The Ingenious Meaning Behind Those Balls On Power Lines – And How They’re Saving Lives

You can’t miss them when you look up. Those bright red, orange and white spheres hang overhead like giant Christmas baubles from the power lines. You can see that they’re spaced perfectly apart, too. But while that neat pattern is obviously by design, the balls themselves aren’t just there for show. They have a purpose — a rather critical one.

Uncertain Origins

When these spheres started appearing is up for debate. Some say the red balls began popping up in Florida and Arkansas in the 1950s. Others, by contrast, claim that they came to Arkansas first – and not until the 1970s. Thankfully, you don’t have to pick a side of this rather unexciting argument... And in any case, the balls are all across the country now.

Bigger Than They Look

You may occasionally have to squint to spot the spheres, however, as they don’t appear to be all that big. This is just an optical illusion. Remember that some are hundreds of feet in the air, so what you see on the ground doesn’t represent their actual size. Some larger varieties measure up at a minimum of 36 inches in diameter.

Special Distances

On the other hand, the balls that hang a bit closer to the ground – say, under 50 feet above where you stand – may be only 20 inches in size. These are distributed a bit less generously than their more sizable counterparts. Smaller spheres can be 30 feet apart, while the bigger ones are separated by about 200 feet. This is all part of a well-regulated system.

Long Distance Electricity

So, what purpose do these brightly colored, perfectly sized, and evenly spaced balls have? To understand, you'll have to know a thing or two about electricity. Being able to light up our cities and homes is a relatively recent phenomenon. It took until 1882 for engineers Oskar von Miller and Marcel Deprez to send electricity over a long distance. The pair relied on overhead wires that would transmit telegraphs, using these to pass a 2.5-kilowatt current over a 35-mile stretch. That was revolutionary at the time.

Moving Over Time

Before this landmark moment, a power plant could only serve nearby towns and cities. That meant electricity had just a short journey from its point of creation to the businesses and residences that needed it. But as time passed, utility companies moved into larger, more remote facilities. The only issue? They were too far away from their customers now.

Birth Of Power Lines

To fix this problem, power companies had to develop a brand-new way to transport electricity from its point of creation to consumers efficiently. And any wasted power was money lost for these businesses, so coming up with the right conduction system was super-important.

Insulated Ground Lines

Now, high-voltage electricity is easily transported from plants to the areas where we live and work. But you may be surprised to hear that the power lines up above aren’t insulated. Why is that? Well, it’s been deemed a waste of money, as few folks ever get close enough to them. Any underground lines, on the other hand, will be insulated to protect people in the vicinity.

Unfortunate Accidents

Accidents do happen with power lines – mostly electrocutions. These typically occur when a construction worker or their equipment touches the cable while also in contact with the ground. This position creates a conductor, allowing the power to travel from the live wire through the person and into the earth.

Birds Have It Figured Out

This also explains why birds can sit on power lines without problems. Electricity won’t leave the lines unless it has a pathway into the ground, meaning the winged creatures can perch on the wire without feeling the deadly surge. They have problems if they brush against two wires at once, however, or if they simultaneously come up against a line and the wooden poles that hold it up.

Safe To Hang Out

Fortunately, power companies have looked after our feathered friends, bumping the distance between lines so birds won’t hit two wires at once when they sit down. So, crows, pigeons, and others of their kind are safe to while away some time up there, as you’ve seen them do.

Shoes On A Wire

But we don’t just spot birds on power lines. Sometimes – especially in cities – we notice old shoes hanging up there, too. People tie the laces of two sneakers together and then launch them up toward the lines. Often you’ll count hundreds of pairs hanging up together on just one section. This phenomenon looks pretty cool, but there’s actually an interesting reason for it – several.

Shoe Removal Force

Between 2008 and 2015, the city of Chicago was asked to remove at least 6,000 pairs of shoes from power lines, according to the radio station WBEZ. But it’s not an issue exclusive to the Windy City. You’ll see sneakers dangling overhead in places across the globe. And it’s a phenomenon with many possible explanations.

Myriad Of Reasons

Some have linked sneakers on power lines to urban crime – especially clashes related to gangs. A former gang member named Patrick Starr confirmed this to WBEZ. He and his buddies would mark their territory with overhead footwear. In other cities, crews have used shoes to signal where rivals have died or where their own have fallen victim to violence.

Urban Legends

Perhaps you’ve heard that a hanging shoe represents a spot where people sell drugs. Well, Chicago locals have refuted this notion. And there are the stories of people whose friends pranked them or tossed their sneakers as payback for a lost bet. There’s no single reason, then, why shoes end up overhead.

Not Approved

But while sneakers aren’t added to electrical cables by city officials, a few baubles do get the official stamp of approval. And unlike dangling tennis shoes, such state-approved items have a clear purpose and meaning for those who know how to interpret them.

Safeguarding The Wire

Perhaps you’ve gazed at a transformer and the high-voltage lines that jut from it – only to notice some disc-like objects around the electric cables. Regardless of their color, these are probably insulators to prevent the live wires from touching anything that could cause a shock.

Ingenious Design

If the wires run next to or into a transformer, they have a direct pathway to the ground. And because most transformers are metal, they can conduct electricity downwards – which power companies naturally don’t want. So, insulators are placed around the lines to separate them from a transformer’s edge.

Close Call

Insulator disks can also protect power plant transformers from storms and electrical surges. You may even have seen power lines being hit by lightning and wondered about the impact. Thankfully, you don’t have to worry about this if there are insulators.

Something Else On There...

Perhaps you’re nowhere near a transformer, though. And what you’re seeing isn’t a disk-shaped stack on a power line. No, what you’ve noticed is unmistakably spherical: a giant plastic ball hanging from the electrical wires overhead. You may be floating across a lake, driving through a canyon, or simply passing by your local airport.

Variety Of Colors And Sizes

These balls come in a variety of colors, too. At first, the go-to hue was red, but experts later transitioned to using bright orange as their default. Still, you may see crimson spheres or even yellow or white ones. And as we previously mentioned, they come in different sizes.

Measured Distances

The balls generally sit at 200-feet intervals, although they may be closer together as you approach an airport. All of these details give a hint as to the purpose of these spherical additions to your local power lines. And there’s one last ironic detail about them to consider.

Unusual Installation

Interestingly enough, the giant power line spheres you see have to be fixed to the wires in a death-defying manner. After all, workers can’t always reach the lines – even with the tallest cherry-picker. So how do teams get up there? Well, they sometimes have to fly in a helicopter that hovers next to the cable long enough to attach the massive, brightly colored bead.

Looking Back In Time

And as we’ve previously discussed, these markers started appearing in the 1950s – if you believe one group of folks, anyway. States, including Florida and Arkansas, began to hang the balls on their electrical wires. Others say that the trend started 20 years later in Arkansas when the state’s governor took a flight and noticed something disturbing upon landing.

One Man's Experience

Supposedly, Winthrop Rockefeller looked out of the window of his plane and saw electrical cables right by the craft. That’s enough to spook anyone! And, rightly, Rockefeller believed these live wires should be made more conspicuous to pilots making their way toward the runway. So, the spheres started appearing to warn aviation professionals: stay away from the dangerous cables ahead.

Making Sense Of The Terrain

Pilots in other states didn’t have the same warning system – at least, not as early as they had in Arkansas. And in one case, it caused a disaster. At the tail-end of the 1980s, Colorado officials began to install the balls across their state’s famously rugged terrain, but they didn’t do it quickly enough to prevent an accident over the South Platte River.

Learning From Mistakes

In 1988 a news channel’s helicopter collided with a thin steel cable that dangled 150 feet over the river. And, horrifically, that impact was enough to cause the vehicle to crash. There were casualties, too, as a pair of journalists both sadly perished in the tragic incident.

Protective Purposes

But even with that and other accidents logged, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) can’t make it mandatory for every state to hang the colorful balls on their live wires. Instead, the agency can only advocate that these warning symbols are used to protect overhead aircraft from fatal collisions.

Unfortunately Not Uncommon

And, remarkably, it’s not uncommon for helicopter pilots to collide with live wires. A 2003 report in FAAviation News explained that they often hit the cables for any one of a number of issues. These include “dirty windscreens, light conditions [and] the obscuring effects of terrain and changes in visual perspective that occur during climb and descent.”

Impossible To Tell

On top of that, the report claimed that “accurately judging the helicopter’s distance from unmarked wires is nearly impossible.” Even a pilot who follows the same path back and forth from the airport could be at risk when wires change shape over the seasons, the color of the cables alters, or another optical illusion presents itself.

Strategically Placed

There are also certain places where you’re more likely to see these spheres, known as visibility marker balls, in the aviation field. They tend to dangle in spots where planes and helicopters often fly low – such as canyons, mountain passes, and valleys – over freeways and on the lead-up to airports.

Lighting Up The Area

And the cables that zigzag across these areas must be tagged with the visibility marker balls. Otherwise, as planes start to descend, their pilots may not be able to see the lines ahead. The FAA guidelines also stipulate why the balls should come in specific sizes and colors.

Mega Size

As you may have already guessed, the spheres you see over lakes, rivers, and canyons are extra-large. The FAA stipulates that they be a minimum of 36 inches across. But those smaller markers – 20-inch balls – are deemed more than sufficient for power lines less than 50 feet in height. You’ll also see the sized-down versions at the end of airport runways.

Impossible Not To Notice

And if you look out of your airplane window, you’ll see that the spheres are much closer together as you taxi toward the bottom of the runway. This is because those markers have just 30 to 50 feet between them. That way, they are handy indicators that the craft is approaching the edge of the tarmac.

Attention-Grabbing

But why are the visibility markers red? Well, simply put, because you can see them against the sky! A later FAA study found that orange was a more visible shade for pilots. So, you’re more likely to spot fire-colored spheres hanging from power lines nowadays, even if there will still be exceptions.

Color Selection

Ultimately, it’s down to the surroundings in which the markers will hang. The color that makes them the most visible to pilots is the shade that local officials should choose. And in most cases, that hue will be bright orange.

Bright Sequences

If a wire is equipped with fewer than four balls, then all of them should come in this garish shade of clementine. Longer wires with more balls may be better served with a pattern of colors, however, to ensure that at least one of them catches the pilot’s eye. Most of these sequences change back and forth between orange, white and yellow.

They Help Geese, Too

And the visibility markers haven’t just staved off aerial disaster. In 1983 an article from United Press International pointed out that the spheres had also helped steer geese away from dangerous live wires. Boat captains had learned to avoid them, too, the piece noted.

Life Savers

That’s great news for professionals across the aviation and boating industries and those concerned with wildlife conservation. Finally, the giant, colorful spheres on your power lines do something: they save lives. And now, when you drive by and see them in all their orange, red, yellow, or white glory, you can appreciate all they do just by dangling from your city’s electrical cables.