CreeRSW207
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I’m curious to why 50w HPS street lights are so common in New England but are so rare elsewhere. I also heard that 100w MV and 105w Incandescent was used primarily in New England, was there a reason that is? It also seems that 310w and 200w HPS seems native to The Western states.
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wide-lite 1000
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310 + 200w HPS are lumen equivalent for 1000w + 700w MV . 50w HPS is equivalent to 100w MV . I'd guess they just wanted low level lighting .
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joseph_125
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I guess they were intending on matching lumens rather than watts. Over here we retrofitted 400w MV clamshells to 200w HPS cobraheads in the 90s/
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CreeRSW207
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I guess they were intending on matching lumens rather than watts. Over here we retrofitted 400w MV clamshells to 200w HPS cobraheads in the 90s/
See here in New England, they replace 1000w MV with 400w HPS, 400w MV with 250w HPS, 250w MV with 150w HPS, 175w MV with 100w HPS, 100w MV with 50w HPS.
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HPS_250
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See here in New England, they replace 1000w MV with 400w HPS, 400w MV with 250w HPS, 250w MV with 150w HPS, 175w MV with 100w HPS, 100w MV with 50w HPS.
That all makes sense, as they are replacing MV lamps with their lumen equivalent HPS lamps. Did they ever use 200w or 70w HPS?
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I’ve always been interested in all kinds of lighting, mainly incandescent and HID, and especially all kinds of sodium lamps (HPS/LPS). I’ll tolerate LED but I’m not a fan of it. I’m not proud to say that my city has Devolved to LED.
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CreeRSW207
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That all makes sense, as they are replacing MV lamps with their lumen equivalent HPS lamps. Did they ever use 200w or 70w HPS?
Yes, NHEC barely uses 50w HPS, being all 70w for smaller roads. Eversource and Unitil sometimes use it. Some places in Maine have it too. No 200w HPS from what I’ve seen.
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wide-lite 1000
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Ohio is full of both 200w and 310w HPS.
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Cole D.
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I know in some places in the northeast they even used 35W HPS.
In my collection I have a 50 W HPS NEMA head. I think it would be nice for home use, because of lower energy costs.
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Collect vintage incandescent and fluorescent fixtures. Also like HID lighting and streetlights.
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dor123
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Perhaps New England streetlighting are similar to the streetlighting in the EU. In Europe, when they moved from mercury to HPS, they used lower wattage HPS to save energy while retaining the same amount of light. In North America and Israel on the other hand, the wattage rating remained the same when moved from MV to HPS, as to increase the light output without energy saving, and they used high wattage lamps.
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I"m don't speak English well, and rely on online translating to write in this site. Please forgive me if my choice of my words looks like offensive, while that isn't my intention.
I only working with the international date format (dd.mm.yyyy).
I lives in Israel, which is a 220-240V, 50hz country.
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CreeRSW207
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Perhaps New England streetlighting are similar to the streetlighting in the EU. In Europe, when they moved from mercury to HPS, they used lower wattage HPS to save energy while retaining the same amount of light. In North America and Israel on the other hand, the wattage rating remained the same when moved from MV to HPS, as to increase the light output without energy saving, and they used high wattage lamps.
Perhaps, I wonder if this goes back to the incandescent days if it was only New England that had 105w lights.
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CreeRSW207
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I know in some places in the northeast they even used 35W HPS.
In my collection I have a 50 W HPS NEMA head. I think it would be nice for home use, because of lower energy costs.
Yes, Canton MA has some.
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LightsoftheWest
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Washington is full of 250W, 310W, and 400W HPS. 50W and 150W is uncommon here.
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CreeRSW207
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Washington is full of 250W, 310W, and 400W HPS. 50W and 150W is uncommon here.
Really? I never knew how rare 150w HPS was!
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sox35
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Plenty of them over here. Not so many 175W mercs though.
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alexd120
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I have few 150w hps bulbs and a 150w hps ballast.
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Rapid start ,preheat metal halide mercury vapor and high pressure sodium for life.
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