Gallery of Lights


Home Login
Album list Last uploads Last comments Most viewed Top rated My Favorites Search
Home > User galleries > ggillis > Street and Security Lighting
Cooper Lighting Vanguard 400 Watt Mercury Vapor
Here's my Cooper Lighting Vanguard fixture.  I had to do some repairs to the refractor/reflector because it was ready to break off.  It has a 400 watt General Electric coated mercury vapor bulb in it.
Keywords: American_Streetlights

Cooper Lighting Vanguard 400 Watt Mercury Vapor

Here's my Cooper Lighting Vanguard fixture. I had to do some repairs to the refractor/reflector because it was ready to break off. It has a 400 watt General Electric coated mercury vapor bulb in it.

IMG_6677_(1).JPG IMG_6606.JPG IMG_6592.JPG IMG_6595.JPG IMG_6500.JPG
File information
Filename:IMG_6592.JPG
Album name:ggillis / Street and Security Lighting
Keywords:American_Streetlights
Company and Date Manufactured:Cooper Lighting (March, 2001)
Model Number:VAN40VW255LV5
Wattage:400W (455W total)
Lamp Type:Mercury Vapor
Filesize:725 KiB
Date added:Apr 10, 2015
Dimensions:2816 x 2112 pixels
Displayed:107 times
Color Space:sRGB
DateTime Original:2015:04:09 17:52:42
Exposure Bias:0 EV
Exposure Mode:0
Exposure Time:1/125 sec
FNumber:f/3.5
Flash:Unknown: 80
Focal length:12.9 mm
Make:Canon
Max Aperture:f/3.5
Model:Canon PowerShot S3 IS
URL:http://www.galleryoflights.org/mb/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=19130
Favorites:Add to Favorites

Comment 1 to 6 of 6
Page: 1

streetlight98   [Apr 10, 2015 at 10:30 PM]
Nice! If you were ever to stick this outside I would apply some silicone caulking around the screws though since it looks like they're sticking out on top. Cooper's Vanguard hasn't changed much from the original Westinghouse design. Some small stuff (I think the Westie ones had the refractor attached to the outside of the reflector) but still the same essential design. I think same goes for the Cooper NEMA head, though the last edition of the Westinghouse RMA was pretty chintzy IMO. I have a 1968 100W MV RMA and it's much nicer. Cooper still used the Westie style PC socket and other small components in their fixtures too, which is cool. Comes in handy when repairing old Westie lights, though one-by-one Cooper drops the original Westie parts.
lite_lover   [Apr 11, 2015 at 02:24 AM]
Looks Nice,is that an American Electric or Cooper refractor?
ggillis   [Apr 11, 2015 at 02:29 PM]
I think Crouse-Hinds owned the Vanguard for a period of time between Cooper lighting and Westinghouse. This one was probably one of the first years that cooper lighting manufactured them. The lens on this one was broken originally, so I went to H&R (one of the local electrical distributers) and ordered a new lens in. They had given me a lens/reflector for a "cheaper" Regent NEMA fixture, so I "pealed" the reflector off the lens lol.
streetlight98   [Apr 11, 2015 at 03:31 PM]
Crouse-Hinds was already owned by Cooper Industries when Westinghouse went under in 19. Cooper bought out Westie, not Crouse-Hinds. Crouse-Hinds was Cooper's name for their street light division until the late 1990s or early 2000s, when the Streetworks name was introduced. But yeah, Crouse-Hinds was already owned by Cooper at the time Westinghouse was bought out. Over time the Cooper name has grown bigger and bigger but now that Eaton owns Cooper, the Cooper name is getting less prominent. Eaton bought Cooper Industries on November 30, 2012.
ggillis   [Apr 12, 2015 at 07:36 PM]
Ah, ok, I always thought Crouse Hinds were on their own until something like 2001 or 2002
streetlight98   [Apr 12, 2015 at 11:21 PM]
Yep Crouse-Hinds was acquired by Cooper Industries in 1981, just one year before Cooper bought Westinghouse. Around 2001 or so Cooper switched their street light division from Crouse-Hinds Lighting to Streetworks and made Crouse-Hinds simply for hazardeous/marine lighting.

Comment 1 to 6 of 6
Page: 1