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TRTS vs Off vs Right away 24/09/2014 at 13:46 #64706 | |
Peter Bennet
5402 posts |
" said:Very interesting thread, thanks.Yes " said: There were some changes recently to core-code so all loader sims should work the same (its a function of the loader) but .exe Sims are probably under the old code. The difference I recall is how far in advance the TRTS is called relative to the departure time. I believe there are plans to allow the relative time to be bespoke for locations such as Exeter where TRTS needs to allow for the level crossing. Peter I identify as half man half biscuit - crumbs! Last edited: 24/09/2014 at 13:46 by Peter Bennet Log in to reply The following user said thank you: maxand |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 24/09/2014 at 15:27 #64710 | |
GeoffM
6376 posts |
" said:With all the discussion regarding variations across different railway operators in the UK, my next question is, does SimSig handle TRTS and RW (Right-Away) identically in all sims?RA rather than RW (you have one of each ). The signaller has no knowledge of what's going on with those, even though they are controlled by the interlocking (platform staff / guard presses a plunger / keys a switch, this feeds an input to the interlocking, if the interlocking decides it's appropriate then it'll drive an output which lights the RA). TRTS in the Loader is given up to one minute early. While the ultimate aim is to be able to have it firing earlier dependent on data, it would have needed a big code reorganisation since things start changing at that one minute mark, events firing, train (quite literally) getting ready, etc. Of course, I now get reports that TRTS is being operated too early. :doh Can't win! SimSig Boss Log in to reply The following user said thank you: maxand |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 24/09/2014 at 15:57 #64711 | |
Steamer
3984 posts |
" said:Is there a consensus as to how SimSig players should respond to TRTS? The safe answer seems to be not to set a route until receiving a TRTS. Luckily, RA signals do not concern us players - they're between station staff and the driver. I know this topic has been raised before, but I just thought I'd recheck.Discussed at length here. Basically, it's up to you whether you wait for TRTS or set the route early. Factors to consider are: is the train running late/has been delayed at station, how busy is the area and how much of the layout is locked up by setting the route. There's no right answer- when running a busy terminus I wait for TRTS, at somewhere like Westbury I'll generally set the route right through the station. Only problem with setting early is that you'll get no sympathy from anyone if something goes wrong! "Don't stress/ relax/ let life roll off your backs./ Except for death and paying taxes/ everything in life.../ is only for now." (Avenue Q) Log in to reply The following user said thank you: maxand |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 24/09/2014 at 16:04 #64712 | |
pedroathome
915 posts |
" said:It would be interesting to have a minimum time set in a trains type for it to buzz up, or have a clear signal before departing (Slam door stock obliviously needing more time to ensure that all doors are closed rather newer stock where a single button press closes doors centrally automatically) James Last edited: 24/09/2014 at 16:05 by pedroathome Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 24/09/2014 at 16:14 #64713 | |
Danny252
1461 posts |
" said:It would be interesting to have a minimum time set in a trains type for it to buzz up, or have a clear signal before departing (Slam door stock obliviously needing more time to ensure that all doors are closed rather newer stock where a single button press closes doors centrally automatically)If it's a quiet station stop, you'd be surprised how quickly a slam door train can get moving again! Last edited: 24/09/2014 at 16:14 by Danny252 Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 24/09/2014 at 17:33 #64716 | |
GeoffM
6376 posts |
" said:" said:It's a bit more difficult than that though, as it can depend on the dispatch staff just as much as the train type and its direction. There are some locations where TRTS is pressed as soon as the train is in the platform, even before it's stopped! Then there's Exeter St Davids in the up direction (which probably falls into that category to a degree) where ideally TRTS would be pressed a good couple of minutes early in order to get the barriers down, yet in the down direction half a minute before is probably fine.It would be interesting to have a minimum time set in a trains type for it to buzz up, or have a clear signal before departing (Slam door stock obliviously needing more time to ensure that all doors are closed rather newer stock where a single button press closes doors centrally automatically) As an aside, areas with ARS tend to have it programmed so it won't set route until X minutes before departure from main stations. Anything from 5 minutes for stations where it is unlikely to have an adverse effect if a route is set early, to a minute or less for major London termini. SimSig Boss Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 25/09/2014 at 08:26 #64719 | |
kbarber
1742 posts |
" said:" said:It would be interesting to have a minimum time set in a trains type for it to buzz up, or have a clear signal before departing (Slam door stock obliviously needing more time to ensure that all doors are closed rather newer stock where a single button press closes doors centrally automatically)If it's a quiet station stop, you'd be surprised how quickly a slam door train can get moving again! Same if it's a busy station stop! Barking in the peak could be a bit of a nightmare, with pax running to get on to the train as it started moving. On a number of occasions I saw one jump (briefcase in hand) on to the footboard of a train that was already moving, then set about gettng a door open. :doh If we'd stopped a departing train every time someone tried to get on after right away, no train would ever have gone anywhere. (And quite frankly there were so many people on the platform we'd have been hard pressed to see that sort of thing happening anyway.) Though it has to said the local habit of getting off before the train had come fully to a stand (read still doing 20mph or so in some cases) also helped with prompt despatch Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 25/09/2014 at 08:49 #64721 | |
maxand
1637 posts |
Quote:Though it has to said the local habit of getting off before the train had come fully to a stand (read still doing 20mph or so in some cases) also helped with prompt despatchDispatching the train or the passenger? Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 25/09/2014 at 09:22 #64722 | |
delticfan
476 posts |
" said:" said:I certainly notice that in the Cov and Wolves sim particularly, the TRTS is hit as soon as the train comes to a stand. I usually give a wee bit of extra time before giving the route, rightly or wrongly." said:It's a bit more difficult than that though, as it can depend on the dispatch staff just as much as the train type and its direction. There are some locations where TRTS is pressed as soon as the train is in the platform, even before it's stopped! Then there's Exeter St Davids in the up direction (which probably falls into that category to a degree) where ideally TRTS would be pressed a good couple of minutes early in order to get the barriers down, yet in the down direction half a minute before is probably fine.It would be interesting to have a minimum time set in a trains type for it to buzz up, or have a clear signal before departing (Slam door stock obliviously needing more time to ensure that all doors are closed rather newer stock where a single button press closes doors centrally automatically) Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 25/09/2014 at 09:23 #64723 | |
Sacro
1171 posts |
" said:Then there's Exeter St Davids in the up directionAssume you mean the "Not Down" direction. Both ends can be described as "Up" (towards Paddington or Waterloo!) Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 25/09/2014 at 09:32 #64724 | |
jc92
3685 posts |
" said:" said:up is towards Taunton, Down is towards Newton Abbot. St. Davids is GWR/WR metals onto which the southern interlops, so a down southern ran up and and up southern ran down. no real question about that.Then there's Exeter St Davids in the up directionAssume you mean the "Not Down" direction. Both ends can be described as "Up" (towards Paddington or Waterloo!) "We don't stop camborne wednesdays" Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 25/09/2014 at 11:49 #64725 | |
Peter Bennet
5402 posts |
" said:" said:Where do trains travelling "not down" go thats different from up trains? Is this one of the tautologies you've mentioned before?Then there's Exeter St Davids in the up directionAssume you mean the "Not Down" direction. Both ends can be described as "Up" (towards Paddington or Waterloo!) Peter I identify as half man half biscuit - crumbs! Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 25/09/2014 at 13:54 #64727 | |
Sacro
1171 posts |
" said:" said:"Not down" would be over Red Cow, whereas the other end of platforms 1 and 3 could be up or down depending on which direction you're going. Similar to both ends being "London end" but "country end" being towards Newton Abbot." said:Where do trains travelling "not down" go thats different from up trains? Is this one of the tautologies you've mentioned before?Then there's Exeter St Davids in the up directionAssume you mean the "Not Down" direction. Both ends can be described as "Up" (towards Paddington or Waterloo!) Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 25/09/2014 at 14:47 #64728 | |
Danny252
1461 posts |
I'd argue that the Up/Down Waterloo lines end at the points west of Platforms 1/3, and that once over those points and in the station itself, you are then using the Paddington-Penzance system of Up/Down until you leave the mains at Cowley Bridge Junction. This is supported by P1 being the Down Relief and P3 the Up Relief, although both are bidirectional. It's also rather pedantic to argue over quite when a train becomes Up or Down - everybody knows which end of Exeter you mean when you say "Up End" and "Down End"! Last edited: 25/09/2014 at 14:49 by Danny252 Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 25/09/2014 at 15:30 #64729 | |
GW43125
495 posts |
" said:I'd argue that the Up/Down Waterloo lines end at the points west of Platforms 1/3, and that once over those points and in the station itself, you are then using the Paddington-Penzance system of Up/Down until you leave the mains at Cowley Bridge Junction. This is supported by P1 being the Down Relief and P3 the Up Relief, although both are bidirectional.Exeter->Dawlish=Down. Exeter->Honiton=Up. Exeter->Taunton=Up Exeter->Crediton=Up UNTIL Cowley Bridge, which then becomes down. Confusing, I know! Last edited: 25/09/2014 at 15:31 by GW43125 Reason: Screwed up the quote code! Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 25/09/2014 at 16:43 #64732 | |
Peter Bennet
5402 posts |
" said:I'm with you on that. Peter I identify as half man half biscuit - crumbs! Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 25/09/2014 at 19:24 #64735 | |
GeoffM
6376 posts |
" said:" said:The station platforms are up towards the north, ie Paddington. Waterloo trains thus leave in the down direction before immediately "changing" direction to up.Then there's Exeter St Davids in the up directionAssume you mean the "Not Down" direction. Both ends can be described as "Up" (towards Paddington or Waterloo!) SimSig Boss Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 26/09/2014 at 00:59 #64736 | |
pedroathome
915 posts |
I do like how this thread has gone from being about TRTS and RA through to the location of up and down lines at Exeter SD. Should this be split off from where the topic changed? James Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 26/09/2014 at 02:07 #64737 | |
Danny252
1461 posts |
" said:Should this be split off from where the topic changed?Ah, but now we need another two pages of discussion to determine at exactly what point the Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 26/09/2014 at 08:26 #64738 | |
lazzer
634 posts |
It went from Up to Downhill very quickly ... :whistle:
Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 26/09/2014 at 08:27 #64739 | |
kbarber
1742 posts |
" said:Quote:Though it has to said the local habit of getting off before the train had come fully to a stand (read still doing 20mph or so in some cases) also helped with prompt despatchDispatching the train or the passenger? :laugh: Well, there are a couple of good stories :whistle: Story 1 Barking, evening peak. A down road running in to platform 4 (down main), which was where the supervisor's office was. Someone gets off just a little too early... apparently it was like a cartoon - legs going like Mallard on speed as he careers along the platform, before the laws of physics get fed up with being laughed at and reassert themselves. Whereupon our friend goes base over apex down the platform. Unfortunately (for him) he was carrying a large pot of white paint; it decided to join in the fun with inevitable consequences! Our friend, having picked himself up, rushed out of the station in great embarrassment covered from head to toe in white paint. 'Is he OK?', enquired one of the staff. 'Don't worry about him, let's get this paint scooped up', the Chargeman responded; someone's decorating was cheaper than usual that year! I can vouch for that story. I didn't see it happen but the streak of white paint was still there when I went to Barking as station supervisor a year or so afterwards. Story 2 I can't vouch for, but it is very plausible and too good not to tell. At Fenchurch Street there's a mid-platform entrance accessed from a subway; before they built a great office block over the top of it, the staircases had fairly standard handrails around them. Chained to the handrails were old-fashioned chocolate machines. An up road arrives and someone decides he can get off a bit quick and get out down the subway before the train stops. Again, imagine the cartoon-like image of legs in a frenzy as he hits the platform, then careers uncontrollably along until he does a full-frontal with one of the chocolate machines. In those days there was a BT policeman stationed at Fenchurch, a proper old-fashioned British Bobby (cue Gilbert & Sullivan: '...a p'liceman's lot is not a happy one...') He observed the incident and duly proceeded to the scene. (Why does a bobby always 'observe' and 'proceed' when he could perfectly well 'see' and 'go'?) So he looks down at our friend, bleeding (not too profusely) and surrounded by broken glass and bars of chocolate, and delivers himself of the immortal line: 'We like chocolate, do we sir?' Log in to reply The following users said thank you: Steamer, AndyG, dwelham313, KymriskaDraken, Danny252, GoochyB, NCC1701, guidomcc, welshdragon, Josie, BarryM |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 26/09/2014 at 11:31 #64742 | |
GW43125
495 posts |
" said:It went from Up to Downhill very quickly ... :whistle:This thread really is going downhill fairly quickly... Or uphill if you're going from EXD-Waterloo! Log in to reply |
TRTS vs Off vs Right away 29/09/2014 at 16:12 #64770 | |
TimB2010
77 posts |
" said:" said:When I was on platforms at BHM, I occasionally had to deal with a TM who tried to give 2 on the buzzer to the driver. Not good.Just occurred to me - when I was on Virgin's Pendolino simulator, most of the stations had RA indicators. Is this true to life, and if so, what does the guard actually do at these stations, or is dispatch controlled entirely by platform staff?A lot of stations served by Virgin have "RA" indicators (So yes it is true to real life) Class 390s are generally dispatched by the "RA" indicators instead of the drive guard buzzer, Class 221s on the other hand are generally dispatched on the buzzer, I will use Crewe as an example for a class 390 dispatch. Log in to reply |