JMMUSTANG
car wash owner
I just got mine at Grangers.Hi - I am looking for enclosed, waterproof flourescent fixtures - is this what you purchased?
If not, do you know who carries them? / Thank you
I just got mine at Grangers.Hi - I am looking for enclosed, waterproof flourescent fixtures - is this what you purchased?
If not, do you know who carries them? / Thank you
<<<A 250W 480V MH lights use about the same amount of power as a 55 watt CPF bulb and Metal Halides has 10 times the Lumens. The rest I mostly agree with.
I'm not for any side, I just want to save $. But my calculations on my wash (that I crossed checked with my Industrial Electrician friends) do not show significant savings. Also, MH will dim and thus draw more power with age, so they should be replaced every 2 years.
BigLeo
Leo, show me where I can find the data that a 250W MH uses the same amount of power as a 55W CPF. Some how this does not calculate.A 250W 480V MH lights use about the same amount of power as a 55 watt CPF bulb and Metal Halides has 10 times the Lumens. The rest I mostly agree with.
I'm not for any side, I just want to save $. But my calculations on my wash (that I crossed checked with my Industrial Electrician friends) do not show significant savings. Also, MH will dim and thus draw more power with age, so they should be replaced every 2 years.
BigLeo
But not longer than 340W pulse-start metal halide. Poor comparison when you simply pick one that fits the need to raise your product above another.Shorco1 said:longer lamp life versus 250W metal halide lamps
For tube fluorescents maybe, but not CFL, which makes this an apples-to-oranges comparison.Shorco1 said:fluorescent lamps, as a linear source, offer potentially more uniform lighting, less shadows and less glare
Remember you're posting on a car wash forum where "dimmable" is unnecessary. We just want lots of light.Shorco1 said:Fluorescent is also easily and inexpensively dimmable
Copied and pasted directly from lightingtaxdeduction.orgShorco1 said:World Gym retrofitted eighteen 400W metal halide fixtures each with four T5HO biax lamps...
Amen! I dont think anybody should back out of this discussion.A good topic for discussion.
I envy you - mine went up 11% last February, then up another 19.7% this week. F#@!ing OUCH!My utility went up 6% in 2007 and 6% in 2008.
FYI, this weekend I am rewiring my bay lights. Each bay currently has 2 MH lights on photocells. Effective this weekend (or as soon as I get the wiring done ), I will be shutting one of the lights off at midnight.I've wondered if it even makes sense to run the lights all night.
The color temperature rating determines the "warmth" of the light output. The better quality bulbs us a tri-phosphor coating which better simulates an incandescant light. I agree, the older CFL's and even the cheaper new ones are an ugly color almost as bad as mercury vapor. I recently replaced the equipment room fluorescent bulbs with better ones, and even though they're rated at a lower light output it seems brighter because the quality of light is so much better.Greg Pack said:I have not liked the color temperature of fluorescents in the past, but it sounds like they are getting warmer.
The 250W 480V pulls about the same amps as the 55W 120V bulb but a watt is a watt regardless of voltage. All power companies bill by the watt so the 250W bulb will cost 4.55 times as much to run as the 55W.A 250W 480V MH lights use about the same amount of power as a 55 watt CPF bulb and Metal Halides has 10 times the Lumens. The rest I mostly agree with.
I'm not for any side, I just want to save $. But my calculations on my wash (that I crossed checked with my Industrial Electrician friends) do not show significant savings. Also, MH will dim and thus draw more power with age, so they should be replaced every 2 years.
BigLeo