Matt Bramanti Profile picture
Aug 24 41 tweets 17 min read Read on X
due to logistical issues, I have to postpone the razor-blade thread to next week

in the meantime, let's talk about these little guys

🧵 Image
this is an Interstate Highway sign

it's part of a system of standardized signage used on Interstate Highways in the United States Image
you might just call them "freeways" but the network of roads is officially the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways, named for the president who signed the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956Image
the system has nearly 50,000 miles of highways criss-crossing the Fruited Plain Image
Interstates are all controlled-access roads, meaning they use on- and off-ramps and do not cross other roads at grade

the biggest one in the world is about 300 yards from my front door Image
Interstates are designed and built to standards promulgated by the Federal Highway Administration, an agency of the U.S. Department of Transportation

that department is led by Secretary Pete Buttigieg, shown here absolutely devouring that hog Image
with a standardized network of roads, you need a standardized system of signage

that's set forth in the Federal Highway Administration's Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices for Streets and Highways, or MUTCD

mutcd.fhwa.dot.gov/kno_11th_Editi…Image
this manual, along with the Standard Highway Signs publication, goes into excruciating detail on sizes, dimensions, colors, typefaces, you name it

for example:

speed limit signs in kilometers per hour, like you might see near the Canuckistani border, must have the limit circledImage
so let's talk about each kind of sign

the Interstate shield is used to mark Interstates

states may optionally include the name of the state Image
the number represents the number of the highway

east-west Interstates have even numbers, with the lowest numbers in the south of the country and rising as you go north

when complete, I-2 will run from Peñitas, Texas to Harlingen, Texas

I-96 runs from Norton Shores, Mich. to Detroit
north-south Interstates have odd numbers, with the lowest numbers in the west and rising as you go east

I-5 runs from the Mexican border at San Ysidro, Calif. to the Canuckistani border at Blaine, Wash.

I-99 runs from Bedford, Pa. to Painted Post, N.Y.
three-digit numbers represent either a spur or a loop around a city

spurs have odd first digits, loops have even first digits

the next two represent the parent highway

for example, this one is a loop around Houston, bisected by I-10

avoid at all costs Image
Alaska's Interstates are kinda weird

they're just numbered A-1 through A-4

and nobody calls them by their numbers

and they're not interstate

and they're not controlled-access

just two-lane roads

that view though
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Hawaii's are - you guessed it

H-1 through H-3, plus H-201, which loops around Honolulu Image
the MUTCD specifies different colors for different classes of signs

red means a full stop is required

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orange is for temporary warning signs related to construction

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yellow is for warnings about the condition or design of the upcoming segment of highway

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green is for guide signs, exits and mile markers

in Colorado and Idaho, they replaced the mile marker 420 signs with 419.9 because stoners kept stealing them

i'm sure they steal those too

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black and white are used for regulatory signs

most of these are speed limits, but there are others


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blue is used to inform drivers of upcoming services or the lack thereof

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spots on these are for sale

the rules and prices are set by each state

jalopnik.com/heres-how-much…
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brown is for cultural, historic and recreation sites


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apparently pink is used for temporary incidents

I have never seen one of these

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the typefaces are specified by Federal fiat, in Standard Alphabets for Traffic Control Devices

right down to the kerning and leading

mutcd.fhwa.dot.gov/SHSe/Alphabets…Image
so what are the signs made of?

they can be plastic or wood, but they're almost always aluminum

they're faced with a material called "sheeting," which has little prisms or spherical glass beads in it

this allows them to be retroreflective
they reflect light back in the direction it came from

which is the front of your car

which is pretty close to your eyes
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hey they're just like retroreflective pavement markers

what luck!

the Federal Highway Administration has detailed specifications for the required coefficient of retroreflectivity of various materials in various colors

highways.dot.gov/safety/local-r…
the poles can be wood or steel (tube, U-channel or I-beam)

regardless of the material, they have to behave well when struck by a vehicle

they can be:

-breakaway (the pole breaks off and flies over the car when you hit it)

-yielding (it bends flat and you run over it)

-shielded (blocked by a guardrail or other barrier)
here's a breakaway pole

those bolts are narrowed at the flange to weaken them

just like fire hydrants!

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the Federal Highway Administration even recommends anti-theft measures

to include hammering the end of the bolt holding the sign to the pole

this offends me

highways.dot.gov/safety/local-r…
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but I have to say my favorite part of the Manual on Uniform Traffic Devices is this

the errata

dozens and dozens of acknowledged errors



please fix, Mayor Petemutcd.fhwa.dot.gov/htm/11th/error…Image
so that's the signage

now a little history on the Interstate Highway System

in 1919, the U.S. Army Motor Transport Corps sent a convoy from Washington, D.C. to Oakland, Calif. to test the Army's cross-country mobility

the convoy of 81 vehicles took 62 days to drive the 3,251 miles
that's 52 miles a day

a day

virtually nothing between Nevada and California was pavedImage
the convoy included cars, motorcycles, heavy and light trucks, 39 officers and 258 enlisted men

among the officers was this fella

28-year old brevet Lt. Col. Dwight D. Eisenhower Image
Ike would later contrast those dusty roads with the Reichsautobahnen

the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956 would allow states and localities to site Interstates, with Uncle Sam kicking in up to 90 percent of the funding Image
there's an urban legend that the Act required one in five miles of Interstate to be straight and level, so that it could be used as a military airstrip in case of war

this is not true

there were pilot programs in the 40s to identify lengths of highway that could be so used
the Australian government has identified segments of outback roads for emergency use by the Royal Flying Doctor Service Image
during the Cold War, Sweden had a dispersal plan to spread its air force across the country in case of war

this included building mini-airbases all over the country, many of which used highways as runways Image
anyway, i'm rambling at this point

that's Interstate signage

i hope you enjoyed it; if I missed anything or got anything wrong, let me know

previous deep-dive threads are here:

next one will be on razor blades, next Friday
Image
dammit

that should read "virtually nothing between Illinois and California was paved"

I regret the error

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More from @mattbramanti

Aug 21
i can't sleep

so let's talk about these little guys

🧵 Image
This is a host, sacramental bread or communion bread

it becomes the body, blood, soul and divinity of Jesus Christ when a priest utters the words of institution during the Mass

but this thread will be about the unconsecrated bread as a physical object Image
so what is it?

Canon law gives only the barest specifications:

924 §2: “The bread must be wheaten only, and recently made, so that there is no danger of corruption.”

926: “In the eucharistic celebration, in accordance with the ancient tradition of the latin Church, the priest is to use unleavened bread wherever he celebrates Mass.”
Read 21 tweets
Aug 17
let's talk about these little guys

🧵 Image
this is a water tower

it's an elevated structure used to supply pressure to a water distribution system Image
as a kid, I thought they were for storing water in case of an interruption to supply

but it's really about hydrostatic pressure
Read 33 tweets
Aug 10
let's talk about these little guys

🧵 Image
this is Scotch whisky Image
it's a distilled spirit made from malt or grain in Scotland, and it goes back a long way

the first recorded instance of distilling is evidenced by exchequer records from 1494

To Friar John Cor, by order of the King, to make aqua vitae, VIII bolls of malt.
Read 31 tweets
Aug 4
let's talk about these little guys

🧵 Image
(I know Scotch whisky won the poll, but my boy @stronkdaddy requested this)
@stronkdaddy this is a match

it's a single-use device for rapidly producing fire Image
Read 52 tweets
Aug 2
Mr. Smith reminds me that I never got back to the can sizing system

I mentioned that the standard Campbell's soup can is a No. 1, also known as a picnic

there's a bunch of sizes, and the numbering is goofy
Image
as far as I can tell, the No. 1, 2 and 2 1/2, 10, etc. were just arbitrary

but there a method to the 3xx madness
the Can Manufacturers Institute defines these sizes with two 3-digit numbers, like "300 x 407"

for both numbers, the first digit represents whole inches and the next two represent sixteenths of an inch

the first number is diameter and the second is height
Read 4 tweets
Aug 2
let's talk about these little guys

🧵
Image
Image
this is a can

sometimes known as a tin can, or in the Commonwealth as just a tin Image
despite the name, they're not made primarily of tin and never were

they used to be made of tinplate - a thin sheet of steel with a thin coating of tin

this prevents corrosion
Read 60 tweets

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