There's nothing wrong with the concept. I use it on my elevated track to sequence two trains on the same loop. When the "trigger track" is unoccupied, its insulated outside rail is connected only to the outside rails of the "stop track", so there should be no source of voltage across a train in the stop track. This is true no matter what transformer you are using. So I would suspect that something is not wired the way we think it is.
Is there anything other than the stop track connected to the insulated rail of the trigger track, like an accessory or a anti-derailing turnout's control rail? If there were such an accessory, powered from a voltage source different from that of the stop track, you would see the voltage difference at the stop track, but probably not when the stopped train is present. The few volts that you report might just be the difference between the stop track's 14 volts and the accessory voltage.
Bob Nelson
Bob Nelson hit it right on.
There's a little current bleeding through a bulb or coil somewhere - probably a turnout.
Rob
Thanks for the replies. All of the switches are currently manual or spring loaded so no switch motors or bulbs. There is one accessorie currently attached , a signal bridge, so I'll look at that. Also there are some long wire runs, perhaps the resistance of the wire from the long run, is enough to cause the voltage potential I'm reading. The first thing I'm going to do, next time I'm there, the layout is 40 miles away, is to make sure every track in the vacinity is attached to the 10 gauge ground bus. Thanks, Dave
There is enough voltage there that when an older F3 is sitting there, supposed to be stopped, it buzzes, but doesn't run. We are running a control block, withing a control block as a fail safe to avoid cornfield meets. This has happened when trains get out of time or sync, or if somehow a train blows through a stop track. Dave
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