The other day, while driving to get groceries, I rolled over a pair of black rubber cables stretched across the roadโthe kind you barely notice as they make a soft thunk-thunk under your tires. My sister, riding with me, suddenly asked, โWhat are those for?โ I had no idea.
Later, I Googled itโyogurt spoon still in handโand found out theyโre called pneumatic tubes. Their job? Counting cars. When a vehicle passes over, the pressure sends a puff of air to a sensor that logs it.
One tube simply counts cars; two can measure speed, direction, and even vehicle type. This data isnโt just collected for funโitโs used by city planners to make real decisions: where to place stop signs, adjust traffic lights, or add turn lanes.It helps identify speeding hotspots and even shapes public transit and snowplow schedules
What amazed me most is how quietly it all happens. These tubes donโt flash or beep; they just sit there, quietly shaping our roads
Now, whenever I spot themโusually right before something changesโI see them for what they are: silent but essential tools helping make our daily drives a little smarter

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