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Crouse Hinds Type M 4-way
Crouse Hinds Type M fixed 4-way.  It came wired for a three circuit controller which meant that the signal only had three circuits.  Main St. red was wired to cross street green.  Main street green was wired to cross street red.  All 4 yellows were wired together.  The green stayed lit during yellow, and the signal displayed yellow when changing from green to red as well as from red to green.
Keywords: Traffic_Lights

Crouse Hinds Type M 4-way

Crouse Hinds Type M fixed 4-way. It came wired for a three circuit controller which meant that the signal only had three circuits. Main St. red was wired to cross street green. Main street green was wired to cross street red. All 4 yellows were wired together. The green stayed lit during yellow, and the signal displayed yellow when changing from green to red as well as from red to green.

ch_dt_4-way_09.jpg ch_m_4way_2stack_hanging.jpg ch_m_4way_3stack.jpg ge_4way_pgh01.jpg eagle_2c4-way06.jpg
File information
Filename:ch_m_4way_3stack.jpg
Album name:Nevada Willis / Traffic Signals
Keywords:Traffic_Lights
Company and Date Manufactured:Crouse-Hinds Co., 1959 - 1960s
Lamp Type:69 w. traffic lamps
Filesize:19 KiB
Date added:Apr 02, 2011
Dimensions:400 x 400 pixels
Displayed:248 times
URL:http://www.galleryoflights.org/mb/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=5842
Favorites:Add to Favorites

Comment 1 to 6 of 6
Page: 1

basilicon89   [Apr 02, 2011 at 04:59 PM]
Thats an interesting setup, I would assume this M replaced an older four way..perhaps Darley or Autoflow with that kind of controller configuration.
Nevada Willis   [Apr 03, 2011 at 03:24 AM]
The Type M followed the more traditional looking DT. Some of the early post mounted controllers were only 3 circuit controllers and they often outlasted the signals out on the span wire, so this signal probably went in service in the 1960s and replaced a WW-II or earlier vintage signal.
basilicon89   [Apr 03, 2011 at 04:49 AM]
Well I knew the DT was before. I just meant the controller type may have been because of an older light there...like a Darley I don't know of any Crouse Hinds controllers that did the overlap
Nevada Willis   [Apr 03, 2011 at 12:34 PM]
I post some of the explanations for those reading this thread that aren't familiar with the evolution of the various models. Three circuit controllers were more common for on-board use since they took up less space, but in the 40s and 50s there were a lot of 3 circuit post mounted controllers too. Remember back then nearly all transmissions were manual. Some jurisdictions required putting stickshifts in neutral when standing at a red light. The yellow before green meant "get it in gear." I remember a lot of those as a kid in the 50s.
traffic light1   [May 04, 2014 at 01:00 AM]
My 3M set-up does that. It serves my dads drive way.
joe_347V   [May 04, 2014 at 02:46 AM]
I've temporarily setup my Marbelite 4 way to display this too as using a three wire controller in it until I order a controller for 4 way signals.

Comment 1 to 6 of 6
Page: 1