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GE "VR" series acorn fixture in Fullerton, CA
There are dozens of these in this neighborhood in Fullerton, CA. Similar to a gumball, but with more of a "low bay" design, with a deep reflector and shallow drop lens. They are on series circuits, originally incandescent, now HPS with plug in series ballasts. They can be changed back to an incandescent simply by unplugging the ballast and plugging in a plain mogul socket designed for series circuits. I know of a few remaining as incandescent in Pasadena, CA in the same area with the radial waves. Also, in the suburbs of Detroit, DTE Energy still has some of these scattered here and there on residential streets, converted to mercury vapor.
Keywords: American_Streetlights

GE "VR" series acorn fixture in Fullerton, CA

There are dozens of these in this neighborhood in Fullerton, CA. Similar to a gumball, but with more of a "low bay" design, with a deep reflector and shallow drop lens. They are on series circuits, originally incandescent, now HPS with plug in series ballasts. They can be changed back to an incandescent simply by unplugging the ballast and plugging in a plain mogul socket designed for series circuits. I know of a few remaining as incandescent in Pasadena, CA in the same area with the radial waves. Also, in the suburbs of Detroit, DTE Energy still has some of these scattered here and there on residential streets, converted to mercury vapor.

image~95.jpg image~130.jpg image~158.jpg image~44.jpeg 20170630_200019.jpg
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Filename:image~158.jpg
Album name:Silverliner14B / southern california edison street lights (includes city owned lts)
Keywords:American_Streetlights
Filesize:155 KiB
Date added:Feb 16, 2014
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URL:http://www.galleryoflights.org/mb/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=17018
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Comment 1 to 4 of 4
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streetlight98   [Feb 16, 2014 at 08:44 PM]
Nice! I guess they didn't have to think too hard when they invented the SkyGuard reflector for the 201SA Laughing nice looking light! I bet these are less glarey than a traditional gumball light.
Silverliner14B   [Feb 16, 2014 at 09:12 PM]
I've seen these at night, they were a little glary but better light distribution than the traditional gumballs. Prolly the reason for the glare is because the plug in HPS ballasts take more room, bringing the lamp down near the refractor, which is designed to redirect light. The arc tubes are visible at night in all the traditional gumballs sticking out down in the area of the refractor, but they are less glary because the glass doesn't redirect light as much.
joe_347V   [Feb 17, 2014 at 06:24 AM]
Nice! I wonder if the original incandescent lamps were less glary than the HPS lamps.
streetlight98   [Feb 17, 2014 at 02:20 PM]
Probably since the lower the lamp is in the reflector the glarier it is, though the lower it is the longer distance the lamp will cover.

Comment 1 to 4 of 4
Page: 1