[PRCo] Re: 42/38 on Smithfield Yellow-Green Light

Fred Schneider fwschneider at comcast.net
Thu Oct 27 14:30:45 EDT 2011


It ended when the feds wanted consistency everywhere.   They never managed to get it everywhere ... Florida and Texas mount traffic lights horizontally to confuse the color blind.  

At the same time New York City scrapped their lights that simply went from green to red.   Marietta, Ohio used to have green and red lights that flashed red over green three times as a warning before the green went out.   They also disappeared about the same time.   There were a lot of odd variants at one time.  Some cities had lights where the green was sequential .... started at the bottom and progressed up a ladder until it turned red.   Seems to me Reading, PA had a version like that back in the 1930s or 1940s but it was not still around in the 1970s.   



On Oct 27, 2011, at 2:20 PM, Barry, Matthew R wrote:

> No, Bob.  That practice ended in Pittsburgh - I  think in the late 70s.
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: pittsburgh-railways-bounce at lists.dementix.org [mailto:pittsburgh-railways-bounce at lists.dementix.org] On Behalf Of Bob Rathke
> Sent: Thursday, October 27, 2011 2:18 PM
> To: pittsburgh-railways at dementix.org
> Subject: [PRCo] Re: 42/38 on Smithfield Yellow-Green Light
> 
> 
> Don't the traffic lights in Pittsburgh still have the overlapping green/yellow indication? 
> 
> 
> 
> I recall that in the 1960's Pittsburgh was one of the few (maybe the only) city in the U.S. with overlapping traffic signals.  Also in that era, Canton, Ohio had simple red & green traffic signals - no yellow. 
> 
> 
> 
> Bob 
> 
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> 
> 
> From: "Matthew R Barry" <mrb190 at pitt.edu> 
> To: pittsburgh-railways at dementix.org 
> Sent: Thursday, October 27, 2011 12:21:58 PM 
> Subject: [PRCo] 42/38 on Smithfield  Yellow-Green Light 
> 
> Hi Folks, 
> Take a look at this of the 42/38 on Smithfield:   http://www.railpictures.net/viewphoto.php?id=275722&nseq=45 
> 
> Remember when the traffic lights used to give us "green" THEN   "green and yellow together," then "yellow," and finally "red?"    The photo illustrates the former green/yellow signal. 
> 
> Matt 
> 
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> 
> 
> 
> 





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