Thanks to all for the informative comments, I had never heard of anything like floating switch and I know Hollywood many times shows something to make it more exciting. I thought maybe something had shorted out causing this. I figured this would be the right place to get the "real" truth about this and glad some of you also watched it. I appreciate the comments, this is the first time I started a forum of my own, but had commented on many Funny comment about Lionel doing this and somebody must have a trainset growing up. ha ha
Growing up in a RR (Frisco!!!) family I have a working knowledge of what goes on. Dad did work in the yards checking car seals for tampering especially those holding cigs and booze. 3rd trick and no tower lights like today, so he had to be very careful swinging his battery lantern as he moved around. Later he got into yard office where he worked the rest of his career, and the road crews always hung out in the office as trains were made up. Know the basics of a switch but not all the updated technology as he died in 1973, CTC had started. I do remember Dad taking me and my cousin for a walk along the Frisco tracks from downtown to the yard where he worked, about 10-12 miles. He made us stay way over near Union Station because of the pneumatic switches, we saw the tubes and could get a foot caught in one. We walked on MoPac property for a bit and Dad explained the situation and no problem. Still one of my great memories but never walked that far since that time.
I remember once (in the fifties) when I was going from Chattanooga to Birmingham (single track) we met a northbound train. After we cleared the switch (we had taken the siding), at the south end of the siding, the flagman lined the switch back for the main. We talked, briefly, as he was taking his gloves off.
Johnny
Cotton Belt MP104variable point switch, automatic switch .......is this different than a .....spring switch = Spring switches are used by some prototype railroads to save the crew from having to re-align the switch points after passing through the switch. The switch is sprung in one direction (typically the mainline), allowing any train to pass through the switch from the frog end without manually aligning the points.
A variable point switch (aka automatic switch) stays lined for the last route used by a trailing point switch. The trailing point movement can run through a switch lined for the other route and the points stay lined. They don't spring back.
Many yard track flop over handle type switches were of this design, even if they weren't "officially" acknowledged as such.
Jeff
Electroliner 1935 Other than pneumatic switch operators, does anyone know of fast operating switch machines. Most I am aware of take multiple seconds to operate. The video had the points moving cack and forth in a blur.
Other than pneumatic switch operators, does anyone know of fast operating switch machines. Most I am aware of take multiple seconds to operate. The video had the points moving cack and forth in a blur.
This story sounds iike another case of a TV show where the real story has been "dramatized" to make a mundane real-life event something that can fill a 30 or 60 minute TV time slot (22 or 45 minutes with advertisements).
Pneumatic switches--ah, yes! As I drank in the sight of the J that would take N&W #42 out of Bristol, I heard the switches being thrown as the headend cars and Pullmans were added to the train.
I recall in the movie "Silver Streak" a couple of switches very quickly moving - but the pacing of the movie at those points wouldn't really allow a leisurely swing. Other movies have shown the same thing. Minor detail to the average viewer.
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
Gramp Like a Lionel set. :-)
Like a Lionel set. :-)
The Lionel switches I had operated using a solenoid and they snapped over very quickly. Faster than my auto's electric door locks.
My first reaction to what was discussed was - RANDOM DRUG TEST immediately.
Does not seem to fit the real world.
Most switch machines that I've been into or around (GRS/National/etc) are like giant Swiss mechanical watches. Lots of internal motion to generate forces to move the points at agonizingly slow speed. With most switch points in main tracks in CWR territory being 39'-0" rascals held in place with hook plates instead of massive heel blocks, it takes considerable force to "bend" those rascals with the gearing in the switch machine. (no longer a hinged joint at the heel block)
jeffhergertOnce we had a power switch that wouldn't lock up, the points kept moving.
Tentatively this sounds like a control problem, the kind of thing that can happen if you have too many people tinkering with circuitry or code without systems testing.
If you have a power switch that is intended to 'default' to being fully locked in one position, and the limit switch or sensor that indicates full position in the opposite hand is defective in some way (or 'mandatory' engagement of locking does not complete) a 'transaction-based' programming model might try to cycle the switch back to starting position and then 'repeat the exercise hoping for different results'. The same action might be true for CTC or PTC switches that must confirm 'route integrity' remotely. Now at least some of the time this might actually work, so it makes sense to repeatedly cycle some number of times (well clear of any potential switch occupancy, of course) but some idiot enamored of modular code might write the 'excursion' actions into one module that could become divorced from other parts of the signal system, or have higher execution priority or whatever. The described action is just what I'd expect from a switch trying to lock in 'commanded' position, failing to confirm, and return-cycling.
Another possibility might be water or mechanical damage to some of the wiring or components, leading to low-level cycling of the hardware.
Why the whole of this action would not always and everywhere be accompanied by the most restrictive aspects in the rule book, I can't say. But weird things can happen with computers when too many cooks have been tampering with recipes.
Of course the actual actuation time will be bone slow for anything but a pneumatic switch, and the lockout timer on many of these things is specifically hardwired to preclude just the sort of cycling that control shorting or 'switchman's remorse' might cause...
To me, an automatic switch (AKA variable point switch) is a hand throw switch that can be run through. The points stay lined for the last route used by a trailing move. Remote controlled or dual controlled power switch would be a better term.
Once we had a power switch that wouldn't lock up, the points kept moving. It was said there was a bug in the control system when too many changes had been 'stacked' into the system. I don't know if that was really the problem. I don't believe the signal cleared up because the switch didn't lock up.
Re
The screenwriter probably had a Lionel set when growing up. The electric switches had points that sometimes would move back and forth rapidly when there was a wiring problem.
Deggesty Semper Vaporo Ummm?! this is only 5/27/20, how could it have "aired" (past tense) on 9/11/20? He has a time machine; be sure to look for it on 9/11/20.
Semper Vaporo Ummm?! this is only 5/27/20, how could it have "aired" (past tense) on 9/11/20?
Ummm?! this is only 5/27/20, how could it have "aired" (past tense) on 9/11/20?
He has a time machine; be sure to look for it on 9/11/20.
My bad. Thanks to Comcast's on demand, I was able to see the episode and it did play on May 11. The switch points are seen by the engineer in his headlights as he is approaching them and they are in a constant back and forth motion which is not to me, anything I think would ever happen. Most switches I have ever worked on had considerable friction even when well graphited and in good condition. No way could they oscillate as shown in the story. But that is the device to show the train derailing.
BaltACD It is not unheard of for something to break in interlockings - break, such that a improperly lined route can display a clear signal.
It is not unheard of for something to break in interlockings - break, such that a improperly lined route can display a clear signal.
That is true. There was one time in my career that the switch did not throw when I wanted it to, and the lights on my board were indicating that it had thrown. No disasters, but a very flummoxed operator and a brand-new throw rod when the problem was found.
Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
Semper Vaporo
Pkgs.
SunnylandI was watching TV show 9-1-1 when they responded to a nasty train wreck. It showed the tracks at a switch moving back & forth and the engineer put it in emergency with many cars on the ground. Had never seen anything like this before and asked some railfan friends on FB what happened. Here is one reply: "That’s called a floating switch when it does not lock in when thrown automatically. "I have never started a forum before and am attaching pics I took from TV, the inner 2 tracks were the ones moving back & forth. Wondered what some of you will have to say about floating switch, does it happen very often ?
It aired on Monday at 5/11/20 @ 8/7c and I thought it was a construct of a hollywood screenwriter needing something to cause a train wreck. As switch motors are geared to be high force slow motion devices and pneumatic switch operators are fast but snap operating, the scene was clever but totally imaginary. If the operating rod(s) broke, and the locking rods were also broken, it is possible that points could drift but not likely swing wildly as in the scene.
It is no unheard of for something to break in interlockings - break, such that a improperly lined route can display a clear signal.
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The "inner two tracks" are the points; that's what would float.I would have to assume that there was a signal connected to the switch if it were in mainline territory. Said signal should not have cleared in either direction, so any derailments would have been the result of running a signal.If this switch were an automatically-thrown switch in the yard (I threw these by the hundreds every day I worked), again, the signal displayed should be dark, since you shouldn't get a signal until after the switch has locked itself in position. Also, in yards, where movements are to be made at "Restricted Speed", one of the things you must be able to stop short of (within half the range of vision, the rule now says) is a switch not properly lined. So again, it's on the engine crew if something untoward happens.
I was watching TV show 9-1-1 when they responded to a nasty train wreck. It showed the tracks at a switch moving back & forth and the engineer put it in emergency with many cars on the ground. Had never seen anything like this before and asked some railfan friends on FB what happened. Here is one reply: "That’s called a floating switch when it does not lock in when thrown automatically. "I have never started a forum before and am attaching pics I took from TV, the inner 2 tracks were the ones moving back & forth. Wondered what some of you will have to say about floating switch, does it happen very often ?
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