside of traditional repair shops, where access to computers is limited.
“This collaboration with Duke University is about bringing together innovation, academia, and industry to strengthen the rail network. We are excited to partner with students at Duke on this project and look forward to developing solutions that will improve railcar recording and accuracy—a critical need for the freight rail industry,” said Railinc President and CEO Allen West.
“At Duke, we believe innovation happens when students, faculty, and industry come together to tackle meaningful, real-world challenges. Collaborating with Railinc brings our mission to life, giving our students the chance to apply their creativity to one of the nation’s most vital industries while also creating solutions that strengthen the communities and workers it touches,” said CFCI Managing Director Adria Dunbar.
“Product development education should be rooted in apprenticeship-style, real-world problem solving. By partnering directly with Railinc, our students gain hands-on experience designing technologies that deliver immediate value—enhancing accuracy, reducing inefficiencies, and helping scale practical tools that rail professionals rely on to run their businesses,” added CFCI Executive in Residence Anna Wilson.
Beyond initial prototypes, the effort, the partners say, is expected to generate lasting benefits: “strengthening the rail workforce, improving compliance, and creating new opportunities for students to contribute to the future of a critical national industry.”




