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  2. Spotlight operator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spotlight_operator

    The spot light operator is able to use the device with both eyes open due to the Bindon aiming concept which the brain can impose the red reticle into the combined vision from both eyes. Prior to usage and availability of these red dot sight style devices, various methods were and are still used.

  3. Automotive lighting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automotive_lighting

    Auxiliary high beam lights may be fitted to provide high-intensity light to enable the driver to see at longer range than the vehicle's high beam headlights. [13] Such lights are most notably fitted on rally cars, and are occasionally fitted to production vehicles derived from or imitating such cars.

  4. Lekolite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lekolite

    Century Lighting founders and the instrument's inventors, Joseph Levy [2] and Edward Kook, combined the first two letters of their own last names and called the unit "Leko." Rival lighting company, Kliegl Brothers, released their own Elipsoidial Reflector Spotlight that same year, calling it " Klieglight ".

  5. Headlight flashing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Headlight_flashing

    Typical dashboard icon indicating that high beams are illuminated. Headlight flashing is the act of either briefly switching on the headlights of a car, or of momentarily switching between a headlight's high beams and low beams, in an effort to communicate with another driver or drivers.

  6. Headlamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Headlamp

    As previously with round lamps, the US permitted only two standardized sizes of rectangular sealed-beam lamp: A system of two 200 by 142 mm (7.9 by 5.6 in) high/low beam units corresponding to the existing 7-inch round format, or a system of four 165 by 100 mm (6.5 by 3.9 in) units, two high/low and two high-beam. corresponding to the existing ...

  7. Parabolic aluminized reflector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parabolic_aluminized_reflector

    The following year in 1958, all states allowed the new system. Two of the lamps contained two filaments and served as low and high beam, while the other two lamps contained only one filament and were active only during high-beam operation. From the 1975 model year, a rectangular version of the four-lamp system was legalized.

  8. Stage lighting accessories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stage_lighting_accessories

    A top hat, also known as a stove pipe or snoot, is a device used in theatrical lighting to shield the audience's eyes from the direct source of the light. [1] It is shaped like a top hat with a hole in the top, and the brim being inserted into the gel frame holder on a lighting instrument.

  9. Ellipsoidal reflector spotlight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Ellipsoidal_reflector_spotlight

    A Colortran ERS. An Ellipsoidal Reflector from a Leko Source Four ERS. Ellipsoidal reflector spot (abbreviated to ERS, or colloquially ellipsoidal or ellipse) is the name for a type of stage lighting instrument, named for the ellipsoidal reflector used to collect and direct the light through a barrel that contains a lens or lens train.