QUOTE: Originally posted by chuckn Pages 6 and 8-10 give descriptions of what each terminal is used for and recomendations for wiring the switch up in different enviroments, command and conventional. You can pull the center track pins on both sections of a piece of track or slice the center rail with a Dremel tool to force isolation. One note of caution. Even if you isolate a block, if you move any car/loco with dual center rail pickups (aka front and rear), you can energize that block by way of the pickup rollers. We tend to focus on the rollers for picking up current, but they can also act as bridges allowing current to flow into that isolated block.
QUOTE: Originally posted by chuckn I will have to test this, but I believe you can set the track up such that a siding is only powered when the switch is thrown to the out position. This gets tricky if the siding is connect back to a main line by other means (e.g. double ended passing siding). Either switch thrown to the outside will energize the track section. This is another reason to "like" command control. Engines don't move until you tell them to!
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