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A junction, in the context of rail transport, is a point at which two or more routes diverge, controlled by 'points' (US: switches) and signalling.

Railroad operations refer to stations that lie on or near a railway junction as a junction station. Frequently, trains are built up and taken apart (separated) at such stations so that the same train can split up and go to multiple destinations. For goods trains (US: freight trains), marshalling yards (US: Classification yards) serve a similar purpouse.

Measures to improve junction capacity


The capacity of the junctions limits the capacity of a railway network more than the capacity of individual railway lines. This applies more as the network density increases. Measures to improve junctions are often more useful than building new railway lines. The capacity of a railway junction can be increased with improved signalling measures, by building points suitable for higher speeds, or by turning level junctions into flying junctions. With more complicated junctions such construction can rapidly become very expensive, especially if space is restricted by tunnels, bridges or inner-city tracks.

See also


Rail infrastructure | Rail junction types | Railway track layouts

Eisenbahnknoten

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Junction (rail)".

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