Relamping
In order to get the highest energy savings possible, you now have the option of relamping.
Relamping replaces fluorescent lights in a fixture with high
output LED lights. Click
here for 10 things you should know about LEDs. Click
here for reasons to upgrade to LED lighting.
Here is why you might consider relamping:
- Energy savings: LEDs can produce more light per watt than conventional high-intensity discharge lamps (metal halide and high pressure
sodium) and may therefore require less energy to produce the same amount of light. - Operational savings: LEDs can have long life spans (50,000+ hours), which reduces the frequency and cost of maintenance and replacement.
- Light quality: LEDs produce clean, bright light, which can improve safety and visual comfort while enhancing property values.
- Environmental: LEDs contain no mercury or lead.
- Durability: LEDs are very tolerant of temperature variations, vibrations, and on/off cycles, and are tightly sealed to prevent
interior accumulation of dirt, insects, and moisture.
You don't have to change fixtures, but you do
have to rewire them to bypass the ballasts. The ballasts can
remain in place, or they can be removed. It does not make a
difference so long as they are disconnected and the standard 120VAC
power is being delivered directly to the sockets. Simply install
the LED replacement lamps, orient them properly (unlike fluorescents
that broadcast light in all directions around the glass tube, LEDs are
installed on one side only and need to shine down), and turn on the
lights.
- Colored and White LEDs LEDs can be red, green, blue, or
amber. The color emitted by an LED is dependent upon the materials used to
produce it. For example, a red LED is made from the chemical elements of
aluminum, gallium, and arsenic. White LEDs are created by covering a blue LED
with a yellow phosphorous coating. A white LED can also be created by using a
red, blue, and green LED in close proximity to each other. At this time, there
is not an LED that can emit white light. Producing an LED that could emit white
light is the “holy grail” of LED light research.
- LED Brightness A single high power LED can produce about
80 lumens of light.
In comparison, a standard 60 watt incandescent light bulb produces about 900
lumens. Thus, a single high power LED is only about 1/11th as bright as a 60
watt incandescent light bulb. In order to produce adequate lighting, therefore,
an LED fixture must contain groups of LEDs. However, the future is bright, pun
intended, for LEDs. The lumen output of LEDs has almost doubled in the last two
years.
- LED Color Temperature Color
temperature is a measure of the color appearance of a light source which
helps describe the apparent “warmth” (reddish) or “coolness” (bluish) of that
light. Light sources below 3200 Kelvin (3200K) are considered to be “warm;”
while those above 4000K are considered to be “cool” light sources. For
comparison, a traditional household incandescent light bulb is 2800K. The color
temperature of a light source is not related to how hot the light source will
get or how much heat is given off by the light. White LEDs vary in color
temperature. Some white LEDs can be as “warm” in appearance as 2600K but most
white LEDs are slightly “cool” in appearance. This is because most white LEDs
are created by putting yellow phosphors over blue LEDs.
- LED Color Rendering Color
rendering index (CRI) is the ability for any light source to render colors
accurately. The CRI scale goes from 1 (low pressure sodium) to 100 (the sun).
A CRI of 75 is considered to be good, a CRI of 85 is considered to be very good,
a CRI of 95 is considered to be excellent, and, of course, a CRI of 100 is
considered perfect. LEDs in a warm white color temperature are currently
available with a CRI of 80.
- LED Efficacy As with all light sources, the efficacy of LEDs is
measured in lumens/watt, the amount of light produced by one unit of power.
Warm white LEDs produce between 25-44 lumens/watt while cool white LEDs are more
efficacious by producing 47-64 lumens/watt. In comparison, the typical
household incandescent light bulb creates 10-18 lumens/watt while compact
fluorescent light bulbs produce 35-60 lumens/watt.
- LED Drivers Fluorescent light bulbs require a ballast in order to
function. The ballast provides a starting voltage and limits the electrical current to the
light bulb. LEDs also require a similar electronic power source. For LEDs,
this electronic power source is usually called an LED driver. The LED driver
converts line power to the appropriate voltage (usually between two and four
volts DC for high-brightness LEDs) and current (typically 200-1000 milliamps or
mA), and may also include dimming and/or color correction controls. LED drivers
are generally about 85% efficient. Thus, the efficacy of LEDs should be reduced
by 15% to account for the LED driver.
- LED Heat Generation It is a myth that LEDs do not generate
heat. In fact, all light sources generate heat and LED lights are no
different. Thus, it is important that an LED fixture is well-designed with
“heat sinks” to adequately dissipate the heat that is created.
- LED Lifespan LEDs do not burn out like an incandescent
light bulb. Instead they get progressively dimmer over their lifetime until
they no longer emit enough light to be useful. An LED is generally considered
to be no longer useful when it is emitting only 70% of the original amount of
light the LED produced. The time that this takes is often referred to as the
“rated life” of
an LED. While some LEDs may have a rated life of 100,000 hours, this is usually
only under perfect laboratory conditions. Under real-world conditions most LEDs
operating in light fixtures might last up to 60,000 hours. The rated life of an
LED is often much less when the LED is operating in a light fixture as opposed
to the same LED operating outside of a light fixture due to the buildup of heat
inside the fixture. The typical LED inside of a typical light fixture may have
a rated life of 35,000 to 60,000 hours.
- OLED An OLED is an organic light emitting diode. It is an
LED that also contains carbon. OLEDs are generally manufactured as flexible
lightweight sheets. Today, OLEDs operate at significantly lower efficiency than
inorganic (crystalline) LEDs. OLEDs typically generate less light per area than
inorganic, solid state LEDs, which are usually designed for use as point-light
sources.
- Infrared and UV Radiation White LEDs do not emit infrared,
or heat, radiation like an incandescent light bulb. In addition, white LEDs do
not create ultraviolet radiation (UV rays) like a fluorescent
light bulb.
Although there has been a lot of media attention given to LEDs, there are
still far too many LEDs that are not well-designed. In short, the LED lighting
market is still maturing. Research continues to improve LED brightness,
efficacy, and the rated life of LEDs at a remarkable pace. However, in the
short-term be cautious when selecting an LED lighting fixture.
About the Author
Tom Farin is founder and President of Pegasus Associates
Lighting. Dr. Farin has been in the field of lighting for almost 20 years. He
has extensive training and experience in lighting, physics, mathematics and
education, acquired at the undergraduate level, in graduate school, and in the
field.
Why Upgrade to LEDs?
Light-emitting diodes (LEDs) offer significant cost-savings and other
advantages over conventional lamps commonly used in large outdoor and covered
areas, such as parking lots and garages:
- Energy Savings: LEDs produce more light per watt than
conventional, high-intensity discharge lamps (e.g., metal halide and
high-pressure sodium), so they require less energy to produce the same amount of
light.
- Operational Savings: LEDs have very long life spans
(50,000k hours), which reduce the frequency of costly maintenance and
replacement service.
- Light Quality: LEDs produce a very clean, bright light. The
superior color, uniformity, and visibility provided by LED lighting can improve
user safety and visual comfort while enhancing property values.
- Future Savings: LEDs are a rapidly evolving technology with
a record of efficiency, performance, and longevity advancements—along with
reduced manufacturing costs—every year. Amid increasing public emphasis on
energy efficiency, LED lighting can minimize a major component of a facility's
carbon footprint.
- Durability: Unlike conventional lighting, LEDs are very
tolerant of temperature variations, vibrations, and on/off cycles. LED fixtures
can also be tightly sealed, which prevents the interior accumulation of dirt,
insects, and moisture, and eliminates the need for time-consuming disassembly
and cleaning.
- Environmental: Unlike traditional lamps, LEDs contain no
mercury or lead.
Links:
Oncor LED program: http://oncor.com/electricity/teem/business/led.aspx
LED News:
http://www.elightbulbs.com/lighting-news/christmas-light-sets-19474874/Motown-blues-just-got-green
http://www.ledsmagazine.com/news/6/10/15
http://www.facilitiesnet.com/lighting/article/Lighting-Retrofits-Commercial-Buildings-Tax-Deduction-Provides-Incentivesa--11034
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091215/ap_on_re_us/us_snow_covered_stoplights
Photos:

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