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Re: Please JC don't get any bright ideas...
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Light Emitting Diodes are inherently harsh by their very nature & will never replace incandescent point source illumination, as they cannot be made to act the same. [but they can be made to Emulate incandescent at a higher cost]

White LED is normally made w/ 'blue dice' that are coated by phosphors ......just like Fluorescent tubes.

The EARLY PRISON LIGHTING & RETINA BURN fixtures usually combine poor source Shielding with limited phosphor coating [so that more lumens/watt can be claimed in the sales pitch] & crappy Colour Rendering.

Since most design professionals incorporate these fixtures into their designs without regard for Elegant Lighting Design Principles/Solutions the results are normally very Jarring to our visual sensibility standards,,,,,particularly at night when the contrast ratios are at their peak.

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Frank_M wrote:
Brewster, if you?re convinced LEDs are inferior for horticulture, I wouldn?t be so quick to call people overly sensitive if they find the color temperature and spectral distribution of some LED lights extremely unpleasant and perhaps even unhealthy. We don?t make use of photosynthesis, but we do have physiological and psychological responses to all kinds of stimuli, including the quantity and quality of light we receive. We are predisposed to having some of those reactions in great part because of evolution, so there?s only so much ?getting used to it? that we can do.

LED lighting technology has improved greatly over the past several years, but fixtures that produce high quality light tend to be very expensive. For outdoor lighting, we usually want fixtures that produce the most amount of light for the lowest installed and operating costs. Unfortunately, cheaper, brighter, and more efficient LED lights tend to produce very cold light with poor color rendering ability, which tend to look and feel very unnatural when they?re the only source of light.

Posted on: 2015/10/21 15:23
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Re: Please JC don't get any bright ideas...
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It's complicated & hard to find that combination of Pro-Grower/Pro-Lighting individual who fully understands PAR, strain differentials & the optimal conditions to yield stellar results.
Plus it is expensive to obtain the proper emitters & equipment.

Majority of the 'LED Gro-light' deals offered online are toys for DIY people to waste their money on.

Posted on: 2015/10/21 15:00
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Re: Please JC don't get any bright ideas...
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Brewster, if you?re convinced LEDs are inferior for horticulture, I wouldn?t be so quick to call people overly sensitive if they find the color temperature and spectral distribution of some LED lights extremely unpleasant and perhaps even unhealthy. We don?t make use of photosynthesis, but we do have physiological and psychological responses to all kinds of stimuli, including the quantity and quality of light we receive. We are predisposed to having some of those reactions in great part because of evolution, so there?s only so much ?getting used to it? that we can do.

LED lighting technology has improved greatly over the past several years, but fixtures that produce high quality light tend to be very expensive. For outdoor lighting, we usually want fixtures that produce the most amount of light for the lowest installed and operating costs. Unfortunately, cheaper, brighter, and more efficient LED lights tend to produce very cold light with poor color rendering ability, which tend to look and feel very unnatural when they?re the only source of light.

Posted on: 2015/10/21 14:53
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Re: Please JC don't get any bright ideas...
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Quote:

light12v wrote:
If one knows how to properly configure/utilize LED grow-lights, they can bury HID............
& save alot of $$$ in utility costs!!


My source is well connected in the N CA grow community and says it was tried by a pro and was a failure.

Posted on: 2015/10/20 23:57
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Re: Please JC don't get any bright ideas...
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If one knows how to properly configure/utilize LED grow-lights, they can bury HID............
& save alot of $$$ in utility costs!!

Posted on: 2015/10/20 23:05
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Re: Please JC don't get any bright ideas...
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there is a parking lot on my block and they switched to these lights a few years ago and it looked like something our of a sci fi movie.

The neighbors all complained as the light was so bright they couldn't sleep even with blinds. To their credit the management company figured out how to tone them down.

Posted on: 2015/10/19 21:05
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Re: Please JC don't get any bright ideas...
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Quote:

brewster wrote:
This writer is horrified by anything over 4k, but DAYLIGHT is 5500k!


Well, aesthetically, that's a fair point.

But colors similar to daylight are the ones that keep us awake; that's why we're supposed to avoid them at night, no?

Posted on: 2015/10/19 19:05
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Re: Please JC don't get any bright ideas...
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Quote:

brewster wrote:

There's some neighborhoods in Maplewood that have gas lights, the kind with mantles. I was wondering whether they're electric start, have pilots or are just on all day.


Maplewood doesn't have gas lights. South Orange does.

Posted on: 2015/10/19 14:37
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Re: Please JC don't get any bright ideas...
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Quote:

brewster wrote:
Quote:

MDM wrote:
Maybe we should just go back to gas streetlights?

LED technology has improved to the point where a majority of the new commercial construction is using them (NJ offers incentives for such).


There's some neighborhoods in Maplewood that have gas lights, the kind with mantles. I was wondering whether they're electric start, have pilots or are just on all day.

As an aside, you may be interested to know a reliable source told me LED grow lamps have been a failure in the, um, pharmaceutical industry. HID's still rule.


Maplewood, South Orange, and Glen Ridge have gas lamps on every street. They're on all day.

http://www.nj.com/business/index.ssf/ ... e_gas_lamp_tenders_p.html

Posted on: 2015/10/19 2:35
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Re: Please JC don't get any bright ideas...
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Quote:

brewster wrote:

As an aside, you may be interested to know a reliable source told me LED grow lamps have been a failure in the, um, pharmaceutical industry. HID's still rule.


I am using CFLs and high output T-5 lamps for my seed beds. Might experiment with some LEDs when I try getting my strawberry plants to bloom in the basement this winter.

Posted on: 2015/10/19 0:35
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Re: Please JC don't get any bright ideas...
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Quote:

MDM wrote:
Maybe we should just go back to gas streetlights?

LED technology has improved to the point where a majority of the new commercial construction is using them (NJ offers incentives for such).


There's some neighborhoods in Maplewood that have gas lights, the kind with mantles. I was wondering whether they're electric start, have pilots or are just on all day.

As an aside, you may be interested to know a reliable source told me LED grow lamps have been a failure in the, um, pharmaceutical industry. HID's still rule.

Posted on: 2015/10/18 23:53
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Re: Please JC don't get any bright ideas...
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Maybe we should just go back to gas streetlights?

LED technology has improved to the point where a majority of the new commercial construction is using them (NJ offers incentives for such).

Posted on: 2015/10/18 22:50
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Re: Please JC don't get any bright ideas...
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People gotta lighten up and not be so sensitive. Imagine if flourescent had been invented before incandescent, and that was what everyone as used to! The tyranny of 2700k would never have taken place. This writer is horrified by anything over 4k, but DAYLIGHT is 5500k! And people were horrified by those yellow sodium bulbs when they became standard and replaced tungsten bulbs.

My MIL obsessively recycles and composts but won't use CF bulbs. She's a professional princess who finds a pea in every room or car she steps into, and if it's not the color temp, it's the room temp. Or the noise, or the smell or.....

Posted on: 2015/10/18 22:41
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Please JC don't get any bright ideas...
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http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/18/opi ... oody-urban-glow.html?_r=0

AT 13, I covered multiple lamps in my bedroom with variously colored theatrical gels, the better to create a luminary ambience to suit my mood. When I felt sunny, I chose the yellow; when glum, the blue. And hey, I was a teenager. The blue got a lot of use.

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In my repellently contented middle age, I don?t seek blue light. Like most sane people, I spurn restaurants whose lighting glares. I recoil from mirrors under fluorescent tubes. I switch on an overhead only to track down a water bug while wielding a flip-flop. Yet each evening from March onward, in the Brooklyn neighborhood where I live part of the year, it seems as if the overhead is always on.

Along with other parts of South Brooklyn, Windsor Terrace is an early recipient of the Department of Transportation?s new light-emitting diode streetlights. New Yorkers who have not yet been introduced to these lights: We are living in your future.

Our new street ?lamps? ? too cozy a word for the icy arrays now screaming through our windows ? are meant to be installed across all five boroughs by 2017. Indeed, any resident of an American municipality that has money problems (and what city doesn?t?) should take heed.

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In interviews with the media, my fellow experimental subjects have compared the nighttime environment under the new streetlights to a film set, a prison yard, ?a strip mall in outer space? and ?the mother ship coming in for a landing? in ?Close Encounters of the Third Kind.? Although going half-blind at 58, I can read by the beam that the new lamp blasts into our front room without tapping our own Con Ed service. Once the LEDs went in, our next-door neighbor began walking her dog at night in sunglasses.

Medical research has firmly established that blue-spectrum LED light can disrupt sleep patterns. This is the same illumination that radiates in far smaller doses from smartphone and computer screens, to which we?re advised to avoid exposure for at least an hour before bed, because it can suppress the production of melatonin. The tribute to ?the city that never sleeps? was meant to celebrate a vibrant cultural night life ? not a town of hollow-eyed ?Walking Dead? insomniacs.

While the same light has also been associated with increased risk of breast cancer and mood disorders, in all honesty my biggest beef with LEDs has nothing to do with health issues. These lights are ugly. They?re invasive. They?re depressing. New York deserves better.

Yet the substitution of LEDs for traditional high-pressure sodium bulbs, whose familiar tangerine glow would have suited my rare upbeat humor at 13, is proving irresistible to many cities because of the economic benefits. Chicago, Seattle, Boston, Philadelphia, Detroit and Los Angeles have all undertaken mass retrofits. Although three to four times more expensive, the new bulbs are supposed to last two to four times longer than their predecessors, reducing energy costs between 30 and 70 percent.

Thus the advance of this technology has an inexorable quality. Rather than stand in the way and get mowed down, we urban aesthetes are probably better off focusing on the fact that all LEDs are not created equal.

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Color temperature is measured in Kelvin units. Lower temperatures are warm, in the yellow range; higher temperatures are cool, in the blue. Sodium bulbs are around 2,200 Kelvin ? light in which one might fall in love. The brutal LED outside our house is 4,000 ? light more conducive to dismembering a corpse.

New York?s D.O.T. has also opted for lights that penetrate lower-floor residential properties like ours with rude, invasive lateral glare. Though the D.O.T. claims to have adjusted the angles slightly in disgruntled neighborhoods, our street?s lights appear untouched.

But LEDs come in warmer spectra. Even fiscally and environmentally conscientious California has compromised on this point. Berkeley, Oakland and San Francisco have all opted for yellow-rich LEDs. These cities have willingly made the modest 10-15 percent sacrifice in efficiency for an ambience that more closely embodies what Germans call Gem?tlichkeit and Danes call hygge: an atmosphere of hospitality, homeyness, intimacy and well-being.

Other municipalities have worked successfully with citizens to reconcile energy savings with a more pleasing nocturnal landscape. In Berlin, in response to outcry over a similar conversion, engineers designed LEDs that imitate the qualities of gaslight. After enough complaints, Davis, Calif., sponsored a variety-pack test street, from which residents ultimately selected not only a lower color temperature fixture, but one with a lower wattage, thus saving the city yet more money.

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RECENT COMMENTS

Steve 3 hours ago
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For New York, it may not be too late to marry practicality and aesthetics. Specifications could still be revised ? though LEDs may last up to 20 years, and once they?re installed citywide it will be too late. So even if you don?t live in a south Brooklyn neighborhood, call 311 to support:

? Limiting, per a stalled City Council bill, streetlights to no more than 3,000 Kelvin (think an incandescent ?soft white?);

? Installing some kind of shade or lens cover to reduce lateral glare;

? Exploring ways of dimming lighting in residential neighborhoods;


? Suspending further installation until specifications are refined.

My husband claims that everyone will eventually ?get used to? these grisly blue-spectrum diodes, and he?s probably right. But then, we?ve ?gotten used to? garish big box stores and the foreshortening blight of fast-food franchises that make so many American cities look fungibly frightful. Parents ?get used to? a clutter of kitschy plastic toys. Just because one is capable of becoming dully inured to something doesn?t make it desirable.

As currently conceived, the D.O.T.?s streetlight plan amounts to mass civic vandalism. If my focus on aesthetics makes this issue sound trivial, the sensory experience of daily life is not a frivolous matter. Even in junior high school, I understood that lighting isn?t only about what you see, but how you feel.

Lionel Shriver is a novelist whose most recent book is ?Big Brother.?

Posted on: 2015/10/18 22:19
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