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A railroad switch (known in British English as a
point, a set of points, or occasionally a turnout) is a construction where a
railroad track A splits into two tracks B and C. It can be in two positions, which
determine (as opposed to steering) whether a train coming from A is led to B or C. A train coming from B or C is led to A anyway, but this movement is smoother if
the switch is set to the appropriate position.
The switch contains a pair of linked tapering rails that can be moved laterally (point
blades).
The position of the switch is usually changed electrically and controlled from a remote control center or signal box, from where staff also alter semaphores or light signals correspondingly. In
rarely used sidings, self-contained marshalling yards or on heritage
railways a switch might be manually operated with a points lever. The switch points of tram lines are often operated remotely by the driver.
With a right switch A and B form a straight track and C is to the right of B, with a left
switch C is to the left. A switch may also be symmetric, or tracks AB and AC may both be curved in the same
direction.
A double switch or English switch, known in British English as a double slip, is a crossing of railroads AB and CD at a small angle, with the
possibility of vehicles being made to pass from one to the other (go from A to D and from B to C). This construction is
equivalent to one crossing and four switches (two left and two right), but without the need to be able to set all four
independently: the whole double switch has only two positions: crossing and bending. A single slip works on the same principle
but only has one way to go.
The correct setting of points is fundamental to the safe running of a railway. A fatal train accident at Potters Bar, Hertfordshire,
UK occurred in May 2002, when a switch sprang to a different position as a coach crossed it. The front coach wheels therefore
progressed from A to B whereas the rear wheels slewed towards C, causing the whole coach to detach from the train and slew
sideways across the platform ahead. Thankfully the movement of the
switch occurred beneath the final coach, so that although seven people were killed, the front coaches were spared. Poor
maintenance of the points was held to be the primary cause of the crash.
Monorail systems have special switches, see the external
link , a page which includes animations.
- See also: Rail terminology (US/UK differences
highlighted)
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