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Showing posts with label info. Show all posts

Friday, May 28, 2021

10 Years of The Position Light - A Milepost

Not sure anybody noticed, but May 28th marks a decade since I started this blog as a place to archive long form signaling related content I had previously published on old school web forums with limited visibility. Due to an odd coincidence at the beginning, I have accidentally committed myself to and then maintained a 49 post per year schedule with signaling news, history and general overviews of some of the more obscure topics such as interlocking horns. Over the past decade there was been way more bad news than good and I can't say that things stand to improve in that regard, but it has still been my privilege to mark the passage of so many pieces of both railroad and technological history. If one was to ask what I was most proud of it would likely be the comprehensive surveys of PRR Main Line and Port Road signaling along with the documentation of the late great METRA interlocking tower interiors.


I'm sure a lot of people out there would use this sort of milestone to pivot to some completely new/different project like elevators or some sort of history of history of the Bell System, however as tempting as they are I still have a whole bunch of unfinished projects lined up for The Position Light and I hope you all will still around for them.  These include, but are not limited to:

  • A B&O Main Line signaling survey between Washington DC and Pittsburgh, PA that features most of the now removed CPLs

  • Finishing up the remaining PRR Main Line interlocking towers that I have interior photos for including ZOO, PARK, CORK, STATE and AR.

  • Additional LIRR and METRA towers that I still have unreleased photos for.

These are just the marquee items as I will still keep pumping out the content, rain or shine, good news or bad, 49 posts per year.  Thanks for reading.  Check out my Youtube Channel where I do signaling related live-streams on a somewhat bi-weekly basis.  Also remember to like, subscribe and don't forget to hit that bell notification. 😏

Thursday, March 12, 2020

Thinking About the Price of Safety

I have been a pretty vocal critical about the value of PTC when it comes to general rail safety.  It's the sort of thing that sounds great in practice, but looking at the number of lives lost in PTC preventable rail accidents the costs are seriously hard to justify.  Anyway, in this day of weighing the cost of hundreds of thousands of lives lost due to a pandemic against the severe cost of an economic depression, the folks at 538 took a crack at trying to figure out how much the government should spend to save a life.  It provides some additional metrics beyond "lives" or even Quality Adjusted Life Years that get to people's own subjective valuation of risk.

Sunday, December 22, 2019

Hot Stuff! Railroad Point Heaters and Snow Melters.

Railroads are normally pretty tolerant of ice and slow with even the snowiest lines through the Sierra Nevada or Rocky Mountains needing the use of specialized rotary snow ploughs only about once a decade.  However when rails need to move back and forth at the point of a switch, snow and ice can quickly gum things up and that is where the wonderful world of switch heating comes into play.  Despite there really being only two main heating methods and a handful of fuels, the solutions employed still show a fair bit of diversity, even within the railroads themselves.

SEPTA losing a bet on the necessity of point heaters at 16TH ST Jct.

 The two main methods of clearing the movable parts of switches are heating the rails directly or blowing hot air in and around them.  These two categories are then divided by the type of fuel beings used to do the job.  Currently the most common are electricity, gas (methane or propane) and kerosene. The decision of which point heating solution to use is typically based on the severity of the winter events any given interlocking is likely to encounter.  Erring on the side of caution may result in unnecessary maintenance and capitol expenditures.  On the other hand insufficient point heating capacity may not only fail in its intended role, but also succeed in making the problem worse.  Railroads may further adopt the use of snow plans where the use of top quality snow melting is restricted to certain locations with the remainder being straight railed and taken out of service for the duration of the snow event.


The most basic type of point heating solution is that of the smudge pot.  Named for an agricultural device designed to ward off the effects of frost, a railroad smudge pot is a long, flat metal tank holding 2-5 gallons of kerosene with a wick at one end.  Placed under the running rails and ignited, the open flame will heat the rail sufficiently to ward off snow and ice accumulation within a certain vicinity.


 Smudge pots can be left in place year round or deployed by maintainers in advance of a weather event.  Regardless of the placement, smudge pots must by lit and extinguished manually and are generally not used anywhere a switch needs to be in service during a significant snow/ice event. They also replaced the practice of igniting oil or other flammable liquids directly on the track structure, although that can still be used to free frozen points in an emergency.


 Moving up a notch in power, the electrically powered rail heater works in much the same fashion as a smudge pot, but without the need for on-site manual operation or fuel oil and with a significantly larger area of effect.  The hardware device could not be simpler, usually consisting of an electric-range style heating elements strapped along the length of the outer rail.


In the above example of an electric resistance point heater in operation, the water has evaporated along the entire length of the heating element.  When encountered in the nighttime the elements glow a cherry red, again similar to a household electric range.


Where heating elements on the outside rail prove insufficient, additional coils can be placed under the points themselves where the radiant heat would work to keep the mechanism clear.  One major drawback to electric contact point heaters is the somewhat limited amount of BTUs available.  A practically sized heating coil can only output so much heat and in extremes of temperature and precipitation and electric contact point heater will not only fail to melt the snow as it accumulates, but the snow that does melt may re-freeze between the ties and the points making mechanical clearance nearly impossible.


Electric heaters also require a fair amount of railroad and utility infrastructure.  Not only do the interlocking locations need a power supply with sufficient current available to power tens of feet of heating element, they also need additional cabling between the power supply and the switches themselves and in the long run high voltage electrical cabling in wet conditions can become a maintenance issue.


When the electricity supply either isn't available or isn't enough then it's time to break out the burner bars that apply a gas flame directly to the rail.  Generally impractical to use except on the outside rail, it was common to add an additional shroud to trap the heat around the rail, although these since fallen out of favor due to issues related to inspection or snagging equipment.  


The propane heaters shown above generally succeed in hiding the flame and and often create a whistling noise while in operation.  Some older installations that use municipal natural gas lines create more visible flames, sometimes to the alarm of passers by who think that something has gone wrong.

Sunday, January 12, 2014

North American Signaling Dialects

Signal aspect systems are a lot like languages.  Many times they basically saying the same thing, but as you move around from place to place you might find those things spoken or pronounced in slightly different ways.  In North America there is a fairly common language with single Green, Yellow and Red indicating Clear, Approach and Stop.  There are common concepts like approach the next signal at some speed, or proceed at some speed through turnouts or proceed prepared to stop within half vision.  In the coming year I will be taking a close look a all of the major signal aspect systems, noting their various strengths, weaknesses, quirks and similarities, but I wanted to start out highlighting some of the common patterns that separate one system from another.

Y/Y vs *Y* Advance Approach 

Y/Y Adopted By: Seaboard, CSX, New York Central, New Haven, Southern, N&W, Reading
*Y* Adopted By: NORAC (Conrail), CN, CP, IC, UP, UP, Caltrain

This is one of the more common distinctions in the Eastern half of the United States. Advance Approach informs the engineer to be prepared to stop at the second signal.  It is used in short block situations (ie less than 2 miles at normal speeds) where a 3-block system using only Approach would not provide sufficient stopping distance. I'm sure I could look up the real history of how this dichotomy developed between using Y/Y and Flashing Yellow for Advance Approach, but I'm just going to turn this into a story between the New York Central, which was a Y/Y road and the PRR, which ultimately became a *Y* road, or at least its successors did.

You really needed a second head for that?  This ain't semaphores.
 The story wasn't originally between Y/Y and *Y* because flashing indications did not become popular until the 1950's.  The real story is that Speed Signaled railroads always had the option to overload the Approach Medium indication for 4-block signaling.  Instead of allowing the engineer the discretion to stop by the second signal the speed signaling method would enforce a 30mph restriction at the first signal.  The Y/Y method, on the other hand, informed the engineer of congestion instead of making him guess if the problem was a diverging movement OR congestion (one reason that route signaled roads went for Y/Y if it was free).  When flashing indications became available all the roads that had never bothered to deal with 4-block signaling or had just overloaded their Approach Medium signals adopted *Y* because it was both free and allowed blocks to be shortened without having to modify the wayside signal units.

Y/Y Advance Approach is one of those old-timey things that have somehow survived into the modern era.  It was used back in the days of the semaphore by a few high density railroads that didn't want to overload Approach Medium and didn't want to constrain their engineers.  Conrail had the oppurtunity to put it to bed with the formation of  NORAC, but unfortunately CSX is a bit more hidebound and has been turning back the clock when re-signaling former Conrail territories.

Y/Y vs Y/G Approach "Diverging"

Y/G Adopted By: East of Mississippi and Canada
Y/Y Adopted By:West of Mississippi

Approach "Diverging' signals, either speed or route, are those that instruct the engineer to approach the next signal at a proscribed speed in order to safely take a diverging route. This is an interesting East vs West thing I don't really know where it came from, although I suspect lower quadrant semaphores had a role to play.   The east almost universally uses Y/G to instruct engineers that they are about to diverge, while out West Y/Y is the standard.  Canada beaks the tie with Y/G, but it still makes me wonder why the western roads wanted to be different. Like I said I suspect it has something to do with lower quadrant semaphores as Y./G is actually severely under utilized in the west, having only been recently resurrected for Approach Limited type indications.

Route signaling, but Yellow over Green still means diverge.

Y/Y vs Y/R/G Approach Slow

Y/R/G Adopted By: New York Central, Seaboard, Reading, NJT,
Y/Y Adopted By: PRR, Caltrain, Amtrak, B&M (Guilford), Conrail, Canada

Here is a Speed Signaling special that certainly doesn't apply anywhere out west as all those guys use Y/Y for Approach Diverging.  Another interesting point here is that sensible signal aspect systems like NORAC allow bot BOTH versions of Approach Slow, yet member railroads show distinct preferences for which they tend to adopt.  Approach Slow is exactly what it says on the tin.  Y/Y is an obvious choice because if Y/G is Approach Medium, downgrading the lower head to Y reduces the speed to Approach Slow.  Of course Y/R/G is also an obvious choice since Y/G/R is Approach medium and moving the Green to the lower head downgrades it to slow.  Y/R/G is the position theory version and Y/Y the color theory version.  For roads that already adopted Y/Y for Advance Approach Y/R/G is what you are left with.  Unfortunately this requires the use of so called "three headed monsters" and also precludes Approach Slow from being displayed on dwarfs.


Whole lot of slashes going on.
Looking back at NORAC which employs both methods it is interesting to see which member roads choose to use which signal.  Conrail generally went with Y/Y once it standardized system wide in the 1990's.  Amtrak has also been a big user of Y/Y.  On the other hand NJT has made frequent use of Y/R/G as has SEPTA.

R/Y/G vs R/Y/*G* Medium/Approach Medium

Y/R/G Adopted By: NORAC, D&H, NS,Caltrain, B&M
Y/R/*G* Adopted By: Seaboard, CSX, NYC, Reading,C&O

Typically trains run on the model of prepare to diverge, diverge, proceed.  However when where finf a situation where one needs to diverge, then immediately diverge again you need a special "combination" signal that provides explicit speed/route instruction for the first action and then the next.  Now, the majority of railroads have tended to eschew these sorts of signals, either providing interlocking exit signals or allowing trains to diverge over a signal where the immediate action is implied from the preceding signal or over restricts the train for the next signal (think Medium Approach instead of Medium Approach Medium).

I like to call this one "The Christmas Tree"
 Anyway, one of the strangest splits in signaling practice is the use of R/Y/G for Medium Approach Medium vs Medium Approach Slow.  With CSX and the former New York Central on board with the Medium Approach Slow it would seem that that is the standard, however it is somewhat baffling why those railroads would have so many situations where one encounters a medium speed route right before a slow speed route.  Slow speed switches are actually pretty rare so why were those roads installing them enough to make Medium Approach Slow so necessary? Well the answer is that sidings would have single dwarf signals at their exit points.  While the turnout might be Medium Speed, they would be signaled at Slow Speed, hence the need for Medium Approach Slow.  In fact the New York Central didn't even have a Medium Clear dwarf indication. As time passed and better siding exit signals were provided Medium Approach Medium was created by using the flashing indication.

When Conrail and the other Northeast roads created NORAC this anachronism was thrown out and R/Y/G was given over to the now more common Medium Approach Medium.  In fact Conrail didn't even bother to adopt any Medium Approach Slow indication.  Where sidings were equipped with slow speed exit signals they were upgraded to show Medium Clear using G/*R* from G/R Slow Clear. Again, the reversion of R/Y/G M-A-M to R/Y/*G* on former Conrail territory being changed to Seaboard signaling can be considered a step backwards on CSX's part.

R/Y/Y vs R/*Y*/(R) Diverging Approach Diverging

R/Y/Y Adopted By: UP, BNSF
R/*Y*/R Adopted By: Southern, N&W, DRG&W, BNSF

This is the same issue as above only as seen in route signaled systems.  One would assume that R/Y/Y would be the default seeing as how Y/Y is the standard Approach Diverging indication.  However R/Y/Y requires three heads and when one is upgrading a Restricted Speed siding into a signaled siding it would be nice to not have to modify the two headed searchlight with a lower head that can display Y, R or L.  The easy solution for signal engineers in the 1950's with newly reliable flashing relays was to use R/Y for Diverging Approach and R/*Y* for Diverging Approach Diverging.




 This has resulted in R/*Y* (or R/*Y*/R) becoming more popular than R/Y/Y.  In the east the N&W adopted it with the Southern adopting a variation for use with slow speed entry and exit signals.  Out west the R/Y/Y is the official indication for UP system wide, but most of the former DRG&W territory uses R/*Y* via special instruction.  BNSF actually uses both although they are given different names with R/Y/Y being Diverging Approach Diverging and R/*Y* Diverging Approach Medium.  R/*Y* is more popular due to the needs for only two signal heads

R/Y/R Medium Approach

R/Y/R Only Adopted By: NYC, Reading, D&H, N&W, Canada, B&M

One expects rare signal indications to require three heads.  Approach Slow, Medium Approach Medium and the like aren't the sorts of signals one will see displayed every day.  However quite a large number of railroads adopted systems that only allowed Medium Approach to be displayed on three headed masts.  to be fair there was a time when almost all home signals were expected to have three places, if for no other reason than to allow for the use of a subsidiary semaphore in the bottom position to display R/R/Y Restricting, but quite a few railroads allowed this practice to persist well into the modern era.

No flashing needed on three headed signals.
 The PRR had a unique situation wherein it completely lacked a Medium Approach, preferring trains to diverge over Approach, but adopted one in the 1950's when flashing relays became more available. This was carried over into Conrail and NORAC with the R/*Y* indication for use on two headed masts.  Still, NORAC is the only system to adopt R/*Y* Medium Approach with others sticking with three headed masts or R/Y if that is not otherwise occupied by Restricting.  Interestingly enough CSX uses R/Y/R in territories slated for conversion to Seaboard signaling in the future, but needing NORAC signaling in the present as it is common to both systems.

R/Y vs R/R/Y Restricting

R/Y Adopted By: NYC, NORAC, C&O, N&W, EJE, RF&P, Canada
R/R/Y Adopted By: Southern, Reading, FEC
For concept so common in North American signaling I don't know of anything else with more options to be expressed.  From number plates to marker lights to flashing read and lunar white it seems that every railroad had a different way of telling trains to move slowly and not crash into stuff.  One of the most interesting distinctions is between railroads that allow R/Y Restricting and Railroads that only allow R/R/Y Restricting.  I term these two 'lower yellow Restricting" and "bottom yellow Restricting".

R/R/Y restricting originally came about from very early interlocking technology where the Restricting indication would be controlled via its own lever or would utilize some different system to display since a Restricting was what one would pull up when the signal would not display normally.  The early R/R/Y often involved a smaller semaphore flag or ground mounted semaphore called a subsidiary or call-on signal that would only be pulled up when the train was standing at the Stop. If the  subsidiary signal was not needed at a particular location the railroad would have the choice of just providing a red marker or just assuming the crew could tell a main signal from a subsidiary signal and then allow R/Y to be used for something else.  

That oddly shaped lower head is the last vestige of the "subsidiary" signal.

If the second head wasn't present you would have one main signal with one subsidiary far down on the post.This ultimately resulted in the bottom yellow form of Restricting where two headed signals need a gap between the heads to change a Diverging Approach into Restricting.

Mind the gap.
 Railroad not using subsidiary signals or not using them exclusively would then have the choice of using R/Y for Restricting, but that would then limit Medium Approach to a signal with three heads (see above) or simply not employing that particular indication. Until NORAC and its option of R/*Y* this was the choice that railroads faced, two head Medium Approach and three head Restricting or three head Medium Approach and two head Restricting.

Y vs L or *R* Restricting

R/Y or R/R/Y Adopted By: Most Eastern Roads, C&O, Canada
L or *R* Adopted By: Most Western Roads, Seaboard, B&O, PRR

The final piece of signaling dialect I plan to tackle today is the age old argument between making Restricting the old man out with a strange color or having to flash or by making something else the odd man out by giving Restricting a yellow slot on the lowest head.  Incidentally all of the position light systems, ie the PRR, B&O and N&W, all count as being in the second camp as their forward slash would count as lunar in a color light system.  This is of course clear on B&O and Amtrak where that slash is also colorized lunar.

Thanks Seaboard Coast Line, you just had to be different.
  Not counting position lit systems non-yellow Restricting is most popular out west with Lunar being the previous standard that has now been supplanted with *R* as they avoids the need for second or third heads at absolute signals.  The only exception is CSX whose Seaboard system made exclusive use of Lunar.  The Seaboard made use of Lunar very sparingly, usually only where trains would need to enter a yard, but with CSX's expanded use we are seeing quite a few 4-lamped signal heads.  Again with all its recent re-signaling CSX seems to have passed up an opportunity to adopt *R* and eliminate yet another of its signaling kludges. 

Anyway, I could go on and on with this sort of thing, but these are the major ones and I will be referring to them as i explore the various signal indication systems used in North American in my upcoming series Better Know a Signaling System.

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Greetings

Hey, Jersey Mike (aka Sturmovik Dragon) here and I wanted to create this first port explaining the purpose of this new Blog.  This is designed as an extension to my existing railroad photo blog over on Live Journal.  I have been posting on LJ for about 5 years now and what was originally intended as a personal blog designed to share all those Web 1.5 personal tidbits morphed into my primary venue for sharing my railroad related photo essays. 

I have never been pleased with LJ as an outlet for this creative content as, frankly, LJ, tends not to be viewed as very authoritative or serious so I am using this new forum as a way to help increase my legitimacy and visibility.  This will not be a blind mirror of what is located on my old LJ account.  Although there will be a great deal of cross posting I will also be posting new content that is more specifically signaling related.  Some will be brief news, others will be long format technical essays first posted on a British signaling forum.  I also intend to go back into my archives and post update essays of both classic photo sets that I never placed online and my older photo essays that didn't really have a lot of meat to them.

Anyway if you are reading this that means you either are heading through the archives or following a link from one of my other blogs or forums. While I may in time change this into my sole outlet for my photo essays, I think the LJ site will continue to serve as the primary home to my general interest essays with re-posting here.