Square backplates Huntsville, Alabama has a unique design for its traffic lights that use a square shaped backplate on the majority of its traffic lights. These square backplates have also been introduced to many Dallas doghouse traffic lights across the United States. Some newer traffic lights may have a reflective yellow outline on them, such as the ones at the intersection of Wynn Drive and Bradford Drive.
Shaped lenses ,
Nova Scotia with specially shaped lights to assist people with colour blindness ,
Jalisco,
Mexico, with a double red light for redundancy and increased visibility The Canadian provinces of
Quebec,
New Brunswick, and
Prince Edward Island generally use horizontal traffic lights with red to the left and green to the right. Such traffic lights are also found in
Nova Scotia and eastern
Ontario. These signals also use specific shapes for each color, which aids color-blind people in distinguishing signal aspects: • green – an ordinary circle shape, • yellow – a diamond shape, and • red – a square (somewhat larger than the circle).
Double red In
Quebec, most horizontal traffic lights have a red signal on both sides of the fixture (left and right). They are also now replacing the shaped traffic lights for color-blind people with regular round signals. These are also seen on horizontal traffic lights in Eastern
Ontario and in
Nova Scotia. In some
Texas urban areas, including
Houston and
Dallas, the use of a double red light is different. It is typically used on left turn signals. For horizontally mounted signals, typically hung or mounted over the lanes, it is configured with two red balls or arrows, one yellow arrow or ball, and a green arrow (from left to right). For vertically mounted signals, the two red balls or arrows are on the top, then a yellow arrow or ball, and a green arrow. It is usually accompanied by signs saying "left turn signal" or "left on arrow only". Signals for traffic going straight use standard signals, usually mounted horizontally over the road. The use of two red lights on the left turn signal allows for redundancy in case one of the red lights burns out, while saving money by requiring only one signal for left turns per direction that needs one. It also prevents the
yellow trap that would occur at night if a single red signal burned out and left-turning vehicles obeyed the circular signals instead. One type of installation in Texas uses a double red light instead of a single red light to make the red light more pronounced and visible from a distance. In this installation, it is the first traffic light on a rural highway for miles, and traffic approaches at highway speed (65 mph). The double red light makes the red phase of the light visible at a greater distance than the yellow and green on the same signal. This installation is also used on rural highways in
California, always in a vertical configuration, and in either configuration in some cities of
Mexico, such as
Guadalajara. The double-red light also appears in Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina in left-hand turn lanes. It serves the same purpose as the vertical Texan configuration, and mainly appears on boulevards with multiple lanes of traffic where a left turn is dangerous due to poor visibility. Double red arrows are used for left turn installations on some county-managed roads in
Henrico County, Virginia and
Baltimore County, Maryland. The double–red-ball aspect is used in
Saskatchewan and
Alberta, Canada, to indicate a protected-prohibited left turn signal. A sign with the universal
no left turn symbol and a depiction of the double red light is mounted near the signal to indicate that no left turns are permitted on a double-red light. Intersections with this configuration are quite common in
Saskatoon,
Calgary, and
Edmonton. According to Transportation Alberta, there is no legal significance to a double red light. In some cities in
Mexico, the double red light is treated as a standard red signal; the double light is used to increase the signal's visibility, as well as to provide a redundant light in case one fails.
Clock-type These so-called
"Heuer-Ampeln", developed by the German Heuer-Hammer company were used in the Netherlands, Austria (Vienna) and Germany from the 1930s until the 1960s, with the last of them being replaced with the by then common known traffic lights in 1972.
Bar signals In Tianjin, one system is where there is a horizontal bar in a specific colour, with the colour changing and the bar shrinking. The shrinking bar indicates the time remaining in that colour. The colour itself is either red (stop), yellow or green (go). A blinking green one-third-full bar means "reduce speed now", and a blinking yellow full bar indicates "proceed with caution". When lights of this system turn from green to red, the diminishing green bar will flash once two-thirds (note: not the
full bar) of the green bar is "eaten up", with the remaining third intact. A full, uninterrupted yellow bar will appear for a few seconds before, after a short blink, lights turn red. Immediately after the full red bar appears, two of the tiny (almost unnoticeable) split/divisions that split the bar into thirds appears to signify the bit that will
not be "eaten up". This corresponds to the usual position of a red light (leftmost, or rightmost if at the other end of the road and at the other side of the pavement; or the upper third). When two-thirds of the red bit is "eaten up", the red light extinguishes, only to be replaced nearly immediately with a full chunk of green (again with the minute division). The process then repeats itself.
Multi-colour aspects Another system, which is also common in the other cities in China, is where there is a set of three lights as traffic lights. Every light is an arrow pointing in a different direction and every arrow has a colour of its own, to show whether traffic flow is permitted or prohibited in that direction. The major disadvantage of this system of traffic light is that it is unfamiliar to those who are used to seeing specific colours of the traffic lights at the various ends of a normal traffic light itself (e.g. green rightmost, red leftmost, etc.) as well is being problematic for the color blind (although by Chinese traffic laws, people who are color blind are not permitted to drive). It does, however, conserve space. The other disadvantage of it is it does not have indication of when a turn can be made without yielding and when the turn can made only after yielding to the oncoming traffic. Although by Chinese traffic laws, turning is always supposed to be made after yielding to oncoming traffic. Elsewhere in China, a blinking green light means "reduce speed now", attempting to stop cars from passing (if that car can still safely stop in time) and is nearly universal in appearance. Some cities or parts of cities show the number of seconds remaining in a specific traffic light colour (a so-called "countdown meter"). Another type of signal that can be found in China is the
Unilight signal that displays all three colours in one signal section. Installation of this signal outside of China is banned by the
Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals.
Guided Busway Lights At a number of guided busways in the UK, where these run alongside the normal roads, a special two white diagonal lines aspect in the shape of an inverted V is used instead of a green aspect. This signal at junctions and pedestrian crossings is used to distinguish the lights from the main traffic lights, much like the now extinct X-Way Crossing's white cross aspect, as well as letting other traffic know that the movement relates to guided buses only, similar in design to the white lines used on tram signals. == Ramp meters ==