16 May 2012 Mount&Blade: Warband/Founding a kingdom From StrategyWiki, the video game walkthrough and strategy guide wiki Mount&Blade: Warband To found a kingdom one has to take a castle while not a lord or a mercenary.php?title=Mount%26Blade:Warband/Foundingakingdom&oldid=611862'.16 Oct 2012 Mount & Blade: Warband 1.172 released (March 14th, 2017) aspects of Mount and Blade I figured I'd do a quick little write up on how to be a successful King. You'll always want to start your kingdom with a Town and not a castle. Aside from that hopefully this guide proves helpful and you succeed in.
A light rail train with a roll headsignA destination sign (North American English) or destination indicator/ destination blind (British English) is a sign mounted on the front, side or rear of a vehicle, such as a, or, that displays the vehicle's route number and destination, or the route's number and name on transit systems using route names. The main such sign, mounted on the front of the vehicle, usually located above (or at the top of) the windshield, is often called the headsign, most likely from the fact that these signs are located on the front, or head, end of the vehicle. Depending on the type of the sign, it might also display intermediate points on the current route, especially if the route is particularly long and its final terminus by itself is not very helpful in determining where the vehicle is going. Contents.Technology types Several different types of technology have been used for destination signs, from simple rigid placards held in place by a frame or clips, to, to various types of computerized, controlled signs, such as, or displays. All of these can still be found in use today, but most transit-vehicle destination signs now in use in North America and Europe are electronic signs.
In the US, the specifies certain design criteria for transit-vehicle destination signs, such as maximum and minimum character height-to-width ratio and contrast level, to ensure the signs are sufficiently readable to visually impaired persons. In the 2010s, LED signs have replaced flip-dot signs as the most common type of destination sign in new buses and vehicles. Rollsign. A motorized rollsign changingFor many decades, the most common type of multiple-option destination sign was the rollsign (or bus blind, curtain sign, destination blind, or tram scroll): a roll of flexible material with pre-printed route number/letter and destinations (or route name), which is turned by the vehicle operator at the end of the route when reversing direction, either by a hand or by holding a switch if the sign mechanism is motorized. These Rollsigns were usually made of until (a type of PET film) became the most common material used for them, in the 1960s/70s. They can also be made of other material, such as.In the 1990s rollsigns were still commonly seen in older vehicles, and were sometimes used in modern vehicles of that time.
Since the 1980s, they have largely been supplanted by electronic signs. A may be somewhat less readable, but is easier to change between routes/destinations and to update for changes to a transit system's route network. However, given the long life of public transit vehicles and of sign rolls, if well made, some transit systems continue to use these devices in the 2010s.The roll is attached to metal tubes at the top and bottom, and flanges at the ends of the tubes are inserted into a mechanism which controls the rolling of the sign. The upper and lower rollers are positioned sufficiently far apart to permit a complete 'reading' (a destination or route name) to be displayed, and a strip light is located behind the blind to illuminate it at night. Two types of light rail car on the system in, both fitted with rollsigns, in 2009.
This photo illustrates how rolls/blinds allow use of color and of symbols, such as the airplane icon shown here.Automatic changing of rollsign/blind displays, through electronic control, has been possible since at least the 1970s, but is an option that primarily has been used on rail systems—where a train or can have several separate signboxes each—and only infrequently on buses, where it is comparatively easy for the driver to change the display. These signs are controlled by a computer through an interface in the driver's cabin. Are printed on the reverse of the blind, and as the computer rolls the blind an optical sensor reads the barcodes until reaching the code for the requested display. The on-board computer is normally programmed with information on the order of the displays, and can be programmed using the should the blind/roll be changed. Although these sign systems are normally accurate, over time the blind becomes dirty and the computer may not be able to read the markings well, leading occasionally to incorrect displays. For buses, this disadvantage is outweighed by the need (compared to manual) to change each destination separately; if changing routes, this could be up to seven different blinds. Automatic-setting rollsigns are common on many and subway/metro systems in North America.
Most buses use a standard system with up & down buttons to change the destination shown on the blinds & a manual override using a crank. The blind system is integrated with a system controlling announcements & passenger information, which uses satellites to download stop data in a sequential order. It uses GPS to determine that a bus has departed a stop, and announce the next stop.Flip-disc display. A flip-disc display on a busIn the United States, the first electronic destination signs for buses were developed by Luminator in the mid-1970s and became available to transit operators in the late 1970s, but did not become common until the 1980s. These were flip-disc, or 'flip-dot', displays.
Some transit systems still use these today.Flap display Another technology that has been employed for destination signs is the, or Solari display, but outside, this technology was never common for use in transit vehicles. Such displays were more often used at transit hubs to display arrival and departure information, rather than as destination signs on transit vehicles.Electronic displays. LED destination sign on a bus in SingaporeMost present-day destination indicator signs consist of (LCD) or (LED) panels that can show animated text, colors (in the case of LED signs), and a potentially unlimited number of routes (so long as they are programmed into the vehicle's sign controller unit; some sign controller units may also allow the driver to write the route number and the destination text through a keypad if required). In many systems, the vehicle has three integrated signs in the system, the front sign over the windshield, the side sign over the passenger entrance, both showing the route number and destination, and a rear sign usually showing the route number.
An internal sign, that could also provide different kinds of information such as the current stop and the next one, aside from the route number and destination, may also be installed.Some such signs also have the capability of changing on-the-fly as the vehicle moves along its route, with the help of technology, and a. See also.
^ 'Sign of the Times: Transit signs have evolved from curtain signs to the first electronic sign introduced by Luminator to the present ADA-regulated visual and audio signs'. Mass Transit magazine, January–February 1993, pp. Fort Atkinson, WI (USA):. ISSN 0364-3484. (guidelines for), section 39 within (Accessibility Specifications for Transportation Vehicles) of the U.S. ^ Tucker, Joanne (September 2011). Retrieved 21 November 2014.External links Rollsign Gallery, showing the history of public transit through their destination signs – USA, Canada, overseas:Wikimedia Commons has media related to.Wikimedia Commons has media related to.