Retro Reflectivity 101 & More

Retro Reflectivity 101 & More

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Retroreflective materials are designed to reflect light back in the same direction from which it came or Retroreflective materials are materials that reflect light back towards the observer, making them appear brighter. They're usually made from a material that's very reflective, like silver or gold.

This occurs because retroreflective materials have a surface that's specially designed to bounce light back towards the observer. The more light that hits the material, the brighter it will appear to anyone nearby. This is why retroreflective materials are often used in car headlights and other headlights where visibility is important.

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Retroreflective materials are also used in safety equipment like reflective vests and helmets. By making them visible from a distance, they make it easier for people to see and avoid dangerous situations.

Additional Insight On Retro-Reflective Technologies

Glass-bead retroreflection. An incoming light beam bends as it passes through a glass bead, reflects off a mirrored surface behind the bead, then the light bends again as it passes back through the bead and returns to the light source.

Cube corner retroreflection. This technology returns light more efficiently than glass beads. With this technology, each cube corner has three carefully angled reflective surfaces. Incoming light bounces off all three surfaces and returns to its source.

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How Sign Visibility Is Impacted By Headlight Angles

The design of the optical elements is also important to entrance angularity—or the angle at which a vehicle’s headlights illuminate a sign. Higher degrees of entrance angularity occur on curved or multi-lane roads, at intersections, where signs are set further off the road, or through the simple physics of distance—the closer a vehicle gets to a sign, the greater the entrance angularity.


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Headlight technology, illumination, and traffic sign performance

  • First, vehicle manufacturers have replaced conventional headlights with Visually Optically Aimable or VOA headlights. Designed to reduce the glare of oncoming vehicle headlights at night, VOA headlights also reduce the amount of light available to illuminate road signs.
  • To illustrate the amount of light that reaches signs mounted in various locations, let’s take a right-shoulder mounted sign—illuminated wit
  •  h conventional headlights—and assign it a benchmark illumination of 100%.
  • As you can see, even conventional headlights are only marginally effective at illuminating signs in “disadvantaged locations” such as the left shoulder and overhead.
  • With VOA headlights, sign illumination drops significantly.  The same right shoulder-mounted sign is only 47% illuminated. And the overhead signs are just 6.6% and 8% illuminated.
  • In fact, one study found that VOA headlights suffered up to a 53% reduction in the light directed toward traffic signs compared to earlier, conventional headlights.

Vehicle size, observation angle and traffic sign visibility

  • When it comes to seeing traffic signs, the size of the vehicle you drive can also make a difference.
  • In a typical passenger vehicle, for example, the light from your headlights, striking a sign at 300 feet, will return to you at about a 0.5-degree angle. This is called the angle of observation.
  • In an SUV or pickup truck, this angle increases to nearly 0.6 degrees.
  • And in a semi-trailer truck where the driver is even more separated from the headlights, the observation angle expands to approximately 1.2 degrees.
  • The angle of observation is significant because signs must be visible for drivers of every vehicle type, at critical detection and reading distances along the approach.
  • If the cone of reflectivity is narrow, drivers of large vehicles will have difficulty seeing traffic signs at night.

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