Signals differ both in the manner in which they display aspects and in the manner in which they are mounted with respect to the track.
Mechanical signals in
Poland The oldest forms of signal displays their different indications by a part of the signal being physically moved. The earliest types comprised a board that was either turned face-on and fully visible to the driver, or rotated away so as to be practically invisible. These signals had two or at most three positions. Semaphore signals were developed in France at the end of the 18th century, before being later adopted by the railways. The first railway semaphore was erected by
Charles Hutton Gregory on the
London and Croydon Railway (later the Brighton) at
New Cross Gate, southeast London, in 1841. It was similar in form to the
optical telegraphs then being replaced on land by the
electric telegraph. Gregory's installation was inspected and approved for the
Board of Trade by Major-General
Charles Pasley. Pasley had invented a system of optical telegraphy through semaphores in 1822 for the British military, and appears to have suggested to Gregory the application of the semaphore to railway signaling. The semaphore was afterwards rapidly adopted as a fixed signal nearly universally. Disc signals, such as those made by the
Hall Signal Company, were sometimes used, but semaphores could be read at much longer distances. The invention of the
electric light, which could be made brighter than
oil lamps and hence visible both by night and day, resulted in the development of
position light signals and colour-light signals at the beginning of the 20th century, which gradually displaced semaphores. A few remain in modern operations in the United Kingdom. Mechanical signals may be operated manually, connected to a lever in a signal-box, by electric motors, or hydraulically. The signals are designed to be
fail-safe so that if power is lost or a linkage is broken, the arm will move by gravity into the horizontal position. In the U.S., semaphores were employed as train order signals, with the purpose of indicating to engineers whether they should stop to receive a
telegraphed order, and also as simply one form of block signalling.
Colour light signals (UK) two-aspect colour light railway signal set at 'danger' (Stop) The introduction of electric
light bulbs made it possible to produce colour light signals which were bright enough to be seen during daylight, starting in 1904. West railway station, Romania. This type of signal is based on the German
Ks signals. The
signal head is the portion of a colour light signal which displays the aspects. To display a larger number of indications, a single signal might have multiple signal heads. Some systems used a single head coupled with auxiliary lights to modify the basic aspect. Colour light signals come in two forms. The most prevalent form is the
multi-unit type, with separate lights and lenses for each colour, in the manner of a
traffic light. Hoods and shields are generally provided to shade the lights from sunlight which could cause false indications. , with the lamp and reflector removed to expose the coloured roundels
Searchlight signals were the most often used signal type in the U.S. until recently. In these, a single
incandescent light bulb is used in each head, and either an
A.C. or
D.C. relay mechanism is used to move a coloured spectacle (or "roundel") in front of the lamp. In this manner, gravity (fail safe) returns the red roundel into the lamp's optical path. In effect, this mechanism is very similar to the colour light signal that is included in an electrically operated semaphore signal, except that the omission of the semaphore arm allows the roundels to be miniaturized and enclosed in a weatherproof housing. Widely used in the U.S. from
World War II onward, searchlight signals have the disadvantage of having moving parts which may be deliberately tampered with. This had led to them becoming less common during the last fifteen to twenty years when vandalism began to render them vulnerable to false indications. However, in some other countries, such as on the
Italian railways (
FS) as from the
Regolamento Segnali, they are still the standard colour light signal albeit with new installations being as outlined below. More recently, clusters of
LEDs have started to be used in place of the incandescent lamps, reflectors and lenses. These use less power and have a purported working life of ten years, but this may not in reality be the case. Operating rules generally dictate that a dark signal be interpreted as giving the most restrictive indication it can display (generally "stop" or "stop and proceed"). Many colour light systems have circuitry to detect such failures in lamps or mechanism.
Position light signals A
position light signal is one where the position of the lights, rather than their colour, determines the meaning. The aspect consists solely of a pattern of illuminated lights, which are all of the same colour. In many countries, small position light signals are used as shunting signals, while the main signals are of colour light form. Also, many tramway systems (such as the Metro of Wolverhampton) use position light signals.
Colour-position signals A system combining aspects of the colour and position systems was developed on the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) in 1920 and was patented by L.F. Loree and F.P. Patenall. It is similar to the position light system with the central light removed and the resulting pairs of lights colored in correspondence to the angle they make: green for the vertical pair, amber for the right diagonal pair, and red for the horizontal pair. An additional pair, colored "lunar white", may be added on the other diagonal for restricting indications. Speed signalling is indicated not by additional signal heads, but by a system of white or amber "orbital" lights placed in one of six positions above and below the main head. The position above or below indicates the current speed, while the left-to-right position indicates the speed at the next signal (full, medium, or slow in both cases). Dwarf signals have the same aspects as full-sized signals. One of the advantages claimed for the system is that burned-out bulbs produce aspects which can be interpreted unambiguously as either the intended indication (for the main head) or as a more restrictive indication (for the orbitals—if only the central head is lit, the indication is either slow or restricting). Colour position lights (CPLs) were first installed as a pilot on the
Staten Island Railway in New York City, at the time a B&O subsidiary; they were also applied to the
Chicago and Alton Railroad when the latter was under B&O control, as well as on the B&O itself. With the disappearance of the B&O into CSX they have been gradually replaced with NORAC color light signals. == Signal mounting ==