You probably think traffic cones are just annoying plastic obstacles on the road, designed to ruin your morning commute. But thereās a surprisingly odd story behind why theyāre bright orangeāand why that color wasnāt always obvious.
Traffic cones were first used in the 1910s, but early versions were made from concrete. Yes, actual concrete. Drivers hated them, and letās be honestāthey werenāt exactly portable. In the 1940s, a New Jersey engineer named Charles P. Rudabaker invented the modern, flexible rubber traffic cone. But hereās where it gets weird: traffic cones werenāt always orangeāthey were white.
So why the neon glow? Studies in the 1960s discovered that orange is the most visible color to human eyes in both daylight and low-light conditions. Apparently, our eyes are naturally drawn to longer wavelengths, which is why that bright orange sticks out even in fog, rain, or a snowstorm. Without that color, a traffic cone is basically invisible until itās too lateāturning a simple construction site into a hazard.
Hereās the odd kicker: in some places, the specific shade of orange is actually regulated. Too dark, and it blends into the asphalt. Too light, and it doesnāt catch attention fast enough. Your morning commute stress? Itās basically a battle of optical physicsāand a very stubborn engineer from New Jersey.
Next time you see a traffic cone, donāt just curse at it. Remember: that plastic nightmare survived concrete, human error, and decades of optical science just to ruin your lane change.