When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: lowe's reflector sticks for driveways installation

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Botts' dots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Botts'_dots

    Today, there are more than 25 million Botts' dots in use in California, [6] though they have started falling out of favor. In 2017, Caltrans announced that it would stop using Botts' dots as the sole indicator of lane division, due to cost and worker safety, and in order to make roadways more compatible with self-driving cars.

  3. Raised pavement marker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raised_pavement_marker

    Drilling to install a delineator. Delineators are tall pylons (similar to traffic cones or bollards) mounted on the road surface, or along the edge of a road, and are used to channelize traffic. These are a form of raised pavement marker but unlike most such markers, delineators are not supposed to be hit except by out-of-control or drifting ...

  4. Cat's eye (road) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat's_eye_(road)

    A key feature of the cat's eye is the flexible rubber dome which is occasionally deformed by the passage of traffic. A fixed rubber wiper cleans the surface of the reflectors as they sink below the surface of the road [2] (the base tends to hold water after a shower of rain, making this process even more efficient). The rubber dome is protected ...

  5. Solar road stud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_road_stud

    Solar road stud. Solar road studs are flashing solar cell powered LED low-maintenance lighting devices that delineate road edges and centrelines. Embedded in the road surface, they are an electronic improvement on the traditional cat's eyes [1] and raised pavement marker in that they may give drivers a larger reaction window.

  6. Permeable paving - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permeable_paving

    Permeable pavement is commonly used on roads, paths and parking lots subject to light vehicular traffic, such as cycle-paths, service or emergency access lanes, road and airport shoulders, and residential sidewalks and driveways.

  7. Rumble strip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rumble_strip

    The North Luzon Expressway's raised plastic transverse rumble strips approaching Balintawak Toll Barrier, Philippines. Rumble strips (also known as sleeper lines or alert strips) are a traffic calming feature to alert inattentive drivers of potential danger, by causing a tactile fuzzy vibration and audible rumbling transmitted through the wheels into the vehicle interior.