Abingdon Update
NW Mailing List
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Thu Nov 1 21:52:50 EDT 2018
I agree that N&W's CTC installations were gold-plated, but I don't believe
wastefully so. Running trains on single track where all the sidings are
bonded, allowing trains to enter on a "diverging approach" indication
instead of "restricting" was nice. And having a separate indicator light
for each block allowed the operators to do some operational things as well
as pinpointing trouble toward which a signal maintainer could be sent.
I worked under too many half-a** penny-pinching CTC setups over the years to
not appreciate N&W's setups. The Wabash had one bonded siding between the
junction at Bement and Landers Yard at Chicago, and I believe none between
Alvordton, Michigan and Bement. You went into all those sidings on a
restricting indication. West of Decatur, towards Hannibal, they had a setup
called "manual block remote control", where the crew handled the switches
after getting a "take siding" signal. I believe that the NKP had some
bonded sidings.
And then there was the Seaboard Air Line. The CTC between Birmingham and
Atlanta had no follow-up signals. The only intermediate signals between
controlled sidings were the approach signals, and you went into the sidings
on a "restricting".
Having experienced a lot of those setups from behind the throttle, I
remembered, and appreciated, those "gold-plated" N&W setups. They bought
them that way because they could afford it, and their balance sheets didn't
suffer on account of it.
EdKing
-----Original Message-----
From: NW Mailing List
Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2018 7:38 PM
To: NW Mailing List
Subject: Re: Abingdon Update
On 11/1/2018 5:24 PM, NW Mailing List wrote:
> The US&S salesmen sold the N&W an absolutely gold plated CTC system for
> the Bristol Line (translation: more bells and whistles than they needed,)
> so no doubt the electric lock for this switch was controlled by a discrete
> 16-bit code address over the code line.
Abe,
The south end of Elkton and Stuart's Draft sidings had a spur off
of them where you had to contact the dispatcher in order for him to code
the switch before you threw it. The signal in the siding would change
from STOP to Restricting once the switch was thrown.
Jimmy Lisle
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