Considering a lighting retrofit for a tough space? LEDs may fit the bill
If you have a Commercial
led lighting, meeting space or supermarket in your portfolio, you’re probably
aware of the cost and complexity of high bay lighting applications. Finding the
right fit for these spaces is a challenge, but the long life and low
maintenance needs of Commercial
led lighting may be
a good match for your facility. Ensure a successful LED retrofit with these
tips.
1) Specify the same base
configuration
Before you start weighing any
other product specifications, make sure you’re only looking at lamps with the
same base (such as metal halide base E39 or incandescent base E26 medium), as
well as the same aesthetic effect, the Department of Energy recommends. This
will ensure that your new Commercial
led lighting produce roughly the same amount of light while consuming less energy.
2) Consider control strategies
Commercial
led lighting dim
easily and work well with lighting control systems, which can be very useful in
tricky lighting situations where a couple of light switches won’t cut it.
Dillon Gymnasium, which houses NCAA wrestling and volleyball matches at
Princeton University and also serves as a base for the campus recreation
program, received a 111-fixture lighting retrofit with a sophisticated control
system in 2012.
“We ended up working with the
manufacturer to create a custom interface,” notes William Evans, Electrical
Engineer for Princeton University. “We initially reduced energy consumption
from 256W down to 180W for each fixture, but once we installed the Commercial
led lighting control system, we were able to reduce it again by 80% during
recreational times due to the occupancy sensors we employed throughout the
gym.”
3) Know your usage patterns
Understand where and how each
space uses lighting to find additional opportunities for your Commercial
led lighting to save money. One project, a retrofit at a 1 million-square-foot
Ace Hardware distribution facility in Rocklin, CA, was projected to save
roughly 50% on energy just from upgrading to LED from metal halide. The owner
hoped to save an additional 50% on the Commercial
led lighting control system for a total savings of 75% but needed to fine-tune
the control strategies first.
The lighting control system
was eventually configured to enable several strategies. The facility started
with task tuning, then progressed to occupancy control with coarse zoning and
daylight compensation. Data from the occupancy sensors in each luminaire was
analyzed Commercial
led lighting and showed the team that not all of the stock areas were accessed
with the same frequency, which could facilitate additional savings. The owners
revised their Commercial
led lighting to include fine zones, some of which only included one fixture.
The end result: energy savings averaging 81% over the 1,500 T5 fluorescent and
100 metal halide fixtures previously installed in the facility.

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