switch stands

NW Mailing List nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Tue Dec 20 09:45:49 EST 2022


Abe,
Thanks for all the great information.  You keep spinning me yarns and I'll
keep knitting my brow (and asking questions).
Jim Cochran

On Tue, Dec 20, 2022 at 9:21 AM NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
wrote:

> Comrade Cochranovski, Excellency, et al :
>
> Just a few general (not location specific) remarks to guide you along this
> quest for knowledege:
>
> 1.  All the details you ask about were time and technology specific,  I.e.
> they changed from place to place, from road to road, and from time to time,
> as the technology developed. So no one answer will fit-all-sizes.
>
> 2.  Back in the early days, switch stands were "high."  Witness the old
> "Harp" type switch stands which operated stub switches (i.e. switches using
> non-mitered rails.)  This type construction was very likely done so that
> the brakeman could use the full weight of his body in moving the switch's
> operating lever, rather than just the muscles in his back (as would be the
> case with a ground-lever switch.)
>
> The high-level switch stand also had the advantage that the switch lamp
> could be mounted up high, where it had a better chance of being seen
> despite foliage, snow, etc.  (Witness the Southern Pacific, which had some
> switch stands with lamps 15 feet in the air, on the line over the Sierra
> Mountains at Donner Pass.  But then, those folks sometimes saw 20 feet of
> snow in a single Winter.)
>
> When I was a brakeman on the Punkin Vine (1967 and 1968,) all main track
> switches had high switch stands.  The Ramapo Ajax low-level switch stands
> were used only on yard and industrial tracks.  Trainmen loved the
> high-level stands, as they put less stress on one's back when operating
> them.
>
> 3.  The section gangs maintained the oil lamps on switch markers and the
> semaphores at depots used as Train order and Block signals.  Most of those
> had what was called the Seven Day Oil Fount, and (at least) once a week the
> designated section man would fill the fount, raise and trim the wick, and
> wipe the glass.  The rules of some railroads required the Operator to
> maintain the lamps on the signals at his own station, and he got a few
> extra pennies of pay for doing this.
>
> The N&W began installing two-arm Automatic Block semaphore signals in
> 1906.  But these were operated by "made" batteries, i.e. primary batteries
> right at the signal location, made in a glass jar of acid, Copper and
> Zinc.  Switches continued to have oil lamp illumination.
>
> Around 1913, the N&W began installing a form of signaling called Absolute
> Permissive Block (APB) using AC track circuits and semaphores operated by
> AC motors.  To habilitate this operation, the N&W (like many railroads)
> strung a 440 volt AC pair on its pole line, and in cases, even built its
> own small generating stations trackside, to supply the 440 line.  At
> signals, the 440 was transformed down to a voltage usable in the operation
> of track circuits, AC semaphore motors, and signal lamps.  This was the
> origin (at least on the N&W) of signal lighting by incandescent lamps.  Off
> this 440 signal power line, the railroad began fitting certain main track
> switches with incandescent lamps.  The decision on where to do this was
> probably ad hoc.
>
> 4.  As for what most people would call ground switches (i.e. low level
> switch stands of the Ramapo Ajax type,)  N&W practice was to illuminate
> with oil switch markers those on tracks where there was a significant
> amount of traffic, say yard ladder tracks.  There may have been a
> specification about where illuminated switch markers were to be used in the
> N&W MW Standard Plans; I do not know.  Or there may have been a legal
> requirement - in Pennsylvania, the Public Utilities Commission required a
> light on switches which saw, on average, more than six engine/train
> movements per 24-hour day.  I do not know what the formal requirements were
> on the N&W as my typical excuse applies:  my function on the N&W was to
> push box cars around in the darkness, not to wrestle with the formal
> regulations and policies.  Of course, the advent of Scotch-Light
> reflectorized tape spelled the death knell of illuminated lamps on most
> switches.  N&W switches were converted from oil lamps to that garbage
> sometime in the 1960s.  Radford was the last place I saw still using oil
> switch markers, and that was sometime in the 1970s.  Interlocked switches,
> i.e. power-operated switches within interlocking limits, have never, since
> the earliest days, required a switch marker.
>
> 5.  One final remark:  The N&W invested some well-spent money in those
> Ramapo Ajax switch stands.  The cheaper option would have been the New
> Century switch stand (which came out in the late 1890s.)  If a movement
> trailed through a New Century switch in the wrong position, the spindle
> inside was irreparably bent or broken.  Not so with the N&W's Ramapo Ajax
> switch stands - they could be trailed through without permanently damaging
> the mechanism.  BTW, the strange word "Ramapo" is taken from the town of
> Ramapo, New Jersey, where the Ajax Company had its headquarters.  The state
> of New Jersey had a lot of lower grade iron ore and an iron business sprang
> up there very early.  Wharton is another name you will hear in connection
> with New Jersey iron, as in the name of a still surviving company called
> Taylor-Wharton,  Ramapo, obviously, is an Indian word, but I have forgotten
> its meaning.
>
> I will attach a photo of an N&W oil switch marker and an N&W electric
> switch marker.  (Easy to tell the difference... the electric markers have
> no provision for venting the fumes from a flame.)
>
> Hope this helps.  If not, come back and I will spin you some more yarns...
>
>     -- abram burnett, LCTW
> (Licensed Clinical Turnip Worker)
>
>
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