United States The majority of systems meeting the definition of Automatic Train Stop in the United States are mechanical trip stop systems associated with rapid transit lines built in the first half of the 20th century. Since 1951 ATS has been required by the
Interstate Commerce Commission (later the
Federal Railroad Administration) as a minimum safety requirement to allow passenger trains to exceed a
speed limit of . The regulatory requirement refers to a system that triggers an alert in the cab of the locomotive whenever the train passes a restrictive wayside signal and that then requires the
locomotive engineer to respond to the alert within a set period of time before the brakes are automatically applied. The most popular implementation of ATS for the mainline railroad industry was made by the
General Railway Signal company starting in the 1920s and consisted of
inductive coils mounted just outside the right hand rail in relation to the direction of travel. Often referred to as just ATS in railroad operating books, the full name of the system is
Intermittent Inductive Automatic Train Stop to differentiate it from mechanical systems being offered at the time. The popularity of ATS as a train protection mechanism fell after the introduction of
track coded cab signals in the 1930s.
ATS installations in the United States Japan Many trains in
Japan are equipped with this system. The ATS systems in Japan are slightly similar to those used in the United States, but are nowadays primarily
transponder-based. The first mechanical ATS systems in Japan were introduced on the
Tōkaidō Main Line in 1921, followed by the
Tokyo Metro Ginza Line in 1927; but ATS did not become commonplace in the country until the late-1960s as a result of the
Mikawashima train crash which occurred in 1962. Below is a list of ATS systems that are specific to Japan only: ====
JNR/
JR Group==== •
ATS-B (also supplemented with S-type transponder; now obsolete since 2009) •
ATS-Dx (ATS using D-type transponder; always supplemented with: ATS-DF (
JR Freight), ATS-DK (
JR Kyushu) or ATS-DN (
JR Hokkaido)) •
ATS-S(x) (ATS using S-type transponder; always supplemented with: ATS-SF (JR Freight), ATS-SK (JR Kyushu), ATS-SM (
Mizushima Rinkai Railway), ATS-SN (
JR East and JR Hokkaido), ATS-SS (
JR Shikoku), ATS-ST (
JR Central) or ATS-SW (
JR West), the last two letters corresponding to the type of transponder used with the S-type transponder) •
ATS-P (ATS using pattern renewal transponder; variants are ATS-PF (JR Freight), ATS-PN (Low-cost introduction type), ATS-PT (JR Central) and ATS-Ps (Frequency change
cab signalling Type; used for e.g. on
Senseki Line and
Sendai Airport Line, and on operational steam trains)) •
D-TAS (introduced by JR West in 2012; previously called
ATS-M and
ATS-DW during development) •
H-ATS (formerly used on the
EF66 locomotive) ATS on Car(JRH-kiha183-5202) DescJP.JPG|ATS pickup on the underside of a
KiHa 183 series DMU Jnr autotrainstop displayunit.jpg|ATS-B light indicator on
KiHa 59 series DMU ATS-DK 415kei Fo124.jpg|ATS-DK control panel JRW light of ATS-P.JPG|ATS-P indicator Train atsps displayunit.jpg|ATS-Ps
cab signalling speed indicators on KiHa 59 series DMU Shinano railway Series115 ATS-P・Ps.jpg|Retrofitted equipment cabinet for ATS-P and ATS-Ps on
Shinano Railway 115 series ====
Private railways/
Subway lines==== at
Saya Station. This transponder arrangement is similar in principle to "
Moorgate control" used on the London Underground. In addition, various private-sector railways and subway lines have adopted their own versions of the ATS system since the 1960s. Like the ATS systems used by the railways in the JR Group, they are transponder-based as well, but are generally incompatible with the ATS systems used by JR. •
C-ATS/ATS Type 1 (Used by
Keikyu Corporation,
Keisei Electric Railway, as well as on
Hokusō Line,
Narita Sky Access Line and
Toei Asakusa Line) •
i-ATS (Used by
Shizuoka Railway since 2007) •
K-ATS (Used by
Keihan Electric Railway since 2015) •
Meitetsu ATS (
M-ATS) (Used by
Meitetsu) •
OM-ATS (formerly used by
Odakyu Electric Railway) •
D-ATS-P (Digital
ATS-P) (Used by
Odakyu Electric Railway, not compatible with JR ATS-P) •
T-ATS (formerly used on
Toei Mita Line, similar to Tobu ATS, replaced by ATC-P) •
Tobu ATS (
TSP) (Used by
Tobu Railway, except for the section of track between Ikebukuro and Ogawamachi on the
Tobu Tojo Line) •
Hankyu Railway,
Hanshin Electric Railway,
Kintetsu,
Sanyo Electric Railway,
Seibu Railway and
Tokyu Corporation (Ikegami/Tamagawa lines only) all use their own proprietary ATS systems. •
Sotetsu replaced own system to JR East's ATS-P. •
Keio Corporation replaced own system with ATC.
New Zealand In Wellington only a few signals at a converging junction are fitted with mechanical ATS. All electric trains are fitted.
South Korea Some
Korail and
subway lines are equipped with this system, as follows: Line 1, Line 4 (above ground section between Geumjeong and Oido stations), Suin-Bundang Line (between Gosaek and Incheon), Gyeongui-Jungang Line, and the Gyeongchun Line. The first ATS system in South Korea was installed on the Korail network in 1969, followed by Seoul Subway Line 1 in 1974 (similar to Japanese ATS-S).
Argentina Buenos Aires Underground lines and have ATS equipped, while , , and have the more advanced
Communications-based train control. The
Roca Line is ATS equipped in its electrified branches since 1985. Its ATS was provided by Japanese company Nippon Signal. which serve as fallback for a
Bombardier-designed
ATP system introduced in 2006 (equivalent to
ETCS Level 1), of which the latter system replaced the older
AWS system originally introduced in 1978 on the
EMU100 and
EMU200 express trains.
United Kingdom The
Manchester Metrolink uses ATS equipment between
Timperley and
Altrincham Interchange. This consists of electromagnetic beacons before the applicable signal. If a signal is passed at danger, the ATS device inside the tram will apply the track brakes. This system used to be universal along the system, but has been narrowed down to just this section because of recent resignalling to the system.
London Underground lines are universally fitted with ATS equipment. This comprises a trip arm just outside the right-hand running rail, and an air valve known as a tripcock on the leading bogie of the train. When the applicable signal shows 'danger', the trip arm is held up by a spring. If a train attempts to pass the signal, the trip arm makes contact with the tripcock. This opens the tripcock, which is connected to the train pipe of the air brakes, and causes an emergency brake application to be made. When the signal shows 'clear', the stop arm is lowered by compressed air.
China Many
China Railway trunk lines use an ATS system introduced in the late-1980s, similar in principle to Japanese ATS-P and ATC. == See also ==