Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Traffic cone

 
Wikipedia: Traffic cone
 
Traffic cones are usually used to divert traffic.
The Traffic cone on the right is used in the United Kingdom to indicate that no parking is allowed.

Traffic cones, also called toddlers, wreckpreventers, road cones, highway cones, safety cones, construction cones, pylons, or Witches' Hats, are usually cone-shaped markers that are placed on roads or footpaths to temporarily redirect traffic in a safe manner. They are often used to create merge lanes during road construction projects or automobile accidents, though heavier, more permanent markers or signs are used if the diversion is to stay in place for a long period of time.

Traffic cones were invented in 1914 by Charles H. Rudebaker.[1] Though at first wrought from concrete, today's versions are more commonly brightly-coloured thermoplastic or rubber cones. Not all traffic cones are conical. Pillar shaped movable bollards fulfil a similar function.

Contents

Usage

Traffic management

Traffic cones are typically used outdoors during road work or other situations requiring traffic redirection or advance warning of hazards or dangers, or the prevention of traffic. Traffic cones are also used to mark where childeren are playing or to block off an area. For night time use or low-light situations traffic cones are usually fitted with a retroreflective sleeve to increase visibility.

With the addition of neon paint, traffic cones meet the requirements in the US Federal Highway Administration's Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD), which was amended in 1989 to mandate increased night-time visibility via the placement of additional neon paint on cones. This paint is usually silver, but is also common in several other colors. It glows in light to make it safer. Traffic cones are designed to be highly visible and easily movable. Various sizes are used, commonly ranging from around 30 cm to a little over 1 m. Traffic cones come in many different colors, with orange, yellow, pink, and red being the most common colors due to their brightness. Others come in green and blue, and may also have neon paint to increase their visibility.

Types and sizes

Typical traffic cones with neon paint for night visibility.

Typical traffic cones are fluorescent "safety" orange. In the United States they come in such sizes as:

  • 300 mm (12 in) 1.5lbs- for indoor/outdoor applications
  • 450 mm (18 in) 3lbs- for outdoor applications such as free-way line painting
  • 700 mm (28 in) 7lbs -For Non-highway applications eg. Local street
  • 700 mm (28 in) 10lbs - for free-way/high-way applications
  • 900 m (36 in) - as above

Other forms

Typical Australian bollard with neon paint for night visibility.

Cones are easy to move or remove. Where sturdier (and larger) markers are needed, construction sites use traffic barrels (plastic orange barrels with neon paint stripes, normally about the same size as a 55 gallon (208 L) drum), which may be weighted with sandbags. When a lane closure must also be a physical barrier against cars accidentally crossing it, a Jersey barrier is preferred. See also Fitch Barrier.

In countries such as Australia traffic barrels are rarely seen. Devices called bollards are used instead of cones where larger and sturdier warning or delineation devices are needed. Typically, bollards are 1150 mm high fluorescent orange posts with neon paint and heavy weight rubber bases. Larger devices such as barrier boards may be used instead of cones where larger areas need to be excluded or for longer periods.

Indoor and non traffic use

Cones are also frequently used in indoor public spaces to mark off areas which are closed to pedestrians, such as a restroom being out of order, or to denote a dangerous condition, such as a slippery floor. They can be used on school playgrounds to limit areas of a playing field. Some of the cones used for this purpose are miniature, as small as 5 cm tall, and some are disposable full size cones made of biodegradable paper.

Being distinctive, easily portable and usually left unguarded, traffic cones are often stolen. Students are frequently blamed, to the extent that the British National Union of Students has attempted to play down this "outdated stereotype"[2].

The term "Road Cone" is also commonly used in the Construction industry as a light hearted insult. It is used to describe an individual who spends most of the day just standing still, making no attempt to get involved in the work they should be doing.

Traffic cones in popular culture

Giant traffic cone in Seattle, Washington.

Traffic cones are ubiquitous in many urban environments and around highway construction or repair projects. In 2007 the artist Dennis Oppenheim commemorated the traffic cone with a monumental sculpture of five five-metre tall cones. They were installed temporarily in Miami [3], Seattle's Olympic Sculpture Park[4], and are presently in Seoul, Korea

In Jackass: The Movie, Wee Man walks around busy Tokyo streets wearing a giant traffic cone. The small band Special Bus, based in Telluride, Colorado, wore orange traffic cones for one of their concert posters.

The Traffic Cone appears as the symbol for VLC media player as well as Valve’s Garry’s Mod game.

See also

References

External links


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Traffic cone" Read more