Solstice Release

Hello again, after a two week break. It feels like I’ve been flat out over the last couple of months, churning out maps like there’s no tomorrow.

I’ve managed to fix a handful of small problems with the maps:

There are also some other bugs that I know about and am trying to fix:

  • On the Charing Cross, Cannon Street and London Bridge to Forest Hill map, trains never step out of the berth for signal L156, and are (seemingly) manually interposed in to the berth for signal L148. This could be a fault with the train describer itself, which I’ll have to work around
  • There are occasional problems with some trains being linked to schedules which are not the right ones
  • Some signals and TRTS indications always show on when they’re not – I believe this is linked to the problem above

I’m working hard to try and get them fixed, so please accept my apologies for the fact it’s taking a while.

That’s it for this week – the next maps are a surprise (read that as "I haven’t decided which ones to tackle next").

// Peter

3 thoughts on “Solstice Release

  1. Trains step from 4119 to 4007 at london bridge central side. It looks like the diagram is missing a crossover. Really useful maps though thanks.

  2. I’m not clear about the track mapping. Sometimes two black lines appear to cross. Is this a flat crossing? Unlikely, I thought. Or is it a double slip? Even less likely! Or is it a double set of points – a lead in followed by a lead out? It would be nice if these various possibilities could be sorted out, and a distinct graphic established to clear up confusion.
    However, I know you’re busy, and weaving your magic in ever INcreasing circles, and I really appreciate what you have done and are doing. Best regards.

    • When two lines cross – one horizontally and one at an angle, it’s normally a flat crossing – if it were a double slip, it’d have little extra pair of lines. However, on earlier maps, it can be either a flat crossing or a double set of points. The map style has evolved since I started out, and new maps are normally much clearer than the old ones.

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