In my 64 years of playing with trains and wiring, I'm DC, but DCC is basic the same wiring, is planning to avoid shorts, not create them and that is all a reversing loop section is. A planned short. So I avoid them like the plague. My experience only!
Frank
ndbprrDogbone style with loops having twelve staging tracks at either end.
A diagram would help, but If I understand what has been described, I think I would recommend reversing the loops to isolate each "reversing" action to exactly 1 train entering or exiting the loops.
I guess it would also depend on: where the split for the staging tracks occurs, how much crossover action is going on, and where the crossovers are located.
If you have loops used as storage it is easy. You only get power from the switch that is algined to the yard, and not from the other one. Obviously the switches must be contrived so that both cannot be set to the yard at the same time. On a single track, that is a gimmie. On a dual track, it is not a reversing loop. Power should not go through a yard, but only to tracks that are aligned to the mane lion. Otherwise, off they should be.
DESIGN THE INTERLOCKING PLANT with its levers or switches on paper. Design it according to the rules pertaining to an interlocking plant. It should work right out of the plan. If not find the issue and fix it. Make sure each segment works as expected before moving on to the next segment.
Wiring of LION is straight forward and wroks purrfectly!
The Route of the Broadway Lion The Largest Subway Layout in North Dakota.
Here there be cats. LIONS with CAMERAS