47. MRH14-01-Jan2014-P.pdf - page 149

Radio has forever changed
the railroading landscape,
enabling train dispatchers to
control their territories from
hundreds or even thousands
of miles away while elimi-
nating the need for towers
and wayside operators. No
longer is a tower operator
required to hoop up train
orders. Instead, communica-
tion between train crews and
dispatchers is now direct,
facilitated by a series of way-
side radio base stations car-
rying radio and data signals
throughout the railroad.
Strategically placed to maxi-
mize signal strength, the
exterior of a base station
presents nothing more than
a group of small antennas
mounted on a tower accom-
panied by a nondescript
equipment housing, making
it a lineside detail that is eas-
ily overlooked.
Although plain on the outside, the interior is quite complex
as groups of electronic devices receive and transmit signals
enabling radio communication over large distances. Since
our focus as modelers is in replicating the visible rather
1: The prototype used
as the basis of this kit-
bash. It's located on the
NS Chicago line.
1
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