my experience of them was in the 80s working on tbm tunnelling in London. They were sectional crossings attached to the last sledge of the tbm train by drag ropes ( wire bonds that is ) about 50m long.
As the tbm advanced the California would be dragged along behind it, the entry and exit ramps had slider rails which slotted over the track so that trains could run up and down
The crossing had continuous steel strakes both sides about 6" above the deck, these ran under steel pins inserted into pre-drilled holes in the lining rings on either side. This prevented the crossing tilting as it was dragged along, especially with an unloaded train on one side - there would only ever be one train, the other one would be under the belt and go straight out.
The system was that loaded trains had right of way and would go straight out to the pit bottom; as a loaded train passed the trains on the fixed crossings ( this might be in tunnels from abour 1500m up to 5km in length ) each train would advance to the next crossing and wait for the next outbound train.
an outbound train arriving at an empty crossing would wait for the next inbound, because a crossing with no waiting inbound meant a delay of some sort.
California crossings might be dragged round long, shallow radius curves by opening the bolts on one side, but they would be dropped and pulled forwards later for sharper curves
''the stopes soared beyond the range of our caplamps' - David Bick...... How times change .... oh, I don't know, I've still got a lamp like that.