Yeah 50W HPS seems to be less popular than 70W HPS overall, though 50W HPS is all over the place in RI and southeastern MA. Here, 100W MV was replaced with 50 (or 70) watt HPS, 175W MV was replaced with 100W HPS, 400W MV was replaced with 250W HPS, and 1000W MV was replaced with 400W HPS. 250W and 700W MV were never used here so consequently 150 and 310W HPS don't exist here. There actually ARE a few 150W HPS lights that were installed in the 80s as new original street lights (they weren't used to replace another light) but those fixtures are not maintained anymore since there's so few of them. So they slap up a 100W HPS (or once in a while, a 250W HPS) in its place. Not sure why there was never 250W MV here, since there are places where I think something between 100W HPS and 250W HPS would be appropriate. I don't know the wattages for any of the incandescents except for the 105W incandescents, which were replaced by 100W MV in the 60s (I know, a lot of energy savings, right? A lot more light too) so a lot of the areas with 105W incandescents kept them until the 1990s changeout where 50W HPS lights went up. I guess the municipalities couldn't justify switching to MV just to save a few watts.
Were they big 400W silverliners (OV-25) or smaller 100/175/250W ones (OV-15)? What about the seven GEs?
I currently have eight GEs, four Westinghouses, and two Coopers. My oldest street light is either my Westinghouse OV-25 remote ballast or my Westinghouse OV-10IB clamshell light. Both are from the early 60s. I think the OV-25 might be a little earlier though. My newest light is my 1997 GE M-400A2. It was originally 400W HPS with a 277V ballast but the shopping plaza it was in converted all the lights (400W HPS, 250W HPS, 1000W MV, and 400W MH) to 320W PSMH around 12 years go. Then a couple of years ago they replaced the lights (whole poles and everything) with LED shoebox lights. I missed out on some M-1000s and a Hubbell RLG but I was able to score two of the M-400A2s, one I kept and the other I gave to another collector. Fortunately the PSMH ballasts were all multi-tap so I could keep it PSMH. A PSMH cobrahead is pretty cool even though it's not OEM. I gave it a new coat of paint and added a photocell socket since it didn't have one. It's a big light and uses quite a bit of juice so it stays outside in the shed. Not the ideal way to display the collection but it'll have to do until I can get my own place with lots of room for all my lighting "junk".
275W HPS? Wow that's something new to me! I have no idea when the first HPS fixtures popped up here. the RI department of transportation had installed a bunch of poles on Interstate 95 with 400W HPS lights of all various makes and models back in the early-mid 80s. However when they went HPS in the 90s like the electric company, they replaced the already-HPS lights on those poles with 400W HPS M-400R2s. No logic at all behind that. I assume it was just so that the lights would all match? But who else would notice but us enthusiasts? Until the 80s all the RIDOT lights were on short poles and were 400W MV (with 250W HPS spot replacements). When they went all-HPS in the 90s they kept the already-existing 250W HPS lights, since by the 90s they already had some new installations of HPS lights (brand new poles and all) with contactor cabinets controlling them.
Interestingly enough, the freeway lighting around here always used individual photocells on each light. It wasn't until the 80s that RIDOT began using contactors to control the freeway lighting. Now it's all they use for new installations. There are still plenty of PC-controlled lights though. Some of the PC-controlled systems were retrofitted with a contactor cabinet and the PCs were swapped out for tall white Intermatic shorting caps but most still use the PCs. The only lights that were always contactor-controlled here were on major bridges such as
the Newport Bridge. If you look on the left, you'll see two hacked-down poles. Way back when, there were twice as many poles. They removed every-other pole. I'm thinking there were traffic signs on those poles so they kept them up. If you look closely, half-way between each pole is a platform for a pole that doesn't exist.
The mast arms attached to the two columns were actually welded into the structure, so those were simply left headless. Those lights in the streetview are 250W MH Cooper OVYs that were installed in the early 90s. This is the only installation of MH cobraheads in RI on a public road/freeway.
The poles not on the actual bridges got replaced with 250W HPS GE M-250R2s. As you can see, they still got rid of every-other poles even off the bridge.
And check this out: they missed two of the M-400s when they went HPS/MH in the 90s! This is at the Jamestown end of the bridge, where the freeway lighting is owned and maintained by the DOT. However, they replaced all the bridge lights with LEDs recently and this time this did not forget about these two.
at the Newport end of the bridge, the freeway lighting is actually owned and maintained by the electric company. The lights are leased to the state like wood pole lights are leased to the city/town. Newport Electric was the electric company (now it's NGrid) and Newport Electric kept installing brand new MVs until NGrid bought them out in ~2000. Since then NGrid has spot-replaced with HPS. Turn this shot left about 120 degrees and you'll see a nice incandescent radial wave with a remote PC socket.