Difference between revisions of "Two-way Prio"
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− | A standard prio gives priority to trains on the mainline and makes trains on the sideline way. In some join, especially at BBHs, a prio may build up long queues waiting to enter the mainline. On PSG 178, we experimented with a concept named a Two-way Prio. The basic idea is that when the waiting trains begin to roll, they should keep rolling and not stop for a few trains on the ML. The mechanism is similar to a real-life traffic light. It releases all traffic in one direction and then switches to the other direction and releases all traffic from there (although, the Two-way prio does not have a timeout, like traffic lights). | + | A standard prio gives priority to trains on the mainline and makes trains on the sideline way. In some join, especially at BBHs, a prio may build up long queues waiting to enter the mainline. |
+ | |||
+ | On PSG 178, we experimented with a concept named a Two-way Prio. The basic idea is that when the waiting trains begin to roll, they should keep rolling and not stop for a few trains on the ML. The mechanism is similar to a real-life traffic light. It releases all traffic in one direction and then switches to the other direction and releases all traffic from there (although, the Two-way prio does not have a timeout, like traffic lights). | ||
[[File:twowayprio.gif]] | [[File:twowayprio.gif]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | == How to build == | ||
+ | |||
+ | Add a small TL1 train on a segment that crosses the two lines. The TL1 train should be blocked by a standard prio in both direction by using a two-way entry signal. | ||
+ | |||
+ | A two-way prio does not need a long prio on the tracks. It just needs to be long enough that trains waiting will enter the prio before the logic train has a chance to switch. | ||
A place to use this is in BBHs where neither of the MLs is more major than the other. A simple join will leave huge gaps, and a standard prio may build big queues even with good balancing. | A place to use this is in BBHs where neither of the MLs is more major than the other. A simple join will leave huge gaps, and a standard prio may build big queues even with good balancing. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Benefits == | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Releases entire queues in both directions at once without breaking the queue. | ||
+ | * This usually give tight packing as the entire queue is release at once. | ||
+ | * Adapts well to the traffic load. On light traffic, the logic train is usually blocked in the prio before a single train can reach it, leaving the path open. |
Revision as of 20:15, 14 March 2010
A standard prio gives priority to trains on the mainline and makes trains on the sideline way. In some join, especially at BBHs, a prio may build up long queues waiting to enter the mainline.
On PSG 178, we experimented with a concept named a Two-way Prio. The basic idea is that when the waiting trains begin to roll, they should keep rolling and not stop for a few trains on the ML. The mechanism is similar to a real-life traffic light. It releases all traffic in one direction and then switches to the other direction and releases all traffic from there (although, the Two-way prio does not have a timeout, like traffic lights).
How to build
Add a small TL1 train on a segment that crosses the two lines. The TL1 train should be blocked by a standard prio in both direction by using a two-way entry signal.
A two-way prio does not need a long prio on the tracks. It just needs to be long enough that trains waiting will enter the prio before the logic train has a chance to switch.
A place to use this is in BBHs where neither of the MLs is more major than the other. A simple join will leave huge gaps, and a standard prio may build big queues even with good balancing.
Benefits
* Releases entire queues in both directions at once without breaking the queue. * This usually give tight packing as the entire queue is release at once. * Adapts well to the traffic load. On light traffic, the logic train is usually blocked in the prio before a single train can reach it, leaving the path open.