While accidents from the problem are rare, they do occur: • 1876 –
Abbots Ripton rail disaster (England) – signals frozen by
blizzard in 'clear' position (signal arm hidden in a slot in the post). • 1915 – Rockledge, Tennessee – Relocation of a Western Union telegraph line from old alignment to new alignment causes a false clear signal indication when the Western Union wire comes in contact with the signal wire for the automatic block signal at the south end of the siding at Rockledge. A southbound freight train departed Rockledge on the false clear indication and collided with a northbound passenger train that had entered the block at Tantallon on a proper clear indication two minutes before the freight train departed Rockledge. A contributing factor was that the tower operator at Rockledge only controlled the signals, the track switches being operated by the train crews themselves. • 1927 – Marrar (NSW, Australia) – lightning damage meant that the single line
train tablet system incorrectly released two tablets simultaneously putting two trains on a collision course; fortunately they saw each other and were able to stop in time. • 1938 –
Charing Cross (Northern line) tube crash (London) – signal linesman rewires a faulty signal incorrectly, so that it shows green too soon; two
Underground trains collide as a result, injuring twelve. Also
Charing Cross (District line) tube crash, signal linesman makes wiring error in cabin, two
Underground trains collide, killing six. • 1953 –
Sydenham Rail Disaster (NSW, Australia) – five killed • 1976 –
Glenbrook, New South Wales (Australia) Automatic signal in rear of a stationary
EMU at "caution" when it should have been at "danger". Following goods train enters occupied signal section and collides with EMU; 1 passenger killed. Cause attributable to deteriorated wiring which allowed a false feed. • 1979 –
Invergowrie rail crash (Scotland) – signal was at "wrong" (i.e. indistinct indication) yet taken by driver to be a 'proceed' signal. • 1982 –
Valley Heights train collision (NSW, Australia) – electrician wrongly replace out clear glass lenses with coloured glass causing false colour with reflected sunlight. • 1988 –
Clapham Junction rail crash (London) – single stray wire causes false green signal and collision killing 35. • 1990 –
Cowan rail disaster (NSW, Australia), which occurred when sand on the rails insulated the wheels from the rails, causing a failure to shunt that allowed a trailing block signal to improperly display a clear aspect, resulting in a rear-end collision. • 2005 –
Deelfontein (South Africa) –
solder splatter bridges a
relay contact. Most testing is done with the relays unplugged which would not detect the splatter, while the solder splatter is likely to lead to a difficult to trace phantom problem. • 2009 – On March 26, two trains collided near Arévalo, Spain while engineers were testing a new signalling system. Lack of safeguards and testing on an active line led to the collision of two freight trains. One of the train drivers died. • 2009 –
Ft Totten crash Washington DC Metro (WMATA). An inbound Red Line train stopped short of Ft. Totten station; the following train failed to stop and impacted at about . Nine dead, 80 injured. Preliminary NTSB reports were that the AC track circuit transmitter was breaking into parasitic oscillation, and that coupled across the rack cabinet to the receiver. • 2020 – On the Italian high speed rail network, maintenance workers during the night left a faulty point to the reverse position, but disconnected its network connection and its link to the safety signalling system (
ETCS L2); the first morning high speed train received a green signal to proceed at full speed and hit the point at , resulting in the
Livraga derailment which killed 2 and injured 31. • 2024 -
2024 Cicalengka railway collision. An uncommanded signal displaying a false clear aspect due to aging hardware causes two trains to collide near
Cicalengka Station in
Bandung Regency, Indonesia, killing four rail employees and injuring 42 others. == False alarms ==