Difference between revisions of "Discharge lighting"

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(Metal halide added, lighting options added, + asstd)
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Sodium & Mercury discharge lights are used for outdoor lighting. They are widely used as streetlights, and are effective for always-on lighting of large areas.
+
Sodium & Mercury '''discharge lights''' are used for outdoor lighting. They are widely used as streetlights, and are effective for always-on lighting of large areas.
  
 
They are highly energy efficient, but the quality of light is poor.
 
They are highly energy efficient, but the quality of light is poor.
  
 +
Metal halide offers good quality white light, but is not as energy efficient as sodium.
  
==Energy efficiency and Cost==
 
Their advantage is extremely high energy efficiency. The disadvantages are poor light quality and slow warm up.
 
  
The lamps (light bulbs) are relatively expensive to buy, cheap and highly energy efficient to run, very long lived, and take minutes to warm up. Hence they can not be used on PIR detectors.  
+
=Energy efficiency and Cost=
 +
The advantage of sodium is extreme energy efficiency. The disadvantages are poor light quality and slow warm up.
  
Discharge lights must be run from a suitable ballast, never connected direct to the mains.
+
Mercury is much more energy efficient than halogen lamps, but less than sodiums. Mercury lamps are cheap and make good replacements for halogen where light quality is not critical. Linear fluorescent lights are competitors with mercury vapour.
  
Sodium lights are available from 18w upwards.
+
Metal halide lamps are costly, but total cost is still cheaper than filament lamps such as halogen.
  
 +
Discharge lamps (light bulbs) are typically relatively expensive to buy, but cheap and highly energy efficient to run, very long lived, and take minutes to warm up. Hence they can not be used on PIR detectors.
  
==Light types==
+
Discharge lights must be run from a suitable ballast, never connect a bulb direct to the mains. The ballast is built into the fitting.
* Mercury lights give an ice cold white light
 
  
* Low pressure sodium gives a pure yellow light
+
Sodium lights are available from 18w upwards. An 18w lamp will light more than the average drive or yard.
  
* High pressure sodium gives an orangey light, often described as golden or pink.
 
  
 +
=Light types=
 +
Mercury
 +
* ice cold white light
 +
* Start time under a minute
 +
* Sometimes used as street or car park lights, but no longer as popular as they were.
  
==Colour Perception==
+
Low pressure sodium (SOX)
 +
* pure yellow light
 +
* Start time in the region of 9 minutes
 +
* Exceptional energy efficiency
 +
* Often used to light motorways
 +
 
 +
High pressure sodium (SON)
 +
* Gives an orangey / golden / pink light.
 +
* Start time in the region of 2 minutes
 +
* Often used as town centre street lights.
 +
 
 +
Metal Halide
 +
* Good quality white light
 +
* Available in warm white 2700K and daylight 4000-5000K
 +
* Much better light quality than sodium & mercury lamps
 +
 
 +
 
 +
=Colour Perception=
 
Under low pressure sodium light, since only one colour is produced, vision is monochrome, meaning no perception of an object's colour is possible. The viewer's perception of colour under these lights is due to light from other sources, memory, and the awreness that greens and blues will look dark while orange and yellow appear light.
 
Under low pressure sodium light, since only one colour is produced, vision is monochrome, meaning no perception of an object's colour is possible. The viewer's perception of colour under these lights is due to light from other sources, memory, and the awreness that greens and blues will look dark while orange and yellow appear light.
  
High pressure sodium produces a wider spread of colours, but still an incomplete spectrum. More colour perception is possible.
+
High pressure sodium produces a wider spread of colours, but still an incomplete spectrum. Much more colour perception is possible.
  
 
Mercury discharge lamps produce white light, but the spectrum is not high CRI, and the relative brightness or intensity of different colours is not natural. Although this is the closest of the 3 to white light, it is a perceptually less pleasant light than high pressure sodium.
 
Mercury discharge lamps produce white light, but the spectrum is not high CRI, and the relative brightness or intensity of different colours is not natural. Although this is the closest of the 3 to white light, it is a perceptually less pleasant light than high pressure sodium.
  
The combination of both mercury and high pressure sodium lamps gives a better quality of light than either lamp alone. To be visually acceptable, the 2 lamps must be in the same place, hence this strategy is best suited to high positioned lamps lighting large areas.
+
The combination of both mercury and high pressure sodium lamps gives a much better quality of light than either lamp alone. To be visually acceptable, the 2 lamps must be in the same place, hence this strategy is best suited to high positioned lamps lighting large areas.
 +
 
 +
Metal halide lamps give a true white light.
 +
 
 +
For more information on the spectra of these lamps and the implications for vision, see
  
 +
http://www.lamptech.co.uk/Documents/SO2%20Spectral.htm
  
==Luminous Efficacy==
 
Typical figures, in lumens per watt:
 
* 150  High pressure sodium
 
* 180-200 Low pressure sodium
 
* ?  Mercury discharge
 
  
 +
=Luminous Efficacy=
 +
Typical figures, in lumens per watt. Filament lamp performance is included for comparison.
 +
* 180 Low pressure sodium
 +
* 110-150  High pressure sodium
 +
* 50-125 Metal halide
 +
* 35-60  Mercury discharge
 +
* 10-17 Filament
  
==See also==
+
 
 +
=Fittings=
 +
Discharge lighting fittings typically look more industrial than domestic. 18w SOX fittings that look like bulkhead lights are available.
 +
 
 +
If you want something that looks better, the contents of an ugly fitting can be transplanted to a fitting of your choice.
 +
# Buy the necessary luminaire for your chosen lamp
 +
# Buy the light fitting you want to transplant the lamp into
 +
# Transplant the bulb holder from luminaire to chosen fitting
 +
# Connect the 2 with mains flex
 +
# Mount the luminaire somewhere out of sight
 +
 
 +
Note:
 +
* Don't try to transplant metal halide, the starting voltages involved are much too high for non-purpose designed fittings and standard cable. Transplants are only for sodium and mercury.
 +
* The wattage rating of the light fitting should exceed that of the lamp being used by a good margin.
 +
* Don't use a fitting with a mirror finish reflector, this can cause lamp overheating. Light scattering reflectors are ok.
 +
* Do not attempt to operate discharge lamps from PIR sensors. Timers and dawn to dusk sensors are suitable.
 +
 
 +
For SON and mercury only:
 +
* Keep the wire between ballast and bulb short.
 +
* This wire will have to cope with high voltage starting pulses with some of these lamp types, so use a heavy mains flex.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
=Lighting Options=
 +
For domestic use a PIR operated 150w halogen lamp or better a few PIR operated CFLs are generally the best option. They give white light and are only on a small amount of the time. 500w of of halogen is much too bright for the majority of houses.
 +
 
 +
Mounting a halogen high up reduces glare. Mounting it within reach of a window makes relamping easy.
 +
 
 +
If a PIR light would spend a lot of time on in your situation, a low power sodium lamp on a timer and/or a dawn-dusk sensor may produce lower total energy use and less bulb changes. The price is lower light quality.
 +
 
 +
For large yards a good policy is often a combination of minimal low pressure sodium lighting plus halogen or CFL on PIRs.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
=See also=
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lighting_efficiency
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lighting_efficiency
 +
 +
http://members.misty.com/don/light.html
  
 
[[Lighting Glossary]]
 
[[Lighting Glossary]]
 +
  
  
 
[[Category:Lighting]]
 
[[Category:Lighting]]
 
[[Category:Electrical]]
 
[[Category:Electrical]]

Revision as of 04:44, 2 January 2007

Sodium & Mercury discharge lights are used for outdoor lighting. They are widely used as streetlights, and are effective for always-on lighting of large areas.

They are highly energy efficient, but the quality of light is poor.

Metal halide offers good quality white light, but is not as energy efficient as sodium.


Energy efficiency and Cost

The advantage of sodium is extreme energy efficiency. The disadvantages are poor light quality and slow warm up.

Mercury is much more energy efficient than halogen lamps, but less than sodiums. Mercury lamps are cheap and make good replacements for halogen where light quality is not critical. Linear fluorescent lights are competitors with mercury vapour.

Metal halide lamps are costly, but total cost is still cheaper than filament lamps such as halogen.

Discharge lamps (light bulbs) are typically relatively expensive to buy, but cheap and highly energy efficient to run, very long lived, and take minutes to warm up. Hence they can not be used on PIR detectors.

Discharge lights must be run from a suitable ballast, never connect a bulb direct to the mains. The ballast is built into the fitting.

Sodium lights are available from 18w upwards. An 18w lamp will light more than the average drive or yard.


Light types

Mercury

  • ice cold white light
  • Start time under a minute
  • Sometimes used as street or car park lights, but no longer as popular as they were.

Low pressure sodium (SOX)

  • pure yellow light
  • Start time in the region of 9 minutes
  • Exceptional energy efficiency
  • Often used to light motorways

High pressure sodium (SON)

  • Gives an orangey / golden / pink light.
  • Start time in the region of 2 minutes
  • Often used as town centre street lights.

Metal Halide

  • Good quality white light
  • Available in warm white 2700K and daylight 4000-5000K
  • Much better light quality than sodium & mercury lamps


Colour Perception

Under low pressure sodium light, since only one colour is produced, vision is monochrome, meaning no perception of an object's colour is possible. The viewer's perception of colour under these lights is due to light from other sources, memory, and the awreness that greens and blues will look dark while orange and yellow appear light.

High pressure sodium produces a wider spread of colours, but still an incomplete spectrum. Much more colour perception is possible.

Mercury discharge lamps produce white light, but the spectrum is not high CRI, and the relative brightness or intensity of different colours is not natural. Although this is the closest of the 3 to white light, it is a perceptually less pleasant light than high pressure sodium.

The combination of both mercury and high pressure sodium lamps gives a much better quality of light than either lamp alone. To be visually acceptable, the 2 lamps must be in the same place, hence this strategy is best suited to high positioned lamps lighting large areas.

Metal halide lamps give a true white light.

For more information on the spectra of these lamps and the implications for vision, see

http://www.lamptech.co.uk/Documents/SO2%20Spectral.htm


Luminous Efficacy

Typical figures, in lumens per watt. Filament lamp performance is included for comparison.

  • 180 Low pressure sodium
  • 110-150 High pressure sodium
  • 50-125 Metal halide
  • 35-60 Mercury discharge
  • 10-17 Filament


Fittings

Discharge lighting fittings typically look more industrial than domestic. 18w SOX fittings that look like bulkhead lights are available.

If you want something that looks better, the contents of an ugly fitting can be transplanted to a fitting of your choice.

  1. Buy the necessary luminaire for your chosen lamp
  2. Buy the light fitting you want to transplant the lamp into
  3. Transplant the bulb holder from luminaire to chosen fitting
  4. Connect the 2 with mains flex
  5. Mount the luminaire somewhere out of sight

Note:

  • Don't try to transplant metal halide, the starting voltages involved are much too high for non-purpose designed fittings and standard cable. Transplants are only for sodium and mercury.
  • The wattage rating of the light fitting should exceed that of the lamp being used by a good margin.
  • Don't use a fitting with a mirror finish reflector, this can cause lamp overheating. Light scattering reflectors are ok.
  • Do not attempt to operate discharge lamps from PIR sensors. Timers and dawn to dusk sensors are suitable.

For SON and mercury only:

  • Keep the wire between ballast and bulb short.
  • This wire will have to cope with high voltage starting pulses with some of these lamp types, so use a heavy mains flex.


Lighting Options

For domestic use a PIR operated 150w halogen lamp or better a few PIR operated CFLs are generally the best option. They give white light and are only on a small amount of the time. 500w of of halogen is much too bright for the majority of houses.

Mounting a halogen high up reduces glare. Mounting it within reach of a window makes relamping easy.

If a PIR light would spend a lot of time on in your situation, a low power sodium lamp on a timer and/or a dawn-dusk sensor may produce lower total energy use and less bulb changes. The price is lower light quality.

For large yards a good policy is often a combination of minimal low pressure sodium lighting plus halogen or CFL on PIRs.


See also

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lighting_efficiency

http://members.misty.com/don/light.html

Lighting Glossary