Belgian railway signalling
Belgian railway signalling is the signalling in effect on the Belgian rail network currently operated by Infrabel.
Preamble
There are in Belgium two types of train movement:
- 'major movement' (e.g. mainline operation) that occurs during normal operation (traffic moves at the speed permitted by the signalling and regulations);
- 'minor movement' (e.g. shunting) which is done by driving by sight and never faster than 40 km/h (25 mph).
The change from one movement to the other is done by signals (main stop signals) or a written order.
The first movement (which is always executed as minor movement) happens in the following situations:
- a driver taking over a new train;
- a change in driver's cab or direction of travel;
- receipt, change or removal of train number;
- vehicles that can drive on themselves are coupled or uncoupled
- when permission is needed to continue to drive after an incident
- when beginning to shunt
Within major movement, there are two regimes, linked to bi-directional operation on double track lines:
- normal track regime: the signals are located on the left of the track. However, in some cases, the configuration of the environment precludes placing signs on the left track. They are then placed on the right and have an arrow (white arrow on a blue disc).[1]
- counter-flow track regime: the signals are located on the right of the track and the aspects are blinking.
The most common way of regime change is by the display of a chevron (V-shaped) sign on a main stop sign (single or combined).
In minor movement, all signals are to be obeyed, both those of the left hand track and the right hand; signals controlling only minor movements are placed on the left. In counter-flow operation, some signals (light or otherwise) are specifically dedicated to minor movements and therefore are ignored by the trains travelling in major movement.
Light signals
The lights are designed and arranged to be visible from a distance (up to two kilometers on a clear day). For this they are equipped with lenses to focus light rays emitted by the bulb, which can be selected and reasonable power. That is why the lights do not seem very intense when viewed from the side while they light up sharply in normal line of vision i.e. in the direction of arrival of the train.
Note that the yellow lights often are orange in reality.
Plain stop signal
The red aspect requires a halt for both major and minor movements. It can be opened for major movement (green when the track gives access to a mainline, or double yellow in stations) or minor movement (red + white). It gives no information about the aspect of the next signal.
A white number below the main aspect restricts the speed (from the first switch or track junction after the signal).
Above the main aspect, the signal can show a chevron (to change the regime), or a "U" (when the train is led towards a dead end).
It can be mounted on a mast or gantry (above the track).
Warning signal
Warns of the aspect of a following main stop signal:
It can show a green aspect (the next signal is open without restrictions), double yellow (the next signal is at the stop aspect), green-yellow horizontal (the next signal requires a speed reduction) or green-yellow vertical (double warning in the case of a short section between the next signal and the signal after that, which has a red aspect or imposes a speed restriction).
It may also present a yellow number above the signal with the main aspects green-yellow horizontal and green-yellow vertical and thus the speed (in tens of km/h) with respect to the next signal.
Combined main stop signal
Serves as both a stop signal and a warning signal and can therefore, according to the needs of the position, present aspects of both a plain stop signal and a warning signal. This type of signal is the most common one on the mainline network.
Simplified stop signal
It can either be placed at ground level or elevated (on a post).
| Red aspect: halt for trains in both major and minor movements. | |
| Yellow aspect: allows trains in major and minor movement to proceed (but doesn't transform the movement type). It does not give any information about the aspect of the next signal. |
Small stop signal
| The halt aspect applies only to minor movements. | |
| This aspect allows minor movement. |
It is placed on the ground.[2]
An older version of the small stop signal has the appearance of the simplified signal above, but with a purple instead of a red light.
Completed operations indicator (IOT)
The Completed operations indicator is a system composed of a set of switches (activation) and light signals (display) on platforms of most stations and allows the guard to announce to the driver (conductor) that the procedure for boarding is completed and the train can start.
Where the system is installed, the yellow aspect (or white on older systems) is a prerequisite for the departure of passenger trains.
Aspects displayed by major stop signals and warning signals
| Normal operation (left hand track) | Explanation | Opposite track operation (right hand track) |
|---|---|---|
| Green: allows the passage at full speed, the next signal 'track clear' without restriction or is a warning signal . | ||
| Double yellow: allows the passage at full speed, but the next stop signal is set to 'line occupied' or switch to minor movements (Red White), or the signal does not "know" the state of the next signal. The driver must drive as if the next stop signal is a red signal. | ||
| or | Red: 'halt'.
If the signal is managed by a signal box, the driver cannot pass at danger without permission from the signal box. If the red signal is displayed on an automatic signal it warns for an occupied block section ahead or a level crossing that is experiencing technical difficulties. The driver will stop, write down the incident on his journey report and will proceed at sight. |
|
| Green-yellow horizontal: allows the passage at full speed, but the next signal requires a speed reduction. This speed may be indicated by number displayed on a yellow display at the top otherwise a black number on a white triangle can be affixed to the mast signal: it is the smallest speed that may be imposed by the next signal. If there is no indication, the driver considers that the imposed speed is 40 km/h (25 mph). | ||
| Green-yellow vertical: allows the passage at full speed and warns of a short section: the distance between the signal following and that follows is shorter than the distance normally required to perform the action required . | ||
| Red and White: allows the passage under 'minor movement' (change the type of movement if it was major movement ). The track behind the signal is occupied, dead end or the next signal is at 'halt' and is at abnormally reduced distance (<370 metres) |
Signs
Speed signs
| Permanent | Explanation | Temporary |
|---|---|---|
| Announcement sign: indicates a speed restriction ahead (in tens of km/h). The train has to slow down to this speed. | ||
| Origin sign: marks the beginning of a speed restricted zone. The number is the same as the announcement sign above. Sometimes the number is not present and a plain black circle is used instead. | ||
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End of zone sign: after passing this sign the train can accelerate to the speed indicated (in tens of km/h).
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| Reference speed sign: after passing this sign the train can accelerate to the reference speed limit of the line, which is the speed indicated (in tens of km/h). |
Additional panels (special triangles, for example) are used to indicate that only certain types of trains are affected: e.g., "HKM" means the sign only concerns freight trains .
Some other signs
| 'Control reference line': indicate on what line it is headed. | |
| Catenary end sign: indicates the end of the zone powered by overhead wire. Electric trains must halt. | |
| 'Expect lower pantograph': Warns of upcoming 'lower pantograph' signal. | |
| 'Lower Pantograph' | |
| 'Raise pantograph': end of zone in which pantograph(s) had to be lowered. |
Other signals
Other signals complement the fixed signs:
- Mobile signals (light at night / low visibility, flag day) red, yellow and green;
- Acoustic signals (detonators, horns);
- Torch flame red lights flashing (requiring 'halt');
Cab signalling
Since the end of 2025 Belgium is completely covered by ETCS levels 1 Limited Supervision, 1 Full Supervision and 2, with the exception of high speed line 1 to France.
TBL1+ is still used by some older trains but the use of ETCS will be compulsory by the end of 2027.
TBL 1+
The TBL1+ system was designed in 2006 by the Belgian subsidiary of the Alstom Transport group. This became the new standard for Belgian signalling, and was deployed on all lines equipped with conventional signalling. The signals are the same as classic ones, but they are combined with automatic train control and cab signalling.
The trigger for developing this system was the Pécrot disaster in March 2001 when two trains collided head-on because a driver had passed a red signal, drawing attention to the fact that on the majority of lines, no system prevented the train from passing a stop signal. It was therefore decided to invest in such a system.
At the time, however, the existing TBL1 system offered this feature of automatic stop at red lights, but only a few main lines were equipped (or approximately 13% of signals). NMBS/SNCB decided therefore to abandon this TBL1 system and modified to make it compatible with the new European ERTMS standard in terms of ground infrastructure, becoming the system TBL1+.
Other cab signalling systems
References
- signalisation
- Belrail.be guide to signals (in French)
- Wallorail.be guide to signals (in French)
- HLT Booklet of the NMBS/SNCB (Rules for train drivers)
- Rétiveau, R. (1987). Signalisation Ferroviaire. Paris: Presses de l'Ecole Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées. ISBN 978-2-85978-102-6.
- "Signalisation SNCB". Trans-fer. 119 (April 2001). GTF Editions.
External links
Media related to Railway signals in Belgium at Wikimedia Commons