One of my first changes at my wash was to brighten up the bay lighting at night. There had been previous security issues due to neglect and poor lighting did not help that. Plus I thought it would promote night time business.
6 years later, security is better, but the wash is no longer neglected and there are also many visible cameras as well.
What has not happened is an increase in nighttime business. I get very, very few people who wash at night-- maybe 1 customer or possibly 2 is a good night. So I am wondering about reducing bay lighting to save $$$. And to keep people out who come in to work on their car or ... whatever.
I can put in low draw LED fixtures for adequate bay lighting, and have my higher power lights kick on when a timer starts. I'm set up to easily do this. Is anyone else using lights which activate with the timer, and are their pros or cons to just continuing to burn bright lights all night just to maintain higher security?
I currently burn two 96w compact fluorescents per bay for ~600watts total times maybe 10 hrs/day on average. I could cut this down to 180watts total (56w per bay.) Considering energy, bulbs, and ballasts I believe a switch to LED would have payback in about 18 months or so.
6 years later, security is better, but the wash is no longer neglected and there are also many visible cameras as well.
What has not happened is an increase in nighttime business. I get very, very few people who wash at night-- maybe 1 customer or possibly 2 is a good night. So I am wondering about reducing bay lighting to save $$$. And to keep people out who come in to work on their car or ... whatever.
I can put in low draw LED fixtures for adequate bay lighting, and have my higher power lights kick on when a timer starts. I'm set up to easily do this. Is anyone else using lights which activate with the timer, and are their pros or cons to just continuing to burn bright lights all night just to maintain higher security?
I currently burn two 96w compact fluorescents per bay for ~600watts total times maybe 10 hrs/day on average. I could cut this down to 180watts total (56w per bay.) Considering energy, bulbs, and ballasts I believe a switch to LED would have payback in about 18 months or so.