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Old January 10th 05, 12:18 PM posted to uk.transport.london,cam.transport
Clive D. W. Feather Clive D. W. Feather is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Jul 2003
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Default Cambrige - London traffic up 75%

In article , Clive Coleman
writes
In message , Clive D. W. Feather
writes
Otherwise all those points are set to "needed" (causing them to move
if they're currently wrong). One the train passes over each set they
move back to "free" (unless another route is also holding them)

What's the chances that the points freed at Poters Bar, whist the train
was going over them, allowing the first part of the train in the right
direct and the second part by the point being able to move?


Zero.

As well as various controls in the signalling logic (note that I said
"once the train passed, modulo misspelling), there is a separate "direct
track locking". If the track circuit covering the points is not clear,
the points are not allowed to move. The relay concerned is "slow to
rise" to allow for a momentary failure to detect the train.

This was allowed for in the investigation. There was no train movement
in the near future requiring those points to be swung, so there would
have been no reason for them to try to move.

In any case, the points were found to be correctly set and locked. The
accident happened because one of the blades broke free from the locking
mechanism underneath the train. The processes involved - and the errors
in assembly - are well understood by now; the question is *why* the
points were wrongly assembled.

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