Modern signal lamps can produce a focused pulse of light. In large versions, this pulse is achieved by opening and closing shutters mounted in front of the lamp, either via a manually operated pressure switch, or, in later versions, automatically. With hand-held lamps, a concave mirror is tilted by a trigger to focus the light into pulses. The lamps were usually equipped with some form of
optical sight, and were most commonly used on
naval vessels and in
air traffic control towers, using colour signals for stop or clearance. In manual signalling, a signalman would aim the light at the recipient ship and turn a lever, opening and closing the shutter over the lamp, to emit flashes of light to spell out text messages in
Morse code. On the recipient ship, a signalman would observe the blinking light, often with
binoculars, and translate the code into text. Some signal lamps are mounted on the
mastheads of ships while some small hand-held versions are also used. Other more powerful versions are mounted on pedestals. These larger ones use a
carbon arc lamp as their light source, with a diameter of . These can be used to signal to the horizon, even in conditions of bright sunlight. == Modern use ==