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Sunday, October 5, 2025

Dispatcher Signal Stacking

The story of railway signaling, like many others, has been one of technology increasing human productivity. Power operation allowed "levers" to be thrown faster, N-X machines allowed routes to be set with fewer button presses and remote operation combined with CTC allowed one person to control many miles of track. However remote control and ease of operation were not the only types of automation added to towers and dispatch offices. Fleeting allowed infrequently manipulated interlockings to do the same thing over and over and in cases where routing decisions needed to be made, automatic route setting combined with train labeling could keep track of train movements and automatically request routes as they approached junction points.

Recently another method of automation has crept into dispatch software, route stacking. While similar to automatic route setting, it is different in a significant way. Consider the following pair of photos showing an Amtrak Springfield shuttle train departing SPRING interlocking at Springfield Union Station.  


 

Within seconds of clearing the interlocking the 2N dwarf signal (upper right of the photo) changes from Stop to Restricting for an opposing movement. In the past this would signify a very attentive dispatcher, hovering over their CTC panel or video display, ready to line the new route as soon as possible. If this was an auto-routing system we would have had to wait for the opposing movement  to enter the track segment to trigger the route request.  With stacking the dispatcher simply uses their computerized dispatching interface to queue up a sequence of routes which will be executed as soon as the last established route is taken. Then they can do and pay attention to something else.  


This works well at places like Springfield where reverse movements are common. For a northbound train the dispatcher could set up a route from the 2S at SWEENEY, 12 switch reverse. Then immediately have a second route set for the 1N 13 switch reverse to the CT River Main Line.  It's not super complicated, but it is something that, due to the time penalties associated with bad routes, took a little while to catch on.

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