Indeed - I saw a FB photo today or yesterday of a train that had just used the curve owing to a signalling failure.It's a reminder to the signaller that they'll need to take certain precautions if signalling a train over that section of line. Rusty rails in themselves don't cause a line to be signed out of use, you just have to be careful when you eventually send a train along them if that line has train detection provided by track circuits.
Not allowed past the previous controlled signal, until the train has passed clear of the signal ahead of the affected track circuits.As The Puddock says, the RUST shown in a a TD berth/display/box on RTT typically is an (unofficial) reminder to a signaller that they need to carry out the relevant rule book rule in track circuit areas if the rail head is rusty or contaminated. This is because a rusty or contaminated rail head may result in the track circuit not detecting trains, hence less (automatic) protection from the signalling system.
Not allowed past the previous controlled signal, until the train has passed clear of the signal ahead of the affected track circuits.
Yes, for all intents and purposes,So essentially double block working for that section?
Interesting, thank you! I had no idea about this complication with rust on the rails.It depends on a number of factors:
- How rusty the rail head is (which includes how long it’s been rusty for, worse is new rail that has been lying around unused for a long time),
- How often trains run over it,
- What type of trains are running it,
- Weather conditions,
- Are trains accelerating or braking, or normally going at a steady speed over it,
- Type of track circuit equipment.
The best service trains for clearing rust are fully laden heavy freight trains, especially if they brake while travelling over the affected section. Even so, it normally takes multiple trains.
Even for a branch line with a regular DMU service and occasional freight train, new rail may take four or more days before enough of the rust has worn away such that the TCs work reliably.
In comparison, a main line that has been closed to all traffic for three days, but during which the weather has been wet/raining, three or four HSTs would be enough to clear the light surface rust.
At Uxbridge sidings there was a siding which had not been used for a long time, myself and one other driver had to run a train in and out of it in order to clear the rails, it took for trips,8 journeys before the signals picked up and sis before they were considered reliable.Out of interest, how easily does rust shift? Will one train do it or does it take quite a few (and does it depend on how long the rust has been there for?)