AU615059B2 - A railway signalling system - Google Patents

A railway signalling system Download PDF

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Publication number
AU615059B2
AU615059B2 AU34669/89A AU3466989A AU615059B2 AU 615059 B2 AU615059 B2 AU 615059B2 AU 34669/89 A AU34669/89 A AU 34669/89A AU 3466989 A AU3466989 A AU 3466989A AU 615059 B2 AU615059 B2 AU 615059B2
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
train
transponder
transponders
identity
authorised
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
AU34669/89A
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AU3466989A (en
Inventor
Robert Edward Blake Barnard
John Peter Slinn
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
GEC General Signal Ltd
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GEC General Signal Ltd
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Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by GEC General Signal Ltd filed Critical GEC General Signal Ltd
Publication of AU3466989A publication Critical patent/AU3466989A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU615059B2 publication Critical patent/AU615059B2/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B61RAILWAYS
    • B61LGUIDING RAILWAY TRAFFIC; ENSURING THE SAFETY OF RAILWAY TRAFFIC
    • B61L25/00Recording or indicating positions or identities of vehicles or trains or setting of track apparatus
    • B61L25/02Indicating or recording positions or identities of vehicles or trains
    • B61L25/025Absolute localisation, e.g. providing geodetic coordinates
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B61RAILWAYS
    • B61LGUIDING RAILWAY TRAFFIC; ENSURING THE SAFETY OF RAILWAY TRAFFIC
    • B61L27/00Central railway traffic control systems; Trackside control; Communication systems specially adapted therefor
    • B61L27/20Trackside control of safe travel of vehicle or train, e.g. braking curve calculation

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Train Traffic Observation, Control, And Security (AREA)

Description

p/ i y i COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA PATENTS ACT 1952 Form COMPLETE SPECIFICATION FOR OFFICE USE Short Title: Int. Cl: 6"1 8~b Application Number: Lodged: Complete Specification-Lodged: Accepted: Lapsed: Published: Priority: Related Art: 0 rS 0 D TO BE COMPLETED BY APPLICANT Name of Applicant: Address of Applicant: Actual Inventor: Address for Service: GEC-GENERAL SIGNAL LIMITED Borehamwood Industrial Park, Rowley Lane, BOREHAMWOOD, HERTFORDSHIRE WD6
ENGLAND
Robert Edward Blake Barnard and John Peter Slinn GRIFFITH HACK CO.
71 YORK STREET SYDNEY NSW 2000
AUSTRALIA
Complete Specification for the invention entitled: A RAILWAY SIGNALLING SYSTEM The following statement is a full description of this invention, including the best method of performing it known to me/us:- 1059A:rk -zA GS/3424 AL A Railway Signalling System o o 0o0 This invention relates to railway signalling systems and o 0 1o 0 particularly to such systems for monitoring and controlling the 0 movement of trains through track sections.
Various systems have been devised for the safe signalling and 0 0 °control of trains using radio data messages between a base station and a radio transmitter/receiver on each train of the system.
o o ~In some of these systems, securely-coded data messages, which constitute authority for a particular train to travel over a 0 oparticular section of track, are sent by radio from a central safe i oO°computer system at the base station to a processor on-board the train.
This electronic 'authority' corresponds to the physical tokens of earlier systems, actual possession of a token being essential for the driver to proceed. The data message contains the text of the station names between which the train may travel. The on-board processr 004000 checks that the secure coding of the message has been preserved during radio transmission, and if so, displays the text to the train driver.
When the train driver reaches the end of the section for which he has authority, he returns his authority to the central safe computer by another data message over the radio, the on-board processor having previously blanked the text display. V ii-- 22 In many of the systems of this type that have been installed to date, the reporting of the position of the train when it returns its authority is accomplished verbally by voice transmission; the train driver tells the central operator the current position of the train, and the operator keys this information into the central safe computer system. This is clearly a process prone to human error.
Others have proposed the use of passive transponders, each having a unique Identity, installed on the track at intervals, together with transponder readers on trains, to allow each train in 0 a0 the controlled area to monitor its own position. Such proposals have ousually Involved a list of transponders that the train may pass over being sent to the train along with the text of its authority. The train, in such proposals, reports its passage over each transponder in turn, by means of further radio data messages. By this means, the central safe computer maintains a record of the location of each train in the system.
Unfortunately, the list of transponder identities will be of variable length, depending on the extent of the authority given to the train. Also, the data messages from each train reporting passage over a transponder tend to use up a significant amount of time on the radio channel, making it unsuitable to be shared between speech and data messages.
SooII An object of the present invention is to provide a railway signalling system employing radio transmission of location information 4 a which at least partially overcomes the above problems. 4
T,.
1 -3- According to one aspect of the present invention there is provided a railway signalling system in which train equipment comprises a transponder interrogator, a data processor and a radio transmitter/receiver, a base station comprises a radio transmitter/receiver and processor means for generating for transmission to the train, data authorising the passage of the train through a track section defined by the transmitted data, said track section comprising a plurality of transponders positioned at intervals along the track and each transponder having an identity code which is transmitted to the train on interrogation, said processor means is adapted to generate for transmission to the train a Scheck code derived from a combination of the identity codes of the transponders in an authorised track section, said check code having a length independent of the number of transponders, and said train equipment is adapted to receive identity codes from transponders as the train proceeds through the authorised track section said data processor providing an indication of the correspondence between the received identity codes and that check code after passage through said authorised track section.
Preferably the base station has means for transmitting, in addition to the check code, the identity code of at least one limit transponder at an end of the authorised track section, the data processor being adapted Sit' to compare each transponder code detected on interrogation with that of the limit transponder received from the base station and to produce a train controlling response in the event the detected identity code is beyond the limit transponder and outside the authorised track section.
G-4s:BC 3A- The base station may have means for transmitting the number of transponders in the authorised track section, the data processor having means for counting the number of transponders detected upon interrogation within the authorised track section and providing an indication of any discrepancy to the train transmitter for transmission to the base station.
The check code may comprise the sum of the identity codes of the transponders in the authorised track section.
The processing of the Oetected identity codes may comprise a cumulative summation, the train transmitter being arranged to transmit the cumulative sum to the base station, the base station comprising means adapted to subtract the cumulative sum from the check code to obtain the identity 2215 code for any transponder that failed to respond.
According to another aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of signalling for use in a railway signalling system in which authorisation is transmitted by radio from a base station to a train to permit the train to traverse a track section having a plurality of transponders positioned at intervals along the track, the method comprising the steps of: deriving a constant length check code by summation of all the identity codes of transponders in the section, (ii) generating a data authority message comprising said check code and the first and last only of the individual transponder identity codes, the message format being constant irrespective of the number of transponders in the particular section, and (iii) transmitting the authority message from the base station to the train.
\4-sBC r-:s
B
I
-A-
i4 *1 ii A railway signalling system in accordance with the invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which: Figure 1 is a diagram showing the relation between base station, train and transponders; and Figure 2 is a diagram of a track system between a number of stations.
Referring to Figure 1, the track system is divided Into a nunber of sections by transponders 1 mounted adjacent the track at a strategic positions along the track. Each transponder is passive, being energised only by reception and rectification of an interrogation signal from a passing train. Such interrogation initiates a response from the transponder, a radio signal which identifies the transponder to the interrogator on board the train.
The power of the transponder signal is much too low to be picked up by any other train.
The type of transponder is not of importance in the invention; it may be partially active as above, purely passive as with magnetic elements, or fully active. The transprnder is merely required to identify itself to the on-board processor when interrogated.
i e The central control, or base, station 3 has a radio 4 o transmitter and receiver and means for transmitting data messages to selected trains. The data messages incorporate very secure address coding for selection of the train in question while different base stations are separated by means of different carrier frequencies.
The data messsage sent to the train contains the text of the authority to be displayed to the driver, i.e. the station or other location names, and various items of data concerning the transponders.
These data may include: Upper and lower limits for the transponder identities that the train may pass over, thus specifying a permitted range.
The number of transponders that the train should encounter during its travel over the authorised section of the line, i.e. the transponder 'count'.
The sum of the identities of all the transponders the o 44 train should encounter, this sum constituting a check o o code.
o Each of these items has, or may be arranged to have, a constant word length irrespective (within limits) of the number of transponders involved. Thus the sum of the identity codes has a constant word length comparable to that of each transponder code. The overall format of the 'authority', i.e. the data message, can thus be maintained constant irrespective of the length of the authorised section. The absence of lists of transponder identities in the authority also provides an economy of transmission time.
Figure 2 shows a track system connecting stations A, B, C and D and a typical transponder numbering system over the various single and double track portions.
Also shown in Figure 2 is a typical list of data messages transmitted to a train. Each message consists of a portion displayed to the driver, giving the extent of the authority granted by the names of the terminal stations, e.g. A B, and a portion received only by the on-board processor and comprising the identity code of the lower limit transponder, the upper limit transponder, the transponder count over the authorised section, and the sum of the transponder identity codes encountered.
-6- In operation, each time the train passes over a transponder, the on-board processor checks the identity of the transponder against the range information [item above] received from the central computer. In the event of the transponder being outside the authorised range, the processor may take appropriate action, such as applying the train brakes.
The processor also keeps a count of the transponders passed since the receipt of that authority, and the sum of their identities.
When the train reaches the end of the authorised section, the driver recognising the terminal station, he returns his authority (by Of initiating a keyed-in verbal signal transmission), the display is blanked and a data message is sent back to the base station computer. Included in this data message are the.
following: The identity of the last transponder passed over (which should be the 'upper limit' or 'lower limit' transponder above). This identifies the current position of the train.
The difference between the expected and actual number of transponders passed during travel over the route. This information can be used by the central computer for diagnostic purposes; a failed transponder in that section of line will result in a non-zero value for this data.
The difference between the expected and actual sums of the identies of transponders passed during travel over the route. This difference is used 4' by the base station processor in a diagnostic operation. A failed transponder in the authorised section of line will result in a value for this data corresponding to the identity of the failed transponder.
The above method of using transponders offers several advantages over other methods: ,.1 -7- The data sent to and from the train by radio is of fixed format, whatever the extent of the authority.
In spite of the fact that the identities of all the individual transponders in the section are not transmitted to the train, the central computer at the base station is made aware of the failure and identity of any transponder, so that a technician can be sent to replace the device.
If logical sequences of numbers for transponders are used on 00bB o Q 0 0 the railway, there is redundancy of information sent to the So"o train, enabling the on-board processor to carry out checks on 0 00 the validity of the data, and of the correctness of each transponder passed. Thus, in the example shown in Figure 2, all transponder identities are multiples of 5 and each section has a constant first two digits (of a four digit code).
Particular transponders can be used as triggers for actions by the on-board processor, in one of two ways: The identity of the trigger transponder can be transmitted to the train in the data message containing the authority details; and, if a logical sequence of transponder identities is used, the trigger transponder identity can be derived by the on-board processor an audible warning on the approach to the end of the authority could be triggered by passage over a transponder with an identity within some limit of the maximum or minimum of the range).
A major advantage of the system described above is that the on-board processor can be a relatively low-cost processor since it -8merely has to deal with limited data of constant format. The majority of the data security procedures can therefore be built into the base station processor, leaving the on-board processor to perform minimal processing with minimal security.
b a *0i

Claims (9)

1. A railway signalling system in which train equipment comprises a transponder interrogator, a data processor and a radio transmitter/receiver, a base station comprises a radio transmitter/receiver and processor means for generating for transmission to the train, data authorising the passage of the train through a track section defined by the transmitted data, said track section comprising a plurality of transponders positioned at intervals along the track and each transponder having an identity code which is 0oO transmitted to the train on interrogation, said processor means is So° adapted to generate for transmission to the train a check code derived 0 from a combination of the identity codes of the transponders in an G:0 authorised track section, said check code having a length independent of the number of transponders, and said train equipment is adapted to receive identity codes from transponders as the train proceeds through the authorised track section said data processor providing an indication of the correspondence between the recrived identity codes and that check code after passage through said authorised track section. 00
2. A railway signalling system according to Claim 1, wherein the transponders in a track section have sequential codes, said base 0°0 station transmitter/receiver is adaptged to transmit, in addition to said check code, the identity code of at least one limit transponder :000 at an end of the authorised track section, said data processor being 0 adapted to compare each transponder code detected on interrogation with that of said limit transponder received from the base station and to produce a train controlling response in the event the detected identity code is beyond said limit transponder and outside said authorised track section. %4 0'*I:Ir_ r
3. A railway signalling system according to Claim 1 or Claim 2, wherein said base station transmitter/receiver is adapted to transmit the number of transponders in said authorised track section, said data processor having means for counting the number of transponders detected upon interrogation within said authorised track section and providing an indication of any discrepancy to the train transmitter for transmission to said base station.
4. A railway signalling system according to any preceding claim, wherein said check code comprises the sum of the identity codes of the transponders in the authorised track section. S
5. A railway signalling system according to Claim 4, wherein the processing of the detected identity codes comprises a cumulative summation, said dataprocessor being adapted to subtract said cumulative sum from said check code to obtain the identity code for any transponder that failed to respond. m o i t4Y" |1 i II
6. A method of signalling for use in a railway signalling system in which authorisation is transmitted by radio from a base station to a train to permit the train to traverse a track section having a plurality of transponders positioned at intervals along the track, the method comprising the steps of: deriving a constant length check code by summation of all the identity codes of transponders in the section, (ii) generating a data authority message comprising said check code and the first and last only of the individual transponder identity codes, the message format being constant irrespective of the number of transponders in the particular section, (iii) transmitting the authority message from the base station to the train, (iv) interrogating each transponder by means of equipment on the train to detect its identity code, comparing each detected identity code with said first and-last identity codes in the authority message, and (vi) generating a train control signal in the event a detected identity code corresponds to a transponder outside the authorised track section.
7. A method of signalling according to Claim 6 comprising the further steps of: processing by means of equipment on the train the detected identity codes within the authorised section to form a cumulative sum, /%fe RA> 7,/1 O* Ii d~ ~,XIU, i1 12 (ii) subtracting said cumulative sum from said check code to obtain the identity code for any transponder that failed to respond, and (iii) transmitting any such identity code from the train to the base station.
8- A railway signalling system substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
9. A method of signalling authority messages between a base station and a train substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the accompanying drawings. Dated this 26th day of June 1991 GEC-GENERAL SIGNAL LIMITED By their Patent Attorney GRIFFITH HACK CO. o a S 4 a I t o -ii- L~ i3.il_ re -1
AU34669/89A 1988-05-11 1989-05-10 A railway signalling system Ceased AU615059B2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8811131 1988-05-11
GB888811131A GB8811131D0 (en) 1988-05-11 1988-05-11 Railway signalling system

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU3466989A AU3466989A (en) 1989-11-16
AU615059B2 true AU615059B2 (en) 1991-09-19

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
AU660788B2 (en) * 1992-04-28 1995-07-06 Gec Alsthom Limited Railway signalling system

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE19501993C2 (en) * 1995-01-11 1997-09-04 Elpro Ag Method and device for the safety-relevant recording and processing of status information of decentralized or central control devices of guideway elements along a guideway on traction vehicles
GB2430528A (en) * 2005-09-22 2007-03-28 Westinghouse Brake & Signal Transmitting movement authorities to trains independently of the interlocking controlling lineside signals.
DE102007031138A1 (en) * 2007-06-29 2009-01-02 Siemens Ag Method and arrangement for operating a railway line

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
AU660788B2 (en) * 1992-04-28 1995-07-06 Gec Alsthom Limited Railway signalling system

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB8910782D0 (en) 1989-06-28
GB2218557B (en) 1992-01-22
GB2218557A (en) 1989-11-15
GB8811131D0 (en) 1988-06-15
AU3466989A (en) 1989-11-16

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