US2458414A - Navigation signal system - Google Patents

Navigation signal system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2458414A
US2458414A US536397A US53639744A US2458414A US 2458414 A US2458414 A US 2458414A US 536397 A US536397 A US 536397A US 53639744 A US53639744 A US 53639744A US 2458414 A US2458414 A US 2458414A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
beams
course
light
axis
white
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US536397A
Inventor
Edgar W Penton
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US536397A priority Critical patent/US2458414A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2458414A publication Critical patent/US2458414A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01SRADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
    • G01S1/00Beacons or beacon systems transmitting signals having a characteristic or characteristics capable of being detected by non-directional receivers and defining directions, positions, or position lines fixed relatively to the beacon transmitters; Receivers co-operating therewith
    • G01S1/02Beacons or beacon systems transmitting signals having a characteristic or characteristics capable of being detected by non-directional receivers and defining directions, positions, or position lines fixed relatively to the beacon transmitters; Receivers co-operating therewith using radio waves

Definitions

  • This present invention relates to a system of signalling and more particularly to direction control lights for indicating to a navigator any predetermined course.
  • control lights heretofore in use such for example as range lights for directing a vessel on a proper course
  • two lights in alinement and coincident with the course or channel which the vessel is to follow, so that when the navigator has these two lights in line he knows the vessel is in the proper channel or on the course.
  • two such lights necessity requires the finding of two sites for lamp installation at the proper points for true bearing with the incident expense of erection.
  • the lights and structures have to be maintained in operation with the attendant labor and service costs.
  • Some of the objects of the present invention are: to provide an improved light system for marine or aerial navigation; to provide a light system wherein control is established by using a single unit for establishment of the true course; to provide a light system wherein lights at two spaced sites are unnecessary; to provide a light system wherein a plurality of different colored lights operate from a common site for direction indication; to provide a novel system of direction control lights wherein a beam of light visibly different from other beams indicates a true course while the other beams indicate variation from the true course; to provide a unidirectional beam of light which when viewed from a specific angle and within a very narrow range presents one peculiar appearance, while viewed from other angles it presents a diiferent appearance; to provide a signalling system as a ground installation as an aid to navigators for guiding ships or airplanes on a true course, or as an installation on ships or airplanes for indicating to observers th course or altitude of the ship or airplane; to provide a novel flashing signal as a means for indicating a true course and
  • Applicant has discovered that by taking two sharply defined beams of light similar to search light beams, which emanate from light sources located close together or in the same housing and which are respectively colored with complemental colors such, illustratively, as red and green, for instance, and by bringing these beams to bear at such angles that the edge of one beam just slightly overlaps the edge of the other beam, there will be established a combined beam having certain unique and important characteristics.
  • Fig. 1 is a graph of light beam candle power with reference to the angle of dispersion
  • Fig. 2 is a graph of candle power of two light beams illustrating the resultant effect of overlap of the two beams to establish an axis of symmetry coincident with a course to be followed
  • Fig. 3 is adiagram of two light beams functioning in accordance with one form of the present invention
  • Fig. 4 is a graph representation for visualizing the light intensities of Fig. 3 from several planes of observation
  • Fig. 5 is a diagram of three light beams functioning in accordance with the invention
  • Fig. 6 is a graph representation for visualizing the light intensities of Fig. 5 from several planes of observation
  • Fig. 1 is a graph of light beam candle power with reference to the angle of dispersion
  • Fig. 2 is a graph of candle power of two light beams illustrating the resultant effect of overlap of the two beams to establish an axis of symmetry coincident with a course to be followed
  • Fig. 8 is a diagram of four light beams functioning in accordance with the invention
  • Fig. 9 is a graph representation for visualizing the light intensities of Fig. 8 from several planes of observation
  • Fig. 10 is a, chart illustrative of one form of timing of the light system of Fig. 8
  • Fig. 11 represents diagrammatically a front elevation of a light projecting unit
  • Fig. 12 represents a diagrammatic side elevation of theunit of Fig. 11
  • Fig. 13 is a graph illustrating more clearly the cross section relation of the combined beams of Fig. 4, the section being taken on line l3l3 of Fig. 3
  • Fig. 14 is a graph of the illumination curves of the three light beams of Fig. 5.
  • Figure 1 an illumination curve of a sharply defined beam showing beam candle power at various degrees of divergence from the axis of the beam.
  • Figure 2 is shown the resultant candle power curve if two identical beams of this character are trained so that their axes diverge by, a very few degrees.
  • a new common axis is formed mid-way and symmetrically between the original axes of the two beams, and with a peak candle power greater than either beam above.
  • the common axis is a substantial line partaking of equal amounts of energy from both beams.
  • the line AB represents the plane of equal visual values derived from the two beams.
  • the combined beams will have a different and distinctive appearance when viewed from difierent angles.
  • the common symmetrical axis is caused to be substantially coincident with a desired course, such course can be followed accurately even though several miles may intervene between the observer and the light sources.
  • An addition to this ranging system can be made by combining additional beams both for the pur pose of delineating intermediate angularities of deviation from the course or for distinguishing these lights from other competing or background lights.
  • Fig. 14 is an illumination curve diagram showing appropriate values of the white beam in relation to the values of the two colored beams. From this it will be seen that it is unnecessary to flash the colored beams in order to obtain the desired result because in the area AB the red cannot be seen when the white is on due to the higher intensity of the white, and in the area B-B' the white cannot be seen, even when on, because of the higher intensity of the red. The same condition exists for the respective areas AC and -0 when considering the white and green beams.
  • the ranging unit might be comprised of two whites instead of the one white in Fig 5 in addition to the basic double beam of contrasting colors.
  • a variety of timing arrangements are possible. For instance, if the two colors are on together, then one white only of the two, then the two colors on together again, followed by the other of the two white only, and repeat, and with the white beams trained so as to overlap and be directed along the course, the result will be as follows: On the course at A the observer will see a continuous substantially white or succession of whites. In the area AB he will see red-whitereddark, and repeat. In the area AC he will see greenwhitegreen-dark, and repeat. In the area BB' he will see red flashes with dark intervals and similarly he will see green flashes with dark intervals in the area C-C.
  • a three light beam projecting unit wherein a housing I0 is mounted on a fixed base I I and encloses a rotatable standard having three pairs of arms I2 arranged to rotate about a common axis and each mounting a lamp I4.
  • Each lamp M has a reflector l 5 shaped and positioned to project parallel light beams out of the housing, the beam from one lamp passing through a red filter IS, the beam from the second lamp passing through a green filter ll and the third lamp through a white filter Hi.
  • three lamps are simultaneously in operative position and in a closed circuit, while the other three lamps are inoperative and in an open circuit and provide an emergency set should any lamp of the other set burn out.
  • the standard is rotated to replace the former operative set by the second set of lamps and the replacement time thus kept to a minimum.
  • the lamps can be timed by any suitable timing mechanism such as a commutator system 20 driven by a small motor 2 Having thus described my invention, I claim:
  • a signalling system comprising means for projecting a red beam, having a light distribution pattern symmetrical about an axis, along a course with the axis of the red beam angularly divergent from the line of the course so that the said red beam is asymmetrical thereof, means for projecting a green beam, having a light distribution pattern symmetrical about an axis, along the same course with the axis of the green beam angularly divergent from the said line of the course and asymmetrical thereof, said red and said green beams mutually overlapping in a path symmetrical of the line of the course, said respective beams forming a line substantially coincident with the line of the course partaking equally of the energy of both said beams so that the visual aspect of the formed line is a resultant of an even additive mixture of the two beam colors while the visual aspect even slightly to one side of the formed line is of an additive mixture of unequal energies in which the greater energy dominates and establishes the visual aspect.
  • a signalling range system comprising means for flashing simultaneously a pair of complementally colored slightly divergent and overlapping light beams of the same effective intensity and each having a light distribution pattern symmetrical about an axis, and means for flashing a substantially white beam narrower than the combined width of the overlapping colored beams and superposed over the common axis defined symmetrically of the overlapping area of the said two simultaneously flashed beams.
  • the method of forming a unidirectional guide beam to identify a linear course from a position toward an objective which comprises projecting a beam of light having a light distribution pattern substantially symmetrical of an axis of peak intensity and of predetermined chromatic characteristics to continuously overlap said course for substantially the full effective range of the beam and by a predetermined angle while maintaining said axis of peak intensity thereof at an angle to and on one side of such course, and projecting a second beam of light having a light distribution pattern substantially symmetrical of an axis of peak intensity and of different predetermined chromatic characteristics from the first beam to continuously overlap said course and the overlapping portion of the first beam for substantially the full effective range of said second beam and by predetermined angles while maintaining the axis of peak intensity of said second beam at an angle to and on the other side of such course from the first beam to form a single composite beam, whereby the overlapping portions of the first mentioned two beams between the respective axes thereof form a third beam having an axis coincident with such course and visually contrasting chromatically with
  • a signalling range system comprising means for flashing simultaneously a pair of complementally colored slightly divergent and overlapping light beams of the same effective intensity and each having a light distribution pattern symmetrical about an axis, with the respective axes in acute angular divergence to form a third beam having a light distribution pattern symmetrically between said two axes, and means for flashing in alternation thereto a substantially white beam narrower than the combined width of the overlapping colored beams and superposed over the common axis defined symmetrically of the overlapped area of the said two simultaneously flashed beams.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Radar, Positioning & Navigation (AREA)
  • Remote Sensing (AREA)
  • Non-Portable Lighting Devices Or Systems Thereof (AREA)

Description

E. PENTON NAVIGATION SIGNAL SYSTEM Jan. 4, 1949.
2 Sheet-Sheet 1 Filed May 19, 1944 E W H W A TTORNE) Jan. 4, 1949. W PENTON 2,458,414
NAVIGfVIION SIGNAL SYSTEM Filed May 19, 1944 2 sheets-sheet 2 M/A E/VMA EDGAR 1M Pf/VTO/V @144, find,
ATTORNEY Patented Jan. 4, 1949 NAVIGATION SIGNAL SYSTEM Edgar W. Penton, Fairfax County, Va.
Application May 19, 1944, Serial No. 536,397
Claims.
This present invention relates to a system of signalling and more particularly to direction control lights for indicating to a navigator any predetermined course.
In control lights heretofore in use, such for example as range lights for directing a vessel on a proper course, it has been the practice to provide two lights in alinement and coincident with the course or channel which the vessel is to follow, so that when the navigator has these two lights in line he knows the vessel is in the proper channel or on the course. With two such lights necessity requires the finding of two sites for lamp installation at the proper points for true bearing with the incident expense of erection. Furthermore, the lights and structures have to be maintained in operation with the attendant labor and service costs.
Some of the objects of the present invention are: to provide an improved light system for marine or aerial navigation; to provide a light system wherein control is established by using a single unit for establishment of the true course; to provide a light system wherein lights at two spaced sites are unnecessary; to provide a light system wherein a plurality of different colored lights operate from a common site for direction indication; to provide a novel system of direction control lights wherein a beam of light visibly different from other beams indicates a true course while the other beams indicate variation from the true course; to provide a unidirectional beam of light which when viewed from a specific angle and within a very narrow range presents one peculiar appearance, while viewed from other angles it presents a diiferent appearance; to provide a signalling system as a ground installation as an aid to navigators for guiding ships or airplanes on a true course, or as an installation on ships or airplanes for indicating to observers th course or altitude of the ship or airplane; to provide a novel flashing signal as a means for indicating a true course and any variation from such course; to utilize the phenomenon of addition of mutually complemental colors to establish by overlapping beams a substantial line of a visual effect contrasted with the visual effects of either of said colored beams; to indicate a course and deviations from the course; to provide a flashing course signal which gives a succession of spaced or overlapping substantially white signals when directly on a course, which gives a flashing alternation of white and one color or white and another color complemental of the first, when slightly oiT the course, and which gives a succession of flashes of one color or its complement when appreciably off the course; and to provide other improvements as will hereinafter appear.
Applicant has discovered that by taking two sharply defined beams of light similar to search light beams, which emanate from light sources located close together or in the same housing and which are respectively colored with complemental colors such, illustratively, as red and green, for instance, and by bringing these beams to bear at such angles that the edge of one beam just slightly overlaps the edge of the other beam, there will be established a combined beam having certain unique and important characteristics.
In the accompanying drawings, Fig. 1 is a graph of light beam candle power with reference to the angle of dispersion; Fig. 2 is a graph of candle power of two light beams illustrating the resultant effect of overlap of the two beams to establish an axis of symmetry coincident with a course to be followed; Fig. 3 is adiagram of two light beams functioning in accordance with one form of the present invention; Fig. 4 is a graph representation for visualizing the light intensities of Fig. 3 from several planes of observation; Fig. 5 is a diagram of three light beams functioning in accordance with the invention; Fig. 6 is a graph representation for visualizing the light intensities of Fig. 5 from several planes of observation; Fig. '7 is a chart illustrative of one form of timing of the light system of Fig. 5; Fig. 8 is a diagram of four light beams functioning in accordance with the invention; Fig. 9 is a graph representation for visualizing the light intensities of Fig. 8 from several planes of observation; Fig. 10 is a, chart illustrative of one form of timing of the light system of Fig. 8; Fig. 11 represents diagrammatically a front elevation of a light projecting unit; Fig. 12 represents a diagrammatic side elevation of theunit of Fig. 11; Fig. 13 is a graph illustrating more clearly the cross section relation of the combined beams of Fig. 4, the section being taken on line l3l3 of Fig. 3; and Fig. 14 is a graph of the illumination curves of the three light beams of Fig. 5.
In Figure 1 is shown an illumination curve of a sharply defined beam showing beam candle power at various degrees of divergence from the axis of the beam.
In Figure 2 is shown the resultant candle power curve if two identical beams of this character are trained so that their axes diverge by, a very few degrees. A new common axis is formed mid-way and symmetrically between the original axes of the two beams, and with a peak candle power greater than either beam above. The common axis is a substantial line partaking of equal amounts of energy from both beams. In the vertical cross section of the combined beams shown in Fig. 13 the line AB represents the plane of equal visual values derived from the two beams.
If now one of these beams is of a distinctive color such as red, and the other beam is of another color such as green, the combined beams will have a different and distinctive appearance when viewed from difierent angles.
When viewed from a point directly along the common axis, the appearance will be practically white if the colors used are mutually complemental railway signal red and railway signal green. If viewed from a point very slightly to the right (in approaching the lights), the color will be immediately red while a slight deviation to the left will give a green indication. The reason for this is that although the light seen is still a combination of the two colors, when the angularity changes to the right the candle power of the red beam increases so rapidly while the candle power of the green decreases so rapidly, so the red energy is so preponderant over the green energy that a very slight deviation serves to convince the eye that it sees only red. Similar efiects in the green dominance follow a slight deviation to the left from the symmetrical common axis.
If, therefore, the common symmetrical axis is caused to be substantially coincident with a desired course, such course can be followed accurately even though several miles may intervene between the observer and the light sources.
An addition to this ranging system can be made by combining additional beams both for the pur pose of delineating intermediate angularities of deviation from the course or for distinguishing these lights from other competing or background lights.
For instance, if a white beam is added to the assembly and trained with its axis along the common axis of the two colored beams substantially coincident with the course as in Fig. 5, and then this white beam is flashed alternately with the two colored beams, the result will be that when the observer is approaching the lights exactly on course as at A, a steady substantially white light or a succession of pulses of substantially white light, depending on the timed rate, will be seen. When the observer is in the area AB, slightly oil of the course A, an alternate red and white light or flashes of alternate red and white light will be seen, while in the area BB', appreciably off of course A, a flashing red light with dark intervals will be seen by the observer. Similarly, on the green side the observer will see alternate green and white light or flashes of light in the area AC, close to course A, with flashes of green spaced by dark intervals in the area C-C', appreciably oil of course A. Fig. 14 is an illumination curve diagram showing appropriate values of the white beam in relation to the values of the two colored beams. From this it will be seen that it is unnecessary to flash the colored beams in order to obtain the desired result because in the area AB the red cannot be seen when the white is on due to the higher intensity of the white, and in the area B-B' the white cannot be seen, even when on, because of the higher intensity of the red. The same condition exists for the respective areas AC and -0 when considering the white and green beams.
If four beams are used in the ranging unit, as shown in Fig. 8, they might be comprised of two whites instead of the one white in Fig 5 in addition to the basic double beam of contrasting colors. In this case a variety of timing arrangements are possible. For instance, if the two colors are on together, then one white only of the two, then the two colors on together again, followed by the other of the two white only, and repeat, and with the white beams trained so as to overlap and be directed along the course, the result will be as follows: On the course at A the observer will see a continuous substantially white or succession of whites. In the area AB he will see red-whitereddark, and repeat. In the area AC he will see greenwhitegreen-dark, and repeat. In the area BB' he will see red flashes with dark intervals and similarly he will see green flashes with dark intervals in the area C-C.
A wide variety of combinations are thus available with suitable timing mechanisms for various purposes.
Referring to Figs. 11 and 12, a three light beam projecting unit is shown wherein a housing I0 is mounted on a fixed base I I and encloses a rotatable standard having three pairs of arms I2 arranged to rotate about a common axis and each mounting a lamp I4. Each lamp M has a reflector l 5 shaped and positioned to project parallel light beams out of the housing, the beam from one lamp passing through a red filter IS, the beam from the second lamp passing through a green filter ll and the third lamp through a white filter Hi. In this arrangement three lamps are simultaneously in operative position and in a closed circuit, while the other three lamps are inoperative and in an open circuit and provide an emergency set should any lamp of the other set burn out. In that event, the standard is rotated to replace the former operative set by the second set of lamps and the replacement time thus kept to a minimum. The lamps can be timed by any suitable timing mechanism such as a commutator system 20 driven by a small motor 2 Having thus described my invention, I claim:
1. A signalling system comprising means for projecting a red beam, having a light distribution pattern symmetrical about an axis, along a course with the axis of the red beam angularly divergent from the line of the course so that the said red beam is asymmetrical thereof, means for projecting a green beam, having a light distribution pattern symmetrical about an axis, along the same course with the axis of the green beam angularly divergent from the said line of the course and asymmetrical thereof, said red and said green beams mutually overlapping in a path symmetrical of the line of the course, said respective beams forming a line substantially coincident with the line of the course partaking equally of the energy of both said beams so that the visual aspect of the formed line is a resultant of an even additive mixture of the two beam colors while the visual aspect even slightly to one side of the formed line is of an additive mixture of unequal energies in which the greater energy dominates and establishes the visual aspect.
2. A signalling range system comprising means for flashing simultaneously a pair of complementally colored slightly divergent and overlapping light beams of the same effective intensity and each having a light distribution pattern symmetrical about an axis, and means for flashing a substantially white beam narrower than the combined width of the overlapping colored beams and superposed over the common axis defined symmetrically of the overlapping area of the said two simultaneously flashed beams.
3. The method of forming a unidirectional guide beam to identify a linear course from a position toward an objective, which comprises projecting a beam of light having a light distribution pattern substantially symmetrical of an axis of peak intensity and of predetermined chromatic characteristics to continuously overlap said course for substantially the full effective range of the beam and by a predetermined angle while maintaining said axis of peak intensity thereof at an angle to and on one side of such course, and projecting a second beam of light having a light distribution pattern substantially symmetrical of an axis of peak intensity and of different predetermined chromatic characteristics from the first beam to continuously overlap said course and the overlapping portion of the first beam for substantially the full effective range of said second beam and by predetermined angles while maintaining the axis of peak intensity of said second beam at an angle to and on the other side of such course from the first beam to form a single composite beam, whereby the overlapping portions of the first mentioned two beams between the respective axes thereof form a third beam having an axis coincident with such course and visually contrasting chromatically with both of said first mentioned beams, said last mentioned beam at its axis being formed of equal energies of the first two beams and its intensity comprising a function of the relative angularity of the overlapping portions of the first two mentioned beams.
4. In signalling, means forming a beam of light of predetermined chromatic characteristics and having an axis of peak intensity, said beam form ing a light distribution pattern symmetrical about said axis, means forming a second beam of light of predetermined chromatic characteristics different from those of said first beam and having an axis of peak intensity, said second beam forming a light distribution pattern symmetrical about its said axis means for simultaneously projecting both of said beams together to form a composite observable guiding beam comprised of components of both of said beams, said composite guiding beam containing the axes of both of said beams with an angular divergence between them forming spaced peaks of intensity with each peak dominated by the chromatic characteristics of the beam having the particular axis, and said composite beam having an axis symmetrically between the first two mentioned peaks composed of an additive mixture of the chromatic characteristics of both beams and being visually in contrast with both said first mentioned beams, said three beams when seen by an observer passing transversely thereof as successively a beam dominated by the chromatic distribution of the first beam, a composite beam partaking of the additive efiects of both beams in a line symmetrically between the axes of the first and second beams, and a beam dominated by the chromatic characteristics of the said second beam.
5. A signalling range system comprising means for flashing simultaneously a pair of complementally colored slightly divergent and overlapping light beams of the same effective intensity and each having a light distribution pattern symmetrical about an axis, with the respective axes in acute angular divergence to form a third beam having a light distribution pattern symmetrically between said two axes, and means for flashing in alternation thereto a substantially white beam narrower than the combined width of the overlapping colored beams and superposed over the common axis defined symmetrically of the overlapped area of the said two simultaneously flashed beams.
EDGAR W. PENTON.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 1,266,554 Coleman et a1 May 21, 1918 1,348,855 Fessenden Aug. 10, 1920 1,442,681 Craig Jan. 16, 1923 1,989,295 Sewell Jan. 29, 1935 2,023,708 Spring Dec. 10, 1935 2,176,469 Moueix Oct. 17, 1939 2,365,038 Adler Dec. 12, 1944 2,386,268 Roper Oct. 9, 1945
US536397A 1944-05-19 1944-05-19 Navigation signal system Expired - Lifetime US2458414A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US536397A US2458414A (en) 1944-05-19 1944-05-19 Navigation signal system

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US536397A US2458414A (en) 1944-05-19 1944-05-19 Navigation signal system

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2458414A true US2458414A (en) 1949-01-04

Family

ID=24138319

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US536397A Expired - Lifetime US2458414A (en) 1944-05-19 1944-05-19 Navigation signal system

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2458414A (en)

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2559415A (en) * 1948-11-23 1951-07-03 Gen Railway Signal Co Course indicating light beacon
US2968023A (en) * 1956-08-21 1961-01-10 Gen Electric Co Ltd Visual position-indicating arrangements
US2979693A (en) * 1955-09-28 1961-04-11 Gasaccumulator Svenska Ab Course directional light beacon
US4040004A (en) * 1976-09-07 1977-08-02 Mcdonnell Douglas Corporation Color coded vehicle guidance system
US4707696A (en) * 1986-01-29 1987-11-17 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Portable glide slope indicator
US5986792A (en) * 1998-02-03 1999-11-16 Farlight Corporation Lighting system sequencer and method
US6028535A (en) * 1995-11-29 2000-02-22 Farlight Corporation Integrated approach lighting system and method of use thereof

Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1266554A (en) * 1917-08-13 1918-05-21 James H Coleman Composition-light lamp.
US1348855A (en) * 1917-09-26 1920-08-10 Submarine Signal Co Method and apparatus for locating submarines
US1442681A (en) * 1921-11-22 1923-01-16 Richard M Craig Road illumination for vehicles
US1989295A (en) * 1929-07-27 1935-01-29 Arthur T Sewell Landing signal
US2023708A (en) * 1933-10-06 1935-12-10 Henry I Spring Elevation beacon for aircraft and the like
US2176469A (en) * 1936-01-23 1939-10-17 Csf Steering device responsive to radio signals
US2365038A (en) * 1944-12-12 Method of treating oil wells
US2386268A (en) * 1938-01-18 1945-10-09 John M Roper Approach light

Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2365038A (en) * 1944-12-12 Method of treating oil wells
US1266554A (en) * 1917-08-13 1918-05-21 James H Coleman Composition-light lamp.
US1348855A (en) * 1917-09-26 1920-08-10 Submarine Signal Co Method and apparatus for locating submarines
US1442681A (en) * 1921-11-22 1923-01-16 Richard M Craig Road illumination for vehicles
US1989295A (en) * 1929-07-27 1935-01-29 Arthur T Sewell Landing signal
US2023708A (en) * 1933-10-06 1935-12-10 Henry I Spring Elevation beacon for aircraft and the like
US2176469A (en) * 1936-01-23 1939-10-17 Csf Steering device responsive to radio signals
US2386268A (en) * 1938-01-18 1945-10-09 John M Roper Approach light

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2559415A (en) * 1948-11-23 1951-07-03 Gen Railway Signal Co Course indicating light beacon
US2979693A (en) * 1955-09-28 1961-04-11 Gasaccumulator Svenska Ab Course directional light beacon
US2968023A (en) * 1956-08-21 1961-01-10 Gen Electric Co Ltd Visual position-indicating arrangements
US4040004A (en) * 1976-09-07 1977-08-02 Mcdonnell Douglas Corporation Color coded vehicle guidance system
US4707696A (en) * 1986-01-29 1987-11-17 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Portable glide slope indicator
US6028535A (en) * 1995-11-29 2000-02-22 Farlight Corporation Integrated approach lighting system and method of use thereof
US5986792A (en) * 1998-02-03 1999-11-16 Farlight Corporation Lighting system sequencer and method

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4249158A (en) Aircraft take-off and landing system and method for using same
US2441877A (en) Beacon system
US3885876A (en) Optical chromatic display for navigational guidance
US2458414A (en) Navigation signal system
US3447129A (en) Aircraft depth-of-flash optical guidance system
US2155295A (en) Airport lighting system
US4064424A (en) Visual glide path beacon system
US1223459A (en) Means for producing colored-light effects.
US3436729A (en) Multicolored anti-collision beacon for indicating position and relative direction of vehicle travel
US2386268A (en) Approach light
US2968023A (en) Visual position-indicating arrangements
US2304861A (en) Blackout means for automobile lamps
US3377617A (en) Three-color alternating-signal single station range light
US1337880A (en) benard
US2064722A (en) Aeroplane lighting system
US2983914A (en) Warning light which causes light rays to travel in a conical path
US3031645A (en) Aircraft lighting system
US2719281A (en) Signal light for marine aviation and vehicular use
US1701205A (en) Illuminated display
US1701204A (en) glatzner
US2531337A (en) Polychrome beam light signal
US2115899A (en) Gauge glass indicator
US1920113A (en) Speed indicating device
RU2486112C1 (en) Device to control passive spacecraft orientation
Jacobs et al. Design, development, and testing of two prototype maritime laser aids to navigation