Railway Block Sections Explained: Fixed vs. Automatic

Overview

A Block Section is a defined portion of track into which only one train is allowed at a time.

This is one of the fundamental safety principles of railway operations.

In simple terms:

A block section ensures safe train separation by preventing two trains from occupying the same stretch of track simultaneously.

Blocks are the building blocks of safe train movement — for metros, high-speed lines, freight corridors, and conventional railways.

Why Do Railways Use Block Sections?

Trains cannot stop quickly and cannot steer.

To avoid collisions:

  • Each train must have a protected space ahead of it.
  • This protected space is the block.
  • A train can enter a block only when the block is confirmed clear.

This principle applies in manual, semi-automatic, and fully automatic systems.

Types of Blocks (Worldwide)

Block systems vary depending on technology, country, and traffic density.

Below are the universal categories.

1. Fixed Block System

The track is divided into fixed physical sections.

How it works

  • Each block has track detection (track circuit or axle counter)
  • If a block is occupied → signal behind it shows danger
  • Only one train per block

Where used

  • Conventional railways worldwide
  • Freight lines
  • Metro systems (older generations)

Limitations

  • Block size is fixed → may be longer than required
  • Reduces capacity at higher speeds

2. Automatic Block Signalling (ABS / Automatic Block System)

An enhanced form of fixed block.

Features

  • Signals are automatically controlled
  • No manual block instruments
  • Trains follow each other with block-to-block separation
  • Track detection governs all aspects

Widely used in

  • US, Europe, India, Japan, Australia
  • Busy double or multiple-track corridors

3. Manual Block System

A human operator authorizes movement into the block.

Examples

  • Token systems
  • Radio/telephone-based manual block
  • Staff-and-ticket systems (still used on low-density lines globally)

Use cases

  • Rural lines
  • Non-electrified low-traffic routes
  • Heritage railways

4. Moving Block System (Advanced)

Blocks are not fixed.

The protected distance moves with the train.

How it works

  • Train constantly reports its position
  • Safe braking distance is calculated dynamically
  • No physical block boundaries

Used in

  • Modern metro lines (CBTC)
  • ETCS Level 3 concepts (Europe, pilot lines)
  • High-density, high-frequency operations

Advantages

  • Higher capacity
  • Shorter headways
  • Optimized use of track

How a Block Section Is Declared Clear

A block is considered clear only when:

  1. Train has fully exited the block
  2. Track detection confirms no vehicles are present
  3. Point/route settings are safe and consistent (if part of a junction)
  4. Flank protection is intact (junction protection)

Track detection methods:

  • Track circuits
  • Axle counters
  • Manual confirmation (in manual block systems)

Entry Permission Into a Block

A train receives permission through one of the following:

1. Signal Aspect

Green/yellow/ proceed aspects indicate the block ahead is safe.

2. Token or Staff

In rural or legacy systems, a physical token gives authority.

3. Electronic Movement Authority

In ETCS/CBTC-style systems, a digital movement authority replaces signals.

Block Section vs. Route — What’s the Difference?

These two terms are often confused.

TermMeaningPurpose
Block SectionA segment of track with “one-train-at-a-time” rulePrevent rear-end collisions
RouteA specific path set through points/turnoutsPrevent side collisions / conflicts

A train may pass through several blocks within one route.

Country Variations (Neutral Overview)

United Kingdom

  • Uses a combination of manual block, absolute block, and Track Circuit Block systems
  • Mechanical block instruments still exist on some rural lines

Europe (EU)

  • Widespread use of fixed blocks integrated with ETCS Level 1/2
  • On high-speed lines, blocks are often very long to suit braking distances

United States

  • Extensive use of Automatic Block Signaling (ABS)
  • Track warrants and dispatcher-authorized blocks common on unsignalled lines

India

  • Absolute block and automatic block are common
  • High-density routes using multiple-aspect automatic signalling

Japan

  • Dense block layouts for metro and commuter operations
  • High-speed Shinkansen uses advanced block logic with continuous detection

Why Block Sections Matter for Capacity

Shorter blocks → shorter headway → more trains per hour.

Capacity is influenced by:

  • Block length
  • Train braking performance
  • Signal spacing
  • Route conflicts

This leads to:

  • High-density lines = short blocks
  • High-speed lines = long blocks
  • Metros = moving block for maximum throughput

Common Questions

Why not make blocks extremely short everywhere?

Because:

  • Cost increases (more signals, detection equipment)
  • Short blocks are not ideal for high-speed lines

Do signals exist in moving block systems?

Often no — cab signalling replaces wayside signals.

Can two trains ever be in the same block?

Only in moving block systems where virtual blocks replace fixed ones.