drop light - определение. Что такое drop light
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Что (кто) такое drop light - определение

DEVICE USED ON A VEHICLE TO SIGNAL EMERGENCIES
Lightbar; Teardrop light; Dashboard light; Tear Drop Lights; Dashboard Lights; Tear Drop Light; Tear-drop light; Kojak light; Dashboard Light; Light bar; Police lights; Police light; Cherry top (slang); Cherry top; Patrol lights; 🚨; Berry top (slang); Gumdrop light; Gumball light
  • A security vehicle using green lights in a mall in [[Florida]]
  • Typical New Zealand Police patrol vehicle with current LED lightbar, LED dash lighting and alternating headlights
  • Red and blue emergency lights on a [[fire engine]] in [[Canberra]], [[Australia]]
  • ACT Police]] vehicle with red and blue lights. Also seen is an LED message board, which can display static or scrolling text.
  • An ambulance from Indonesia.
  • Lightbar incorporating blue lights and white 'alley' lights for night-time searches
  • Victorian Ambulance]] responding with alternating blue and red flashing lights
  • Body mounted beacon in operation, used to draw attention to the vehicle as it emerges from side roads
  • An ambulance responding with blue flashing lights and alternating headlights — 'wig-wags'
  • Blue lights in use on a Garda Roads Policing vehicle
  • Diagram showing potential mounting positions for internal, body mounted, and removable beacons on a first generation [[Ford Crown Victoria]]
  • A [[California Highway Patrol]] [[Ford Explorer]] with its emergency lights and traffic advisor on
  • A Carabineros de Chile Charger with green lights
  • '''The parts and workings of a rotating light''': '''Top''' The assembled beacon, including an optional mirror to be used when the beacon is placed in the windshield or rear window. '''Center''' The beacon, with the mirror removed. '''Bottom left and right''' The green dome of the beacon has been removed to show its rotating reflector, stationary incandescent lamp, and electric motor.
  • Romanian police vehicle with red and blue lights
  • A Malaysian ambulance with its flashing red and white lights.
  • A [[Dublin Fire Brigade]] ambulance responding with flashing blue lights
  • The police car on the right is a slicktop car, lacking the traditional roof-mounted lightbar seen on the car on the left.
  • A [[Michigan State Police]] cruiser with a single red beacon and hood fin
  • Dublin Fire Brigade Foam and Environmental Unit with blue flashing led lights
  • NEXCO East Japan patrol car with amber and red light bar
  • ANPR]] cameras
  • siren]] mounted on top
  • [[Police Nationale]] police car with blue lights
  • Private security car with amber/yellow lightbar on top
  • right
  • A picture of a new Honda Civic 1.8S Malaysian police car patrolling the street.
  • I-35W bridge collapse]]. The lightbars mounted on the cars are LED-based. The illuminated back-up lamps seen in the two cars in the foreground are being used as emergency lights which operate on a different circuit, rather than burning steadily to indicate that the cars are in reverse gear.
  • A Japanese police car with a PATLITE AWS light bar
  • Kent Ohio Police [[Ford Police Interceptor Utility]]
  • Ambulances with green lights at a training simulation in Busan
  • speaker]] can be installed behind the grill.
  • A [[Metropolitan Police]] 'area car' with emergency equipment activated. Such vehicle is considered an 'advanced' vehicle.
  • A New Jersey EMT's vehicle at night with lights flashing
  • A [[Fire and Rescue New South Wales]] fire truck on scene with red and blue lights
  • A [[London Fire Brigade]] appliance demonstrating blue and white lights. Both blue and white lights on vehicles are protected under legislation.
  • A [[Roads & Traffic Authority]] vehicle in Australia with interior mounted lights on the rear windshield, along with a lightbar and integrated lighting in the tail lamps
  • left
  • German emergency vehicles (all blue beacons)
  • A [[St John New Zealand]] ambulance with red lights
  • Required flashing white beacon on top of school buses for a strobe light flashing at the proper period can appear to freeze or have a reverse cyclical motion.
  • An ambulance of the [[Austrian Red Cross]] emitting blue emergency lighting
  • A Tokyo police car with the lightbar raised for greater visibility.
  • LED lighting on an ambulance in [[Toronto]]
  • A Toronto Fire truck displays red and white lighting
  • A fire truck responding with rotating red lights in [[Toronto]]
  • [[Toronto Paramedic Services]] ambulance using red lights
  • LED Information matrix sign (black surface) on a police car between the beacon and search lights
  • Ford Taurus]] using blue lights
  • Ambulance in Zlín, Czech Republic, With blue LED lights

Trouble light         
  • A trouble light using a compact fluorescent lamp. From top to bottom are a hook, a cage, the switch and a handle in one molding
  • A trouble light hung temporarily on a [[television antenna]]
Drop light; Trouble lights; Rough service light; Rough service
A trouble light, also known as a rough service light, drop light, or inspection lamp, is a special lamp used to illuminate obscure places and able to handle moderate abuse. The light bulb is housed in a protective cage and a handle that are molded to form a single unit.
Lemon drop (candy)         
SUGAR COATED, LEMON-FLAVORED CANDY
Lemon drops; Lemon Drop (candy); Lemon drop (confectionery)
A lemon drop is a sugar coated, lemon-flavored candy that is typically colored yellow and often shaped like a lemon. They can be sweet or have a more sour flavor.
drop test         
  • Enterprise]]'' being released by [[Shuttle Carrier Aircraft]]
  • Orion test article after release from C-130 and separation from pallet
  • B-52]] mothership during a drop test.  The pylon used to carry experimental vehicles is visible near the top of the photo, between the fuselage and inboard right engine.
METHOD OF TESTING AIRCRAFT AND SPACECRAFT BY RELEASING THEM AT A SPECIFIC ALTITUDE
Drop launch
¦ noun a test of the strength of an object, in which it is dropped under standard conditions or a set weight is dropped on it from a given height.
Derivatives
drop-testing noun

Википедия

Emergency vehicle lighting

Emergency vehicle lighting, also known as simply emergency lighting or emergency lights, is a type of vehicle lighting used to visually announce a vehicle's presence to other road users. A sub-type of emergency vehicle equipment, emergency vehicle lighting is generally used by emergency vehicles and other authorized vehicles in a variety of colors.

Emergency vehicle lighting refers to any of several visual warning devices, which may be known as lightbars or beacons, fitted to a vehicle and used when the driver wishes to convey to other road users the urgency of their journey, to provide additional warning of a hazard when stationary, or in the case of law enforcement as a means of signalling another motorist that a traffic stop is being initiated. These lights may be dedicated emergency lights, such as a beacon or a lightbar, or modified stock lighting, such as a wig-wag or hideaway light, and are additional to any standard lighting on the car such as hazard lights. They are often used along with a siren system to increase their effectiveness and provide audible warnings alongside the visual warnings produced by the lights.

In many jurisdictions, the use of emergency lights may afford the user specific legal powers, and may place requirements on other road users to behave differently, such as compelling them to pull to the side of the road and yield right-of-way in traffic so the vehicle may proceed through unimpeded. Laws regarding and restricting the use of these lights vary widely among jurisdictions, and in some areas non-emergency vehicles such as school buses, and semi-emergency vehicles such as tow trucks, may be permitted to use similar lights.