Winston Salem District Signals
NW Mailing List
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Mon Jul 20 06:15:45 EDT 2009
Before the WS line was converted to TC, what kind of signals were
there? I have a sneaking suspicion that they were Style S semaphores.
Am I close?
And, yes, at Henry the south end of the siding has automatic signals
where the home signals used to be. A lot of this makes sense now. I
just didn't know the particulars that created the situation.
Ben Blevins
On 7/16/09, NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org> wrote:
>
>
> Ben:
> Prior to TC installation, the W-S district had 19 passing sidings from
> Roanoke
> Terminal to North Winston which averaged 3574 feet in length.? There were
> 15 day telegraph offices plus Payne (24/7), so during the day, there was an
> operator every 7.4 miles.? After TC, nine sidings were removed or shortened,
> but seven passing sidings remained - Boone's Mill, Starkey, Henry, and
> others.? They became designated "storage tracks" in the timetable.? What's
> the significance of a storage track ?? I don't know.? Apparently N&W felt
> it wasn't necessary to provide power switches and signaling for these short
> sidings.? By 1972, the telegraph offices had been reduced from 15 to 9 and
> that's how N&W got the economic justification to install traffic control.
>
> As far as the signal at the north end of Henry being a controlled signal --
> remember -- a train can pass a stop-and-proceed (or restricting) signal and
> proceed at restricted speed.? North of the signal at Henry, there are?three
> back-to-back 10 degree curves and then the ruling grade (1.53%) to Ferrum.
> If you have a set of?pusher units returning light from Belews Creek with a
> one
> man crew and it's following a train grinding up the hill, it's not exactly
> the
> safest practice.? Remember the definition of restricted speed ?? "Able to?
> stop?short of? etc., etc. etc."? It's probably as quick to hold?a train at
> the
> bottom of Ferrum Hill than it is to allow it to follow at restricted speed.
> Safer too.
>
> Henry had been home to Blue Ridge Paints.? It was one of eight companies
> that
> supplied paint to N&W for hoppers.? After TC, apparently the signals at the
> south end remained, but weren't able to display a "STOP" indication.? A
> local doing "one-in, one-out" switching at Blue Ridge Paints would have had
> to follow the procedure for passing a "STOP" indication.? That's one
> person's
> interpretation.? I wish Henry Nase was still around.
> ???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? Harry Bundy
> ????
> ??
>
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