Sorry SL4P but not just 'the wheel' but ALL wheels of the locomotive. As for the next block being reverse polarity, this is goofy logic. If you are an old school H.O. railroader then your locomotive is D.C. powered and as soon as it transitioned into the reversed polarity block assuming it was moving at typical model railroad speeds of 500mph and made it through the short it was briefly creating it would immediately start trying to back up which would be useless but typical of how Norfolk Southern does business. There is one case where we do run into this problem for real, take the typical oval layout, install a pair of right-handed turnouts allowing your train to traverse across the oval and reverse direction. You have just created the perfect shorted circuit layout. You will have to make that crossover section as an 'isolated block' with the plastic insulator track couplers usually at both ends of the crossover. You then need a polarity switch (DPDT) and make the polarity agree when entering the block, then flip the switch and make the polarity agree while exiting the block. Back to the same old problem.....now your train will want to run backwards as it is going around the loop in the opposite direction so you must also flip the polarity of the entire layout!!! You can do this if you use your direction switch to actually operate a 4PDT relay, then everything will switch together. B.T.W., if you want to switch direction around the loop this time you will have to 'back' your train through the crossover. Have fun, Cheers mate. Just go D.C.C. then old problems go away and hundreds of new ones show up!!!