Skip to main content

UK university unveils technology to solve 200-year old railway problem

A failsafe track switch designed to eradicate a 200-year-old problem on the railway has been created by engineers at Loughborough University in the UK. The technology, known as Repoint, is a robust and reliable points mechanism which will improve safety, reduce maintenance costs and boost capacity on the railways.
September 10, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
A failsafe track switch designed to eradicate a 200-year-old problem on the railway has been created by engineers at Loughborough University in the UK.

The technology, known as Repoint, is a robust and reliable points mechanism which will improve safety, reduce maintenance costs and boost capacity on the railways.

Supported by the UK Rail Safety and Standards Board (RSSB), Repoint is the result of work carried out with industry experts into improved switches to override track switch failures which can lead to train derailment.

Using safety concepts derived from aerospace and the nuclear industry, Repoint corrects a failed switch through a patented arrangement of interlocking rail ends which incorporate a sliding arrangement similar to a breather switch. A lift and drop mechanism allows for expansion and provides an additional locking mechanism with virtually no friction losses.

The mechanism can also move the switch in fractions of a second compared to the current four seconds for conventional designs, during which time a train may have travelled a distance of 200 metres. The university claims that Repoint’s ability to reduce this time to under a second improves rail capacity without the need to build new infrastructure.

Professor Roger Dixon, head of the Control Systems Research Group, said the next step was to build a prototype switch to be trialled in a non-passenger environment either on a test track or a siding.

“Repoint is a robust alternative to conventional switches that breaks with 200 years of tradition to offer a change in design that is inherently failsafe and fit for a 21st century rail network,” he said. “It also has the potential to deliver huge cost savings, and will result in a significant increase in reliability and safety to the rail industry worldwide.

“We are currently seeking development partners from around the world to work with us to roll out the patented technology across international rail networks.”

Related Content

  • Dignity should be key measure of MaaS success
    December 4, 2020
    Money isn’t everything: what if we made dignity into the key measure of success for MaaS? Crissy Ditmore sets out her vision statement for the industry’s developers
  • Bangkok combats pollution with city toll 
    October 1, 2020
    Road pricing is part of Thailand’s Clean Mobility Programme
  • EVs: Time for a rethink
    December 14, 2021
    Given a growing body of evidence that EVs are not the clean, green machines they are made out to be, Andrew Bunn suggests they can only be part of the puzzle – not the answer to environmental problems
  • UK researchers take first prize for traffic control system that thinks for itself
    November 13, 2015
    A team of scientists at the University of Huddersfield, led by Dr Mauro Vallati of its Department of Informatics has won a prize for its research into the use of artificial intelligence (AI) as a way of keeping the traffic flowing. The second Autonomic Road Transport Systems competition which took place under the aegis of the long-running EU-backed research framework named European Co-operation in Science and Technology (COST). Dr Vallati formed a team with two fellow researchers in the field whom he h