Roger wrote:
Horizontal slats are called sunshades - and do what they say on the tin. For the 15 - 18 hours in a day when the sun iseityher set or behind the sign, they serve next to no good purpose. for the remaining time, when the sun is blaring on the face of the bulb, without the slats you'd never be able to tell if the light was on or off.
Which doesn't explain why the nearest example to me of slatted lights has, all of about 20 yards away, a set of unslatted lights facing in the same direction, using the same design of head units, controlling traffic in the same lanes, and positioned such that they catch the sunlight in exactly the same way. If the slatted lights were being affected by sunshine to the extent that slats were required, then the adjacent lights would also be affected and should, logically, also then be slatted.
OTOH, my earlier suggestion about these slats being used to "hide" an unsynchronised green light from traffic stopped at an adjacent set of lights does explain why this particular set of lights has horizontal slats fitted to just some of the heads (it was this set of lights I had in mind when describing that scenario).
So, they
may have been designed originally to be sunshades, but it seems as if they're being used for other purposes as well, with less than stellar results...
Roger wrote:
The presence of the sunshades reduces the time of ambiguity from may hours to perhaps an hour at most. They should not stop you seeing if the light is on as you get closer because the *underside* of the shades should reflect and therefore be visible to the motorist looking up.
Nice theory, in practice they don't work like that, not even in the middle of the night when you'd expect to have the best chance of seeing any reflections. With the ones around here you have to be within a couple of feet of the stop line AND looking upwards at the light head to see whether the green is lit or not.
Roger wrote:
In summary, generally I think that sunshades are good - if done well.
IF, yes... I've yet to see any which I'd describe as having been "done well".