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Old thread but something new to add...http://www.railpictures.net/photo/682686/Proof that there was once a triple-head signal at the west end of Woodford, to indicate if the short siding turnout was thrown. (And this is Woodford. Steve has been known to be imprecise on some details. Compare this view (transformer bank lower right) and this one with the same electrical box on pole in background, which is blurred by engine exhaust in the first photo. ) By 1989 the bottom head was gone (which is similar time frame to the disappearance of the third head at the east end of Woodford). This signal mast has changed three times since 1986. Not sure why the second double-head signal replaced the first one. (Maybe it got lost in a derailment?)
Thanks jb, that makes sense. If anyone has any knowledge that contemporary practice was/is different, please weigh in. It's straightforward to change the logic.
Pardon my ignorance here but did there used to be a second siding at Woodford? I know there was a spur track or two but never knew there was a second full-on siding with controlled switches and all.
Approaching Sandcut from the north (left in the diagram): Each signal will only light if it's approach track is occupied. Approaching from the south (right, coming from Bena/Caliente) if either approach track is down both signals will light.Caliente will light both of the double-main approach tracks if either one is occupied. On the single approach it will light only if the single approach track is occupied.Guessing in the diagram that Caliente stands in for Bena so the description I gave matches Caliente (not Bena). All of this is for the searchlights prior to the upgrades in the past few years. Hope this helps.
Yes, the spur track used to be the 'short siding', with turnouts at both ends. The north end was just about underneath the hwy 58 overpass, a little north. I know this entirely from collected photos and notes found online. I have seen pictures of a two headed mast at the north end, removed in the 80s along with the bulk of the rail leaving just the spur that's there now. The south end of the spur remained fully signalled until the mid 90s. I can post links later if you like.
So the behavior you describe is not entirely consistent. Does this have something to do with north of Sandcut being double-track vs south of it being CTC?
(but I'm expecting the answer to be "it depends"). TIA
I have a question about the searchlight-era signal layout at Kern Junction, as captured in this set of proto-photos: ...https://www.redoveryellow.com/signals/tehachapi/T075C_West_Kern_Junction_46164.jpg...2. Should mast #4 be a two-headed signal? E.g., how would one signal that the southbound route is lined for the crossover to track #2?
Oh, 2007 is definitely "modern". Anything post-BNSF merger is modern. I do forget exactly when the roundhouse was razed, it was there in '81, but gone before the merger. The reduction of Bakersfield's status was definitely pre-BNSF, so don't let my stroll down memory lane sway you one way or another. But yes, the "yard lead" connected to SP for enough track for departing but waiting-for-SP trains to clear the ladder so the S-whatevers could burble around making up the next trains. The mainline was what you call "arrive", and bidirectional for through trains.