Current lines using the 100 Hz 4-aspect PRR cab signal system display. This unit is currently displaying a RESTRICTING aspect. •
Amtrak Main Line—Mill River to Springfield •
Amtrak Main Line—New Haven to Boston •
Amtrak Main Line—New York to Hoffmans •
Amtrak Main Line—New York to New Rochelle •
Amtrak Main Line—New York to Philadelphia •
Amtrak Main Line—Philadelphia to Harrisburg •
Amtrak Main Line—Philadelphia to Washington •
Conrail Lehigh Line •
CSX Berkshire Subdivision (no waysides) •
CSX Boston Subdivision (no waysides) •
CSX Landover Subdivision •
NJT All lines (except Princeton Branch) •
MBTA All lines (no waysides) •
Metro-North Hudson Line (no waysides) •
Metro-North Harlem Line (no waysides) •
Metro-North New Haven Line (no waysides) •
Metro-North New Canaan Branch (no waysides) •
Metro-North Danbury Branch (no waysides) •
Metro-North Waterbury Branch (no waysides) •
Metro-North Southern Tier Line (no waysides) •
Norfolk Southern Pittsburgh Line (no waysides) • Norfolk Southern Port Road Line • Norfolk Southern
Conemaugh Line (no waysides) • Norfolk Southern Morrisville Line (no waysides) • Norfolk Southern
Fort Wayne Line (
Conway Yard to
Alliance, Ohio, no waysides) • Norfolk Southern Cleveland Line (Alliance, Ohio to
Cleveland, Ohio, no waysides) •
SEPTA Main Line (Center City to Doylestown; no waysides north of Wayne Junction) •
SEPTA Airport Line •
SEPTA Chestnut Hill East Line (no waysides) •
SEPTA Chestnut Hill West Line (no waysides) •
SEPTA Cynwyd Line (no waysides) •
SEPTA Fox Chase Line (no waysides) •
SEPTA Manayunk/Norristown Line (no waysides) •
SEPTA Media/Wawa Line •
SEPTA Warminster Line (no waysides) •
SEPTA West Trenton Line (no waysides)
Related North American pulse code systems ; •
Long Island Rail Road Automatic Speed Control: The LIRR was a PRR subsidiary and adopted a similar system. The LIRR used standard PRR cab signals until bought by the
Metropolitan Transportation Authority in 1968, when it was modified slightly into ASC systems used to this day. ASC employs two additional codes, 270 and 420 ppm and replaces the in-cab signal display with an in-cab speed display. The additional codes are used to display speeds of 50/60 and 60/70 mph, which are used to slow trains for curves, higher speed turnouts and short signal blocks. •
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Automatic Cab Signaling: The CB&Q
commuter line to
Aurora, Illinois used the same technology as the Pennsylvania, just with different rules and wayside indications to conform to their partly route-based signaling system. It remains in service to the present day. •
Union Pacific Automatic Cab Signaling: The Union Pacific has implemented the PRR type technology on much of its main line between Chicago and Wyoming, as well as several other lines on its system in recent years. As with the CB&Q cab signals, the system works under the same principles as the PRR system, but uses different rules with partly route-based wayside signals and a 60 Hz carrier, which makes it somewhat incompatible with the 100 Hz systems. •
Metra Rock Island Automatic Train Control: Another PRR based cab signal system remnant from the Rock Island. The system is in service on the Metra Rock Island District between Blue Island and Joliet. •
Rapid Transit Lines: Various rapid transit lines built or re-signaled in or before the 1990s make use of the pulse-code cab signal technology for both manual or
automatic train operation schemes. Rapid transit systems are typically failsafe with a 0 code mandating a complete stop. Also, the complete range of pulse codes are used to provide the maximum granularity in speed control. Some examples include the
PATCO Speedline in Philadelphia, the
SEPTA Route 100, the
Baltimore Metro and the
Miami-Dade Metrorail. Pulse-code technology on rapid transit lines has generally been supplanted by Audio-Frequency cab signals. •
MTA Staten Island Railway Automatic Speed Control: A hybrid of the PRR/LIRR systems and Rapid Transit power-frequency cab code. The ATC applies service braking in response to overspeed conditions. 75-120-180-270 are used as speed commands. Zero code is used for stop rather than restricting, which is 50PPM. 420 is used as a latch-out. Dispatchers may authorize trains stopped by a zero-code to close in on certain interlocking signals by manually activating a 50 ppm close-in code.
European pulse code systems •
RS4 Codici is the legacy cab signaling system used in Italy. The system makes use of 0, 75, 120, 180 and 270 ppm codes using a 50 Hz current. •
Continuous Automatic Warning System is the cab signaling systems in Ireland. The system makes use of 0, 50, 120 and 180 ppm codes using a 50 Hz carrier current. Additional codes are used on some
rapid transit lines. •
Automatische treinbeïnvloeding is the
Dutch cab signaling system. It makes use of 0, 75, 96, 120, 180 and 220 ppm codes using a 75 Hz carrier, supplemented by an inductive train stop system for speeds under 25 mph. •
London Underground Victoria line used US&S supplied pulse code cab signals to implement its
Automatic train operation system until 2012 when it was replaced by
CBTC. Codes used were 420, 270, 180 and 120 ppm. •
ALSN (Continuous Automatic Train Signalling) is a legacy system used in the ex-Soviet states (Russian Federation, Ukraine, Belarus, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia and so on). All the lines fitted with automatic block system in ex-Soviet countries are fitted with ALSN, some of them without wayside signals. Since 1990s station tracks and station approach sections on some per-station block system ("semiautomatic block") lines are fitted as well. In contrast with other systems mentioned before, ALSN makes use of pulse count code rather than uniform pulse at some defined rates. There are 3 codes: "red-yellow" (single pulses separated by long gaps), "yellow" (series of 2 pulses with one short gap inside the series) and "green" (series of 3 pulses with two short gaps inside the series), while the exact length of pulses and long gaps may vary substantially to form different code cycle length (usually 1,6 s or 1,86 s) which has no signal meaning, but is used for safety and for block counting on the train. Carrier frequencies are: 50 Hz where 3 kV DC electric traction or no electric traction is used, and 25 Hz (or sometimes 75 Hz - an old standard) on lines with 25 kV 50 Hz AC electric traction. == References ==