Similar Posts

Subscribe
Notify of
6 Answers
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
MacMadB
1 year ago

Railway stations, which are nodes of several routes, were previously created with so-called directional glows. Frequently, trains started and ended here.

If you look at the Map you can see that north of Hude the routes share. The main track stops (or stopped earlier) on tracks 1 to 3 and the trains of the side track started on track 10 (and track 11 rebuilt?).

in Oats up to a few years ago it was still rougher: track 1, 2, 3 for the first main track, then track 101, 102, 103 for the north-facing track and track 10, 11, 12, 13 for the south-facing track south at the railway station as headway platform. (The platforms on the tracks 10 et seq. are now built back.)

zVanessa
1 year ago

Such incomplete sequences of numbers usually result from the fact that the track numbering has changed over time. Many stations used to have much more tracks than today. Sometimes there are tracks without platforms, but they still have a number internally.

MacMadB
1 year ago
Reply to  zVanessa

No, I’m not.

zVanessa
1 year ago
Reply to  MacMadB

I don’t understand what you want to tell me.

zVanessa
1 year ago

To the first point: If you read again, you will notice that I wrote it like that.
Yes, that’s also an option, but not the case with every single station.
And to the last point: As you say, usually.

MacMadB
1 year ago
  • Each track is numbered, whether with or without platform.
  • Jumps in track numbers go back to directional tracks, see my answer!
  • When tracks are built back, a new numbering (see e.g. Kreiensen: No tracks 10, 11, 12 etc. and no tracks 101, 102 etc., but now track 51ff.