FACTOID # 157: People trust Swedes! Swedish companies are the world’s least-likely to be perceived as paying bribes.
 
 Home   Encyclopedia   Statistics   Countries A-Z   Flags   Maps   Education   Forum   FAQ   About 
 
WHAT'S NEW
RECENT ARTICLES
More Recent Articles »
 

FACTS & STATISTICS    Simple view

  1. Select countries to view: (hold down Control key and click to select several)

     

     

    Compare:

     

     

  1. Select fact or statistic: (* = graphable)

     

     

     

  2. (OPTIONAL) Compare to statistic: (both need to be graphable)

     

     

     

  3. View result as:

     

       
(OR) SEARCH ALL encyclopedia, stats & forums:   

Encyclopedia > Track circuit

A track circuit is a simple electrical device used to detect the presence or absence of a train on a railroad track, used to inform signallers and control relevant signals. Image File history File links Please see the file description page for further information. ... It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into Track circuit. ... A typical North American steam train In rail transport, a train consists of rail vehicles that move along guides to transport freight or passengers from one place to another. ... Railroad or railway tracks are used on railways, which, together with railroad switches (points), guide trains without the need for steering. ...

Contents

Principles and operation

The basic principle behind the track circuit lies in the connection of the two rails by the wheels and axle of locomotives and rolling stock to short out an electrical circuit. This circuit is monitored by electrical equipment to detect the presence or absence of the trains. Since this is a safety appliance, fail-safe operation is crucial; therefore the circuit is designed to indicate the presence of a train when failures occur. On the other hand, false occupancy readings are disruptive to railroad operations and are to be minimized. A locomotive (from Latin loco motivus) is a railway vehicle that provides the motive power for a train, and has no payload capacity of its own; its sole purpose is to move the train along the tracks. ... Rolling Stock banner Rolling Stock was a newspaper of ideas and a chronicle of the 1980s published in Boulder, Colorado by Ed Dorn and Jennifer Dunbar Dorn. ... Safety engineering is used to assure that a life-critical system behaves as needed even when pieces fail. ...


Track circuits allow railway signalling systems to operate semi-automatically, by displaying signals for trains to slow down or stop in the presence of occupied track ahead of them. They help prevent dispatchers and operators from causing accidents, both by informing them of track occupancy and by preventing signals from displaying unsafe indications. It has been suggested that safeworking be merged into this article or section. ...


The basic circuit

schematic drawing of track circuit for unoccupied block
schematic drawing of track circuit for unoccupied block
schematic drawing of occupied track circuit
schematic drawing of occupied track circuit

A track circuit typically has power applied to each rail and a relay coil wired across them. Each circuit protects a certain section of track, such as a block. These sections are separated by insulated joints, usually in both rails. To prevent one circuit from falsely powering another, the electrical polarity is reversed from section to section. Circuits are commonly battery-powered at low voltages (3 V DC) to protect against line power failures. The relays and the power supply are attached to opposite ends of the section in order to prevent broken rails from electrically isolating part of the track from the circuit. Image File history File links Clear_track_circuit. ... Image File history File links Clear_track_circuit. ... Image File history File links Occupied_track_circuit. ... Image File history File links Occupied_track_circuit. ... Automotive style miniature relay A relay is an electrical switch that opens and closes under control of another electrical circuit. ... It has been suggested that safeworking be merged into this article or section. ... The polarity of an object is, in general, its physical alignment of atoms. ...


When no train is present, the relay is energised by the current flowing from the power source through the rails. When a train is present, its axles short (shunt) the rails together; the current to the track relay coil drops, and it is de-energised. Circuits through the relay contacts therefore report whether or not the track is occupied.


Circuits under electrification

In almost all railway electrification schemes the rails are used to carry the return current. This prevents use of the basic DC track circuit because the substantial traction currents overwhelm the very small track signal currents.


To accommodate this, AC track circuits use alternating current signals instead of DC currents. Typically, the AC frequency is in the range of audio frequencies, from 91 Hz up to a 250 Hz. The relays are arranged to detect the selected frequency and to ignore DC and AC traction frequency signals. Again, fail safe principles dictate that the relay interprets the presence of the signal as unoccupied track, whereas a lack of a signal indicates the presence of a train. The AC signal can be coded and locomotives equipped with inductive pickups to create a cab signalling system. Cab signalling is any communication system used by modern trains to send track status information to the train cab. ...


In this system, impedance bonds are used to connect items which must be electrically connected but which must remain isolated for the track circuit to function.


AC circuits are sometimes used in areas where conditions introduce stray currents which interfere with DC track circuits.


Jointless track circuits

Jointless track circuits use audio frequency tuned circuits to create what amounts to a block joint.


Frequencies of the Aster SF 15 type track circuit are 1700 Hz and 2300 Hz on one track and 2000 Hz and 2600 Hz on the other. These frequencies are modulated by a small frequency.


TI21 type track circuits use the following frequencies;

A 1699 Hz Down line
B 2296 Hz Down line
C 1996 Hz Up line
D 2593 Hz Up line
E 1549 Hz Down line
F 2146 Hz Down line
G 1848 Hz Up line
H 2445 Hz Up line

A to D are used in two-track areas, while E to H are additional frequencies for use in four-track areas.


Jointless track circuits eliminate most of the impedance bonds that electrified railways would otherwise require.


Circuit failures

The circuit is designed so that most failures will cause a "track occupied" indication. For example:

  • A broken rail or wire will break the circuit between the power supply and the relay, de-energizing the relay. See exception below.
  • A failure in the power supply will de-energize the relay.
  • A short across the rails or between adjacent track sections will de-energize the relay.

On the other hand, failure modes which prevent the circuit from detecting trains are possible. Examples include:

  • Mechanical failure of the relay, causing the relay to be stuck in the "track clear" position even when the track is occupied.
  • Conditions which partially or completely insulates the wheels from the rail, such as rust, sand, or dry leaves on the rails. This is also known as "poor shunting".
  • Conditions in the trackbed which create stray electrical signals, such as muddy ballast (which can generate a "battery effect") or parasitic electrical currents from nearby power transmission lines.
  • Equipment which is not heavy enough to make good electrical contact or whose wheels must be electrically insulated.
  • A rail break between the insulated rail joint and the track circuit feed wiring would not be detected.

Failure modes that result in an incorrect "track clear" signal may allow a train to enter an occupied block, creating the risk of a collision. They may also cause the warning systems at a grade crossing to fail to activate. A track bed is the term used to describe the groundwork onto which a railway track is laid. ...


Different means are used to respond to these types of failures. For example, the relays are designed to a very high level of reliability. In areas with electrical problems different types of track circuits may be used which are less susceptible to interference. Speeds may be restricted when and where fallen leaves are an issue. Traffic may be embargoed in order to let equipment pass which does not reliably shunt the rails.


Sabotage is of course possible. In the 1995 Palo Verde derailment saboteurs connected sections of rail which they had displaced in order to cover up the breaks in the track they had made. The track circuit therefore did not detect the breaks and the engineer was given no indication to stop. The 1995 Palo Verde derailment happened on October 9, 1995, an Amtrak Sunset Limited train derailed near Palo Verde, Arizona. ...


Transmission of status

Track circuit occupancy status, along with status of other signal and switch related devices, is almost always integrated with a local control panel as well as a remote rail control center. If the track circuit contains a relay, it can be connected to device for sending status information via a communications link. The status can then be displayed and stored for archival for purposes of incident investigation and operations-related analysis. Many signalling systems also have local event recorders for recording track circuit status.


History

The track circuit was invented by William Robinson, making possible the automatic block signal. Robinson's block signal was first demonstrated in model form in 1870 and subsequently installed on the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad at Kinzua Township, Pennsylvania. It consisted of electrically operated discs located on top of small signal huts, and was based on an open track circuit. He improved on this with the closed track circuit, replacing the earlier installation in 1872 [BrMc81, Ph93]. William Robinson (1838 - 1935) was a practical gardener and journalist whose ideas about wild gardens spurred the movement that is still recognized as the English cottage garden, an outgrowth of the British Arts and Crafts movement. ... A physical model is used in various contexts to mean a physical representation of some thing. ... The Philadelphia and Erie Railroad was originally called the Sunbury and Erie Railroad. ...


The "open" operation of the first track circuit installation meant that the short circuit made by the train powered the signal to stop. This was not fail-safe, and was soon changed. Safety engineering is used to assure that a life-critical system behaves as needed even when pieces fail. ...


The United Kingdom was slow to adopt track circuits, partly perhaps because they were an American invention, and partly because many carriages had wheels with wooden hubs, which would not operate track circuits.[citation needed]


Accidents caused by lack of track circuits

Numerous accidents would have been prevented by the provision of track circuits, including:

The Quintinshill rail crash on 22 May 1915, which killed 227 people, was the worst ever rail crash in British history. ... The Hawes Junction rail crash occurred on December 24, 1910, in Cumbria, England, when a busy signalman forgot about a pair of bank engines waiting at his starting signal and allowed two trains into the one block section. ...

Accidents when track circuits fail

Much rarer are accidents caused when the track circuits themsleves fail:

  • Cowan rail crash when sand on the rails allows signal to clear behind failed train.
  • Big Bayou Canot train disaster when a railroad bridge was damaged by a barge impact but the track circuits were not interrupted, giving no indication to the train crew.
  • Because the wires of a track circuit are not connected right at the end of the rails, a breakage in the rails in this "blind spot" can lead to an accident.

The Cowan rail disaster occured on 6th June 1990 when a special passenger train hauled by steam locomotive 3801 failed while attempting to climb the steep gradient from the Hawkesbury River to Cowan, New South Wales, Australia. ... The Big Bayou Canot train disaster of September 22, 1993 is the worst disaster in the history of United States railroad company Amtrak. ...

Track circuit clips

A simple piece of safety equipment that can be carried by trains is a track-circuit clip. This is simply a length of wire connecting two metal sprung clips that will clip onto a rail. In case of accident or obstruction a clip applied to a track will indicate that that track is occupied, therefore putting signals to danger. As an example of use, if a train is derailed on a double track, and is foul of the second track, application of a clip to the second track will immediately return signals protecting the second track to danger. This procedure is a much more effective safety measure than attempting to contact a signalling centre by telephone because its effect is immediate and automatic.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Track circuits - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (915 words)
A track circuit is a simple electric device to detect the presence of trains on the track, which can be used to inform the signalmen, and to control the relevant signals.
The track circuits on Cowan bank affected by sand on the rails were NOT indicated to any signalbox.
The track circuit current may be modulated at different frequencies, which can be detected by equipment on the train to provide the driver with a signal indication inside the cab.
Track circuit - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (428 words)
A track circuit is an electrical circuit used to detect the presence of a train.
The fail-safe design of a track circuit means that, should a fault such as power failure occur, the track circuit will show the track to be occupied, to prevent another train from being given movement authority onto the track.
DC track circuits are made with DC track relays and supply, and insulating block joints on each track isolate each circuit from the next along the track.
  More results at FactBites »


 

COMMENTARY     


Share your thoughts, questions and commentary here
Your name
Your comments
Please enter the 5-letter protection code

Want to know more?
Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 


Lesson Plans | Student Area | Student FAQ | Reviews | Press Releases |  Feeds | Contact
The Wikipedia article included on this page is licensed under the GFDL.
Images may be subject to relevant owners' copyright.
All other elements are (c) copyright NationMaster.com 2003-5. All Rights Reserved.
Usage implies agreement with terms.