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If one insists on having a live traveling loco cross from DCC control to DC, it would have to be done more like a reversing section rather than a short section of the crossover turnouts. Otherwise one of the model's trucks will be powered from DC while the other is getting DCC signal. That doesn't sound kosher to me.
Even still, how will the loco behave at that point? If the DC track polarity is opposite to the direction of travel in DCC, we likely have some interesting dance happening.
The problem I see with attempting to transition between DC and DCC track is that once the locomotive bridges the gap between them they're no longer electrically isolated.
I'm sure that could potentially confuse the decoders, but I'd also be worried about potential damage to your command station if you are suddenly feeding a DC voltage through its track circuit.
...I don't think you really care whether there is DCC on one side and DC on the other. What you really care about is just cutting the power if there's a short, where "short" means excessive current draw, no matter what causes it. And you need to be able to detect this fast enough that you cut the power before anything like the DCC booster is damaged (assuming that it doesn't just trip its own overload protection). What else about this am I missing?
But in my experience RTR DC locos from the last 35 years or so aren't very easily damaged by DCC power. It just ruins the suspension of disbelief when they run into a DCC block.
It'd need to monitor one voltage meeter to see if there's AC on it (ie, the DCC signal). Then it'd need to watch the other to see if there's DC on it. THEN it'd need something to sense when there's a short (which you'd get if you had something across the crossover, right?). If there's a "yes" to all three conditions, it'd need to trip a relay to kill the power to a section of track on each side of the gap.