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#1
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Was at London Bridge the other day platform 6 waiting for a Bedford
train watching trains pass through the platform and noticed that signal L100 which appears as a 2 aspect but actually capable of showing double yellow had a indicator box at side which was showing CD this then changed to RA the signal was showing the same aspects during the time the sign changed. anyone explain what this was etc. |
#2
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#3
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Was at London Bridge the other day platform 6 waiting for a Bedford train watching trains pass through the platform and noticed that signal L100 which appears as a 2 aspect but actually capable of showing double yellow had a indicator box at side which was showing CD this then changed to RA the signal was showing the same aspects during the time the sign changed. anyone explain what this was etc. Most of ther trains which use this platform are Driver Only Operated, so platform staff have to assist in dispatching trains (see other thread). When station work is complete, the dispatcher turns a switch which turns the 'CD' display on, telling the driver to 'Close Doors'. When the doors are closed and the orange indicator lights on the train have akll gone out, the dispatcher will turn the switch, to extinguish the 'CD' display and illuminate the 'RA', telling the driver 'Right Away'. Is the 'RA' indicator interlocked with the signal, so that it cannot be displayed if the signal is at red? Presumably the signal itself uses an LED display, so that the upper head can display green or yellow, and the lower head yellow or red, and the signal as a whole can display all four aspects R, Y, YY, and G. Peter |
#4
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On 31 Mar, 16:46, "Peter Masson" wrote:
wrote in message oups.com... Was at London Bridge the other day platform 6 waiting for a Bedford train watching trains pass through the platform and noticed that signal L100 which appears as a 2 aspect but actually capable of showing double yellow had a indicator box at side which was showing CD this then changed to RA the signal was showing the same aspects during the time the sign changed. anyone explain what this was etc. Most of ther trains which use this platform are Driver Only Operated, so platform staff have to assist in dispatching trains (see other thread). When station work is complete, the dispatcher turns a switch which turns the 'CD' display on, telling the driver to 'Close Doors'. When the doors are closed and the orange indicator lights on the train have akll gone out, the dispatcher will turn the switch, to extinguish the 'CD' display and illuminate the 'RA', telling the driver 'Right Away'. Is the 'RA' indicator interlocked with the signal, so that it cannot be displayed if the signal is at red? Presumably the signal itself uses an LED display, so that the upper head can display green or yellow, and the lower head yellow or red, and the signal as a whole can display all four aspects R, Y, YY, and G. Peter Thanks must go to the back of the class should have worked it out. |
#5
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"Peter Masson" wrote in message
... Presumably the signal itself uses an LED display, so that the upper head can display green or yellow, and the lower head yellow or red, and the signal as a whole can display all four aspects R, Y, YY, and G. I think I read somewhere that both heads can display red, but that normally the lower one is used for red. The upper head can be used in emergency to display red if the lower one has failed for any reason. BICBW. Regards Jonathan |
#6
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On Sat, 31 Mar 2007 15:45:52 GMT, "Jack Taylor"
wrote: RA = right away. Instruction to the driver of single-manned trains, initiated by a plunger pressed by platform staff, that the doors are closed, all of the door open lights are extinguished and the train is clear to depart. I've seen RA indicators at Manchester Victoria, where there are no single manned trains. Are they serving the same purpose? And, while I'm in obvious (but not to me) question mode, above the signals are larger ones that occasionally display U B in two boxes. Why? |
#7
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In article , G
writes I've seen RA indicators at Manchester Victoria, where there are no single manned trains. Are they serving the same purpose? And, while I'm in obvious (but not to me) question mode, above the signals are larger ones that occasionally display U B in two boxes. Why? They are telling the driver which route he's going to take (so he knows which speed restrictions apply and which is the next signal to obey). Normally I would suggest it's short for "Up Bolton", but Quail tells me that all directions from Man Vic are Down, and there's no Bolton line leaving the station. ["U" is normally "Up". Going "wrong road" is normally shown with an "X".] -- Clive D.W. Feather | Home: Tel: +44 20 8495 6138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Please reply to the Reply-To address, which is: |
#8
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On Sat, 31 Mar 2007 23:27:41 +0100, "Clive D. W. Feather"
wrote: And, while I'm in obvious (but not to me) question mode, above the signals are larger ones that occasionally display U B in two boxes. Why? They are telling the driver which route he's going to take (so he knows which speed restrictions apply and which is the next signal to obey). Normally I would suggest it's short for "Up Bolton", but Quail tells me that all directions from Man Vic are Down, and there's no Bolton line leaving the station. ["U" is normally "Up". Going "wrong road" is normally shown with an "X".] No, it's definitely not Bolton. The indicators are on the eastbound signals. |
#9
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G wrote:
On Sat, 31 Mar 2007 23:27:41 +0100, "Clive D. W. Feather" wrote: And, while I'm in obvious (but not to me) question mode, above the signals are larger ones that occasionally display U B in two boxes. Why? They are telling the driver which route he's going to take (so he knows which speed restrictions apply and which is the next signal to obey). Normally I would suggest it's short for "Up Bolton", but Quail tells me that all directions from Man Vic are Down, and there's no Bolton line leaving the station. ["U" is normally "Up". Going "wrong road" is normally shown with an "X".] No, it's definitely not Bolton. The indicators are on the eastbound signals. I can't help you on that one, either. According to Quail, the eastbound lines are Up/Down Rochdale Fast/Slow. I haven't got an old Quail to hand but, pre-Metrolink, the Bury lines might have been Up/Down Bury - these days they are simply known as Inbound and Outbound and are not governed by the same signalling system, in any case. |
#10
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On 31 Mar, 23:27, "Clive D. W. Feather" c...@on-the-
train.demon.co.uk wrote: They are telling the driver which route he's going to take (so he knows which speed restrictions apply and which is the next signal to obey). And normally known as 'theatre type route indicators'. Except that in the report into an accident at Euston in 1949, the inspecting officer describes them as 'a route indicator of the music hall type'. Was this a generally used term at one time, or is the inspecting officer simply confused? The report is available on the Railways Archive site, at: http://tinyurl.com/3xkk2n The reference is in paragraph 2. |
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