railway museum The
Great Western Railway used the Tyer's No. 7 electric train tablet instrument at several locations, including the
Bampton to section.
Sri Lanka Railways is currently using this system at several locations, including the Kelani Valley line between Maradana and Avissawella in the Colombo District. In
Japan, carbon-copies of the Tyer's No. 7 tablet instrument were used on many single lines and some are still in use or kept on display at many rural stations. The Tyer's No. 6 tablet instrument was far more widespread in the UK and was adopted by most railway companies on single line installations. However, when the Tyer's No. 9 key token instrument was patented 40 years later in 1912, it began to replace the No. 6 due to it being compact, easier to use and had far fewer moving parts to service and repair. On Britain's national network the use of Tyer's system is now almost extinct, with most lengthy single track lines having been converted to more modern systems such as
Tokenless Block or
Radio Electronic Token Block. However, , the Tyer Electric Token Block, using No 7 instruments and coloured perspex tablets, remains in use on the
Stranraer Line, between and
Dunragit. Token machines under the remote control of the Thames Valley Signalling Centre are also still in use between
Maidenhead and
Bourne End.
Tyer's tablet working in New Zealand Tyer's Tablet working using the No 7 system was used in New Zealand from 1901, as most lines apart from sections near the main centres were single-track. The tablets were generally of fibre, and were originally exchanged by hand using cane slings. Later (safer) mechanical exchangers were used. The
Rakaia railway accident of 1899 had exposed the need for improvements to signalling and train braking. Single-track sections of the
North Island Main Trunk between Auckland and Wellington were controlled by Tyer's No 7 system; most of the line was single-track. Each of the stations for the 94 tablet sections required three tablet porters who each worked a 56-hour week for continuous coverage. Hence each station (many in isolated locations) required at least four houses, for the stationmaster and three porters. From 1938 to 1966
Centralised Traffic Control (C.T.C.) gradually replaced the Tablet system on the NIMT. The last tablet used on the New Zealand Railways was to allow train 1602 (Wellington – Masterton morning
Wairarapa Connection) to travel between
Featherston and
Masterton on the
Wairarapa Line on Monday 4 July 1994. Even though the Masterton to Woodville tablet sections survived a few days longer, trains ran on a
safe all where Train Control could allow a train to run without a tablet. ==Heritage railways and museums==