Some posters here (yeah, you know who you are
)have wrongly identified various different models of streetlights. For example, there is confusion between the General Electric M-400A1 Powr/Door and the M-400 split-door. About the same time the M-250R was introduced, the M-400 was redesigned as practically a clone to the M-400A with notable exceptions. The most obvious one being the rear door has no vent holes
and a simple spring latch rather than a captive screw (early Powr/Door units had no vent holes, either, but had the captive screw). Construction features of the M-400 split-door include a taller PE receptacle, a longer upper "lip" on the top housing, and a housing-mounted ballast.
Another common one is the Westinghouse OV-25. Some posters mistakenly date them as "1964" when the most obvious telltale features (PE receptacle position and lighter silver finish) give it away as a 1970s lume. Remember, if the P-cell is in the middle, like on the original '57-64 version, then it is a true '64 OV-25. IF the P-cell is moved back about 10" with the darker silver, then it's a mid-to-late 60's unit. If the P-cell is all the way back, then it's a 1970's unit.
And yet another mistake is the Silverliner redesign of the 1979-1980 era. All Westinghouse and Crouse-Hinds catalogs state that the models are OV-15 and OV-25.