The title illustration shows what is called a "double-slip-switch" in USA parlance. It allows trains to access any of four separate routes within one section of track. What it would be called in another country would be interesting.
It depends. Each country and railways put different kinds of junctions into different categories, either letter based names, numerical or some else. What you call a double-slip switch might be something completely else in other languages around the world. But yes generally the junctions in the title are called "slip switches", be it single or double.
Pěkný návod 🤟 ještě by se hodil pro mě nějaký návod se skryptování složitějších návěstidel. Mám vytvořené luxusní AŽD pro TRS 22 , ale nemám nikoho kdo umí skryptovat.
Yes it is. By a long short too. From experience, to getr something working in Train Sim Classic, you need a lot of luck. In trainz you just need patience.
Trainz tutorials? What a great idea!
The title illustration shows what is called a "double-slip-switch" in USA parlance. It allows trains to access any of four separate routes within one section of track. What it would be called in another country would be interesting.
It depends. Each country and railways put different kinds of junctions into different categories, either letter based names, numerical or some else. What you call a double-slip switch might be something completely else in other languages around the world. But yes generally the junctions in the title are called "slip switches", be it single or double.
Pěkný návod 🤟 ještě by se hodil pro mě nějaký návod se skryptování složitějších návěstidel. Mám vytvořené luxusní AŽD pro TRS 22 , ale nemám nikoho kdo umí skryptovat.
I've heard Trainz is easier than Train Sim Classic.
Yes it is. By a long short too. From experience, to getr something working in Train Sim Classic, you need a lot of luck. In trainz you just need patience.