fitted to trap points
Trap points are found at the exit from a siding or where a secondary track joins a main line. A
facing turnout is used to prevent any unauthorised movement that may otherwise obstruct the main line. The trap points also prevent any damage that may be done by a vehicle passing over points not set for traffic joining the main line. In the
United Kingdom, the use of trap points at siding exits is required by government legislation. An unauthorised movement may be due to a runaway wagon, or may be a train
passing a signal at danger. When a
signal controlling passage onto a main line is set to "danger", the trap points are set to derail any vehicle passing that signal.
Interlocking is used to make sure that the signal cannot be set to allow passage onto the main line until the trap points have been aligned to ensure this movement can take place. Trap points should preferably be positioned to ensure that any unauthorised vehicle is stopped a safe distance from the main line. However, due to space limitations, it is not always possible to guarantee this. If the lines are
track circuited and a wagon or train using the catchpoint could foul an adjacent line, then a
track circuit interrupter will be fitted to one of the run-off rails. When a train runs off it will break the track circuit and set main line signals to 'danger'.
Types accident investigation image of a cement wagon derailed by trap points at
Clitheroe, Lancashire, England, 9 March 2020, successfully protecting the adjacent running lines (left) There are several different ways of constructing trap points: • A
single tongue trap consists of only one switch rail, leading away from the main line to a short tongue of rail. This is usually placed in the rail farthest from the main line. •
Double trap points are a full turnout, leading to two tongues. Usually the tongue nearer the main line is longer than the other. •
Trap points with a crossing are double trap points where the tongues of rail are longer, so that the trap point rail nearest the main line continues over the siding rail with a common crossing or frog. • A
trap road with stops is a short dead-end siding leading to some method of stopping a vehicle, such as a sand drag or
buffer stop. •
Wide to gauge trap points have switches that work in opposite directions and are therefore either both open or both closed. Vehicles derailed at these points will tend to continue in a forward direction rather than being thrown to one side. Wide to gauge points are typically found on sidings situated between running lines. •
Independent switches are a kind of wide to gauge switch which are part of two separate crossovers. There are three positions: part of crossover A to left; wide to gauge switches; part of crossover B to right. A good place to view these independent switches are at both ends of Platforms 1 and 2 at
Hornsby railway station, Sydney. The type of trap points to be used depends on factors such as the
gradient of the siding, and whether
locomotives enter the siding. File:StokeGiffordYard-catchpoints.jpg|Double trap points protecting the
South Wales Main Line at the exit of Stoke Gifford Rail Yard near
Bristol Parkway railway station File:Castle Cary catch points - 02.jpg|Double trap points with much longer rails, at
Castle Cary railway station File:Schutzweiche.jpg|A trap road with
buffer stops at the railway station of
Allersberg, on the
Nuremberg–Munich high-speed railway File:Strasbourg aiguillage-déraillant.jpg|Trap point in France == Sand drag ==