Some of us enjoy the 'tech' side of our hobby and are always seeking novel or nifty ways of doing things. It's a challenge to get something to work using a sophisticated system, but also to have it run reliably so that it stays fun. Some, like me, prefer a more hands-on operation where I have to 'line the route', meaning I have a designated purpose and destination, not to mention a path, for any train in motion on the layout. I'm the driver of that train, nothing automatic, and I need to be sure that the route is pre-selected, or at least that I am prepared to line turnouts as and when they must be lined in order for the train to continue unimpeded.
I need to explain more: I like to run trains, but mainly to watch them in reasonably decent scenery in a reasonably realistic manner...meaning broad curves, some weathering, a few more details here and there, but more attention to the right-of-way and the surrounding scenery. This means, in the space I have, it must be 'around the room', a folded loop where the twinned mains crosses over itself at least once, usually at a bridge or through hidden trackage. This, in turn, means deep corners and a higher reach length do the back of my yard module where the main goes past at an elevation, but closer to the back wall. I need a stool, but don't particularly enjoy dragging it around. So, I do operate my farthest turnouts remotely with bell-crank mechanisms, wood and screws, dowels, and the close end of the dowel protrudes through the fascia close to me.
I enjoy thinking about 'what I'm doing', mapping out a train's passage around the layout, moving points as I must, and then commencing to move the locomotive and trailing tonnage. All the yard moves are effected using the sharp end of a kabob skewer, again for the same reasons as before. Switching takes some thinking, and I like to run the show myself, moving points in succession and making the locomotive and cuts of cars go where I want them to go.
Where the dowels protrude, their tips are painted yellow. Right beside the hole is a small block of 1X2 acting as a shield from my belly so that I don't inadvertently press up against the dowel and change the remote points. On the proximal side of those blocks are two swaths of paint, one red, one green. Where the yellow tip lies, that's where the points line. Simple, effective, and I quite enjoyed building the various crank mechanisms.