I'm led to believe that the new axle counters are struggling to always give the correct readings due to quality of the track - especially in the West Drayton area - and then fail safe. I'm sure that when they bed down then matters will improve significantly, but the on-going disruption is disappointing.
I'm still puzzling over how that can happen. After all, much higher reliability is generally seen as one of the two main advantages of axle counters over track circuits. (The other, which prompted their use in the current Western Route deployment, is their inherent immunity to traction currents.)
Put another way, any deficiency in the track that can cause a miscount has to either generate a false count or suppress a true one, or so distort the expected signals as to raise an error flag. That third possibility sounds most likely, but even then surely it would take a pretty gross track problem to do it? Or maybe it's an installation issue - such as a detection head being loose - in which case it will not "bed down" without help. So what kind of poor quality track is involved here?
As an aside, track circuits can detect track faults and that is claimed as an advantage, since axle counters can't. In reality a track circuit can only reliably detect a full break in a rail, and you need to be finding the cracks well before that on this railway. A barely-maintained freight-only line in the wilds of the USA is different.
I ought perhaps to declare that I used to work for Thales, but never had anything to do with railway signalling. I have since heard that Thales UK▸ does now do some design support engineering work on axle counters, perhaps because there are so many of them being installed. But I can claim to not be an expert on the subject.