Caretta Branch - Abandoned Signal
NW Mailing List
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Wed Mar 5 12:33:29 EST 2014
The Caretta Branch was a slow-speed spur to a single tipple about 2 miles
to end of track and would not normally rate an approach signal except for
road crossings about 1/3 of a mile from the junction. Caretta was the
largest producer on the Dry Fork and could deliver 150 loads a day. Third
Dry Fork worked it daylight plus a night job when needed and could easily
block the crossings if stopped at the junction waiting for a signal. Ready
to start back to Auville and holding clear of the crossings, they would
call the dispatcher (a phone was here and at the junction) and wait for a
clear on this signal, knowing they would not have to stop at the junction.
The entire spur was slow-speed with no register / second movements (barely
room for one movement) and no need for track circuits or other
aspects--simply a go/no go hold-out signal, in effect repeating the home
signal, to protect the crossings.
Grant Carpenter
> Date: Tue, 4 Mar 2014
>
> That is possible. How short a block are we talking about?
>
> And, is there an Approach Distant signal on up the branch, or is this
> the only signal?
>
> Ben Blevins
>
>
> On 3/4/14, NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org> wrote:
> > Ben,
> > Could it have been the fact that the distance from that signal and the
> > home signal was extremely short and therefore a restricting indication
> > would be safer?
> >
> > Nathan Simmons
> > trainman51 at gmail.com
> > http://www.t-51.org
> > KI4MSK
> >
> > On 3/4/2014 16:13, NW Mailing List wrote:
> >>
> >> If I knew more about how the track circuits and distant signals to
> >> this location were arranged, then I could tell you exactly why this
> >> signal was set up this way. There was a reason.
> >>
> >> The approach aspect was omitted because they did not need it. It
> >> could be as simple as that another train would never follow one out,
> >> meaning a train passing the signal would never need to "Proceed
> >> prepared to stop at next signal", as the Approach aspect dictates.
> >>
> >> Ben Blevins
> >>
> >> On Mar 4, 2014 2:49 PM, "NW Mailing List" <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
> >> <mailto:nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>> wrote:
> >>
> >> This is the automatic advance (or approach) signal for the home
> >> signal a
> >> short block ahead at the junction with the Dry Fork Branch. The
> >> nearby
> >> grade crossing (mostly) necessitates the short block and the
> >> signal's use
> >> as a hold-out. A Stop and Proceed here indicates a Stop and Stay
> >> at the
> >> junction, but allows movement ahead to the home signal without a
> >> violation
> >> if the rear can clear the road crossing (hold-out signals usually
> >> display
> >> Stop and Stay). In this branch line situation, with a permissive
> >> indication
> >> at the junction ahead, a Clear suffices as an Approach Diverging,
> >> making
> >> the signal act much like a repeater.
> >>
> >> Grant Carpenter
> >>
> >> > Date: Sun, 2 Mar 2014
> >> >
> >> > I have a question regarding this old signal on the Caretta
> >> Branch. Does
> >> anyone know if this was the home signal for the branch's junction
> >> with the
> >> Dry Fork Branch main or a distant signal? Someone had asked me
> >> why it only
> >> had aspects for "stop" and "clear". I thought it would've had more
> >> available aspects than what it shows.
> >> >
> >> > http://www.pbase.com/railfire/image/153050851/original
> >> > http://www.pbase.com/railfire/image/154680221/original
> >> >
> >> > Jeff Hawkins
> >> >
> >> > www.railsinvirginia.com <http://www.railsinvirginia.com>
> >> > www.railfirephotography.com <http://www.railfirephotography.com>
> >>
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