In railway signaling "We're making tracks for others to follow!"

Track Shacks, Inc.

 

HomeAboutProducts & ServicesContact Us

 
 

Track Shacks Mission


Track Shacks Inc. is a privately owned railway signaling company providing the highest quality signaling equipment and related services for Class I, Regional, and Short Line railroads resulting in increased capacity, efficiency, and safety for the railway industry.

 


Track Shacks History


Track Shacks Inc. is a privately owned railway signaling company located in Hodgenville, Kentucky. This location in central Kentucky was chosen so we can provide quality signaling products and services quickly and efficiently to eastern railroads.

 Founded by current owner Kenton Slayton, we first opened our doors on November 18, 2002. Mr. Slayton, a former employee of a major signaling manufacturer, decided after much deliberation to open his own business to fill a void in the signaling industry. With 13 years of experience in drafting and engineering Mr. Slayton set out to develop new standards for quality in the railway signaling business.

The name of our company emanated from our original purpose to wire the signaling bungalows and cases used in the railway industry. While this still remains the primary focus of Track Shacks, we maintain an eye to the future constantly seeking new opportunities to diversify our company.

Operations started on West High Street in Hodgenville, KY.  The building is actually quite old and was first used by the Hodgenville Manufacturing Company which went out of business in 1914. This building was also the last stop on the Illinois Central branch from  Elizabethtown to Hodgenville which is now abandoned. Since our opening in November, 2002, Track Shacks has experienced steady growth at this location.

While a fledgling company in the railway signaling industry, our employees have a combined experience of 20+ years working in railway related businesses. While our company is new, you can count on the expertise of our employees to perform quality work in a timely fashion.

 


Track Shacks Facilities


Track Shacks Inc. is headquartered at 501 West High Street, Hodgenville, Kentucky. Our wiring, manufacturing, and engineering facilities are also located in the same complex. This arraignment allows Track Shacks to provide superior product and service quality. Upper levels of  management keep their finger on the pulse of the company by simply walking out of their office and onto the shop floor. Strategically located in central Kentucky, Track Shacks can provide quality signaling products and services quickly and efficiently to eastern railroads. 

Our facilities, while not large by industry standards, provide us with adequate space to handle several projects simultaneously. All of the equipment used by Track Shacks, most of which is relatively new or refurbished, is certified to industry standards where appropriate. We are more than willing to work with our valued customers and invest in our company where appropriate to satisfy customer needs. By not investing heavily in extravagant buildings or equipment Track Shacks can lower overhead, maintain quality, and pass savings on to its customers. 

 


Track Shacks Clients


Track Shacks Inc. provides quality products and services to Class I, Regional, and Short Line Railroads located in the United States. 

"Short line" and "regional railroad" are generic terms without precise definitions, generally used to refer to small and middle-sized railroads, respectively.

There is a precise revenue-based definition of categories of U.S. railroads found in the regulations of the Surface Transportation Board (STB). The STB's accounting regulations group rail carriers into three classes for purposes of accounting and reporting (49 CFR Part 1201 Subpart A):

  • Class I: Carriers with annual carrier operating revenues of $250 million* or more
  • Class II aka Regional: Carriers with annual carrier operating revenues of less than $250 million* but in excess of $20 million*
  • Class III aka Short Line: Carriers with annual carrier operating revenues of $20 million* or less, and all switching and terminal companies regardless of operating revenues.

* These threshold figures are adjusted annually for inflation using the base year of 1991.

 


Railway Signaling Industry History


The railway signaling industry encompasses both the highway crossing signals (active warning devices) and wayside signaling (the use of signals to control train movement). 

Although the date of 1814 is given as the first practical use of George Stephenson's invention, the steam locomotive, railway signaling is even older.  The first rail cars were pulled by horses or mules and were used in mines and quarries.  Records as early as 1806 show that hand and arm signals were used to direct the drivers of these early "trains".  Hand signals, flags - and at night, lanterns - were used to signal Baltimore & Ohio trains in 1829.  In some instances, a mounted flagman preceded the train to warn of an approaching train - this custom continued in New York City, on West St., as late as the nineteen twenties.

Signaling using fixed wayside signals probably first began, in the United States, on the New Castle and Frenchtown R. R., in 1832.  This 17-mile long railroad, connecting New Castle, Delaware with Frenchtown, Maryland, used fixed signals, flags at first and later ball signals, to pass information from one terminal to another.

In the early day of railroading, trains were operated (more or less) by schedules.  Thus train separation was a time separation.  As traffic increased, tracks were divided into blocks, and train separation was by space interval.  Thus block signaling began.  Various electrical and mechanical systems were tried.  Basically, they were designed to let one train pass into a block and to inhibit the block entering signal from clearing to allow another train into the block until the first train was reported to have left the block.  Later systems added a permissive feature, allowing trains to follow each other into the same block.

Beginning in 1851, the electric telegraph was used to determine the locations and progress of trains along the line and to transmit train orders to expedite traffic.

These systems all required substantial manpower and had no protection against a part of a train being accidentally left in a block between signal stations.

August 20, 1872, marked one of the most important events in railway signaling, the invention of closed track circuit by Dr. William Robinson.  First installed at Kinzua, Pa. on the Philadelphia and Erie RR., the closed track circuit soon proved its worth, and other installations followed rapidly.  All modern track circuits are based on Dr. Robinson's original concept, even though their capabilities have been greatly amplified by modern track relays, coding, and more recently, electronic techniques such as the high-frequency jointless track circuits.

The track circuit is used to detect the presence of a train or a broken rail within a block of track. When an electric current traveling through the rails in a block of track is shorted by the presence of a train or interrupted by a break in the rail, a red signal indicates danger to approaching trains. When the track is clear, the closed circuit activates a green signal to indicate that approaching trains can enter the block. The same circuit principle is also used to activate highway crossings.


The railway signaling industry encompasses both the highway crossing signals (active warning devices) and wayside signaling (the use of signals to control train movement). 

Although the date of 1814 is given as the first practical use of George Stephenson's invention, the steam locomotive, railway signaling is even older.  The first rail cars were pulled by horses or mules and were used in mines and quarries.  Records as early as 1806 show that hand and arm signals were used to direct the drivers of these early "trains".  Hand signals, flags - and at night, lanterns - were used to signal Baltimore & Ohio trains in 1829.  In some instances, a mounted flagman preceded the train to warn of an approaching train - this custom continued in New York City, on West St., as late as the nineteen twenties.

Signaling using fixed wayside signals probably first began, in the United States, on the New Castle and Frenchtown R. R., in 1832.  This 17-mile long railroad, connecting New Castle, Delaware with Frenchtown, Maryland, used fixed signals, flags at first and later ball signals, to pass information from one terminal to another.

In the early day of railroading, trains were operated (more or less) by schedules.  Thus train separation was a time separation.  As traffic increased, tracks were divided into blocks, and train separation was by space interval.  Thus block signaling began.  Various electrical and mechanical systems were tried.  Basically, they were designed to let one train pass into a block and to inhibit the block entering signal from clearing to allow another train into the block until the first train was reported to have left the block.  Later systems added a permissive feature, allowing trains to follow each other into the same block.

Beginning in 1851, the electric telegraph was used to determine the locations and progress of trains along the line and to transmit train orders to expedite traffic.

These systems all required substantial manpower and had no protection against a part of a train being accidentally left in a block between signal stations.

August 20, 1872, marked one of the most important events in railway signaling, the invention of closed track circuit by Dr. William Robinson.  First installed at Kinzua, Pa. on the Philadelphia and Erie RR., the closed track circuit soon proved its worth, and other installations followed rapidly.  All modern track circuits are based on Dr. Robinson's original concept, even though their capabilities have been greatly amplified by modern track relays, coding, and more recently, electronic techniques such as the high-frequency jointless track circuits.

The track circuit is used to detect the presence of a train or a broken rail within a block of track. When an electric current traveling through the rails in a block of track is shorted by the presence of a train or interrupted by a break in the rail, a red signal indicates danger to approaching trains. When the track is clear, the closed circuit activates a green signal to indicate that approaching trains can enter the block. The same circuit principle is also used to activate highway crossings.

 
 

  Home | About | Products & Services | Site Map | Legal Notice | Contact Us                                                                    Copyright 2011 Track Shacks, Inc. All rights reserved.