cabman701 wrote:
I actually agree and prefer crossings where the bells shut off after the gates lower
(obviously I'm in a bit of minority though.)
Anyhow... I understand the concept of the crossing being "closed" when the gates
are down. But what about a crossing with just lights and bells only?
Why does the bell stay active the whole time and doesn't shut off when the train
enters the crossing?
Just something to ponder...
For me that's just the way it always was. {shrug}
I'd put a shunt down on the track circuit walk around looking at all the lights and
the bells would be ringing the whole time. It'd be creepy for them to shut off.
Wig-Wags too.
When they quit ringing it means to me... the XR has picked up and the gates are
going to clear. When the gates don't clear it's like.. "uh-oh, some thing's wrong :/"
There were some "normally down" XR's out there too tho. :)
And akin to them were the scary U5 "shunt boxes" instead of wired for an "NWP"
(normal switch repeater relay).
So that's why the bells being cut out doesn't sound right to me. Kinda spooky.
Older crossings with just lights and bells ("crossing bells") or with just a Wig-Wag
(or two) were wired simply. The XR dropped away (or picked up) and everything
would come to life.
"the bells are only for pedestrians" -SP official word
They were wired simply and straight forward, they weren't wired like the "signals"
with all their "double-triple-quadruple checks".
Alvin in AZ
ps- Did any of that make a lick of sense? LOL :)