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Although not themselves signals,
stops, or "trippers", or "automatic train stops", as they are
sometimes known, are a key component of the New York City subway's
signal system. They are and have always been used everywhere in the
system to force trains to stop if and when they attempt to illegally
pass a red signal (one indicating "stop"). The stop is a
T-shaped metal rod about a foot long, usually painted
bright yellow, at track level, to the right side of the track on the
IRT Division and the left on the BMT and IND Divisions. When the stop
is raised by the signal system to the "tripping" position, it engages
a "trip cock" on the wheel frame (truck) of a passing train,
which cuts power to its motors and applies its brakes in a "full
emergency" application, bringing it to a screeching halt, very
possibly causing discomfort or minor injury to passengers, but
stopping the train as rapidly as possible. That action is called
tripping the train. Every car (not just the first car) is
equipped with tripcocks.
Stops are an integral part of the signal system, and the key to its safety strategy. All signals except dwarf signals have stops. The stops are operated by a heavy mechanical spring and either an electric motor or a pneumatic valve (the original IRT was all pneumatic in this regard) - if electric power or air pressure is deenergized, or fails, the stop is raised to the "tripping" position by the spring. The signal system, therefore, drives the stop (forces it down) when conditions are safe, not "raises" it when conditions are unsafe (this exemplifies the general "fail-safe" design of the signal system.)
Although the entire purpose of stops is to prevent trains from passing red signals, the stop associated with a properly-functioning signal will not necessarily be in the tripping position when the signal is red (although the signal always will be red if the stop is up). Here are several cases where the signal is red and the stop is clear (or driven):
For a home signal indicating
"stop and stay", it is possible under certain circumstances for the
tower operator and train operator to cooperate to clear
the stop and allow the train past the signal. This is called a
call-on, and requires that a train is directly in front of the signal,
the signal showing red over red, all the switches in the route lined
up correctly, and the tower operator having operated a special
call-on button associated with the home signal. When these
conditions obtain, a third, special yellow light (the call on
aspect, shown at right) appears under the signal, and the train
operator, seeing this, presses and holds the signal's key-by button,
with which each home signal is supplied, until the stop drives and
stays down (accepting the call-on). The operator may then proceed
past the home signal at very low speed, into possibly-occupied track,
prepared to stop within vision.
As anyone who has carefully watched the trains and tracks knows, in most signalling in the New York Subway, the stops of automatic and approach signals do not come up (assume the "tripping" position) until the end of the train passes the next signal: this confers the advantage that the occupancy of the track section immediately beyond the signal can be used to drive the stop down and implement automatic key-by, clearing for the reverse running scenario, and preventing trains from tripping themselves all in one fell swoop. On the other hand, it mandates that signal control be overlapped such that there is always more than one red signal behind any train.
(Important) The central principle of signal placement and engineering is that the control lengths of the signals be so designed such that when a train running at the highest possible speed under the worst weather conditions, with any semblance of functional brakes, is tripped, it will come to a halt before encountering the other train or obstruction that is causing the signal to be red.
All signals that have a stop associated with them have a built-in check to ensure that they cannot be clear unless the stop is actually clear; if the stop is broken or frozen or jammed in the tripping position, the signal will not clear: the signal has to first want to clear, then the stop clears, then the signal clears. What is more, each signal also has a stop cycle check, to ensure that when it is ready to clear, the stop really is now in the tripping position, i.e., has the capability to trip when the signal is not clear. This feature verifies complete and correct operation before a signal can clear. Stops and signals work hand-in-hand.
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http://www.nycsubway.org/articles/signals_stops.html
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