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Reply to "Tinplate photos πŸ“Έ and videos πŸ“½"

@G-Man24 posted:

Here's a Lionel No. 66 Semaphore (1915-1926) which came as one of the accessories on my 199 Scenic Railway  and stands 14" tall. It is operated manually with the red upper arm alternating between a red and green celluloid disc over the lamp and the lower green arm which alternates between green and amber. The arms operate independently.

IMG_2118



It was intended (in this case) to sit alongside a single set of rails on a curve leading to a signal crossing. It offers no control over the track power and the lamps are always lit.

My question is how would a model engineer operate this accessory so as to simulate a prototypical signal in operation ? What would be the appropriate position of the arms for a train being halted vs a train with the go ahead ? Perhaps it was simply a toy and I'm overthinking it but it seems Lionel would always try and incorporate and promote some measure of realism with their trackside accessories.

Love your scenic railway!! Green-go. Red-stop. Yellow-caution. But seriously that is a question for the "real" train forum. I would google it. Here is some help:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...way_semaphore_signal

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