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M-250 R2 lit up
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Here is the light lit up, works great! Nothing wrong with it, it lights up just as it should, kinda wonder why it was at the restore, I guess excess, that is usually why things end up in places like that I guess. What could I use this for? Nothing really, since I live in a rented out place that I can't do my own stuff with it like I was more able to do when I was living at my parents house. Note: The road signs in the background are my friend/roomates, he has lots of those, and traffic lights too.
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You know, you could do something with those Speed Limit 35 stickers that I saw at your place, maybe you can do the plywood thing like Wisconsin does (that's just how they do things) and make it like a real sign or something like that. xD
Do you have any highway shields? My friend specifically collects those, and would want a couple others but specifically collects state shields or US highway or interstate ones. I could get some more myself but I am not made of much money at the moment. I have a couple signs I would want but those would be very hard to find since they are specific. Heh.
I've never bought any of my signs. They've either been given to me or I've picked them off the side of the road due to a knockdown. A lot of times the signs get all scratched and destroyed if the pole gets hit but sometimes I get lucky and the sign manages to not get damaged badly when it falls. One of those cases was a stop sign that was installed on an existing pole (to replaced a faded non-reflective sign) and a month later the sign fell because the snow plows packed the snow against it. The sign sat under the snow pile all winter and they actually installed a new stop sign and must not have seen the existing one under the snow since they left it. I lived right around the corner too so I grabbed my dad's truck and tossed the pole in the bed and took it back to my house. I mean, they had already installed the replacement so it was a no brainer. Plus the stop sign was brand-new. Literally used for a month!
Now, do any of the signs you or your friend own have "AHS" on them? Most of my signs have "AHS" on the bottom. I assume a brand name but I can't find any info on them when I look them up. And they must be a current company since that brand new stop sign I was talking about was AHS. All my signs are local so maybe it's a small RI sign shop that doesn't advertise or something. Most signs here say AHS or are unbranded. RIDOT uses a lot of 3M signs, which are what those sign sheets I have are. RIDOT buys the sign faces and applies them to their own sheet metal blanks in most cases. The only wood signs they use here are for construction signs.
As for highway shields, I have signs for ON 6, 7, 9, 11, 27, 101, 401, 403. I also have a I-5 sign I bought off eBay. I also have EAST and WEST directional tabs for the ON shields.
Haven't seen AHS on any of my signs though. The ON highway shields are all made in house by the MTO so there's no manufacturer's markings on them. The modern MTO shields are made from adhesive vinyl on engineer grade sheeting. The older shields appear to have been hand stenciled. Yeah the two main makers of reflective sheeting are 3M and Avery Dennision so unless AHS was Avery Dennison's old name I'm not sure what it stands for. The MTO uses a lot of plywood signs, some of the larger warning signs, and ground mounted guide signs are all made using plywood on 6x6 cedar posts. The wood signs usually have a rough texture to them and have grey painted backs. The smaller signs use 4x4 cedar posts. They use metal posts for the larger freeway signs or the smaller signs which are always aluminum or galvanized steel.
Municipal signs are a mixed bag, galvanized U-channel seems to be the most common, but they also use galvanized square tube and wood 4x4/6x6 posts. I've only seen round tube used for things liks bus stop signs here.
With the U-channel poles what side do they install the signs on the posts up there? The proper way to do it is to mount the side to the "bigger" side of the pole, which RIDOT has always done, but many cites and towns here install the signs on the "smaller" side. Not sure if it's out of ignorance (those guys are not the smartest lol) or if they do it purposely so you can't remove the sign without a deep socket (which is easy enough to get but it's probably enough to deter teens from stealing the signs unless their dad is a mechanic or something and has deep sockets. I have a deep 1/2" and deep 9/16" for my street lights like the Westy lights with the threaded rods and nuts. The 1/2" happens to be the size most traffic signs use too... Some traffic signs are installed with bolts that take 7/16" nuts though most are 1/2".