Gallery of Lights


Home Login
Album list Last uploads Last comments Most viewed Top rated My Favorites Search
Home > User galleries > Silverliner14B > southern california edison street lights (includes city owned lts)
Night scene of Washington Blvd in Culver City, CA
All merc for miles! They are 6.6 amp series wired.

Night scene of Washington Blvd in Culver City, CA

All merc for miles! They are 6.6 amp series wired.

P1290016.JPG betweenpoles.jpg culvercitymercsnite.JPG DSC01482.JPG 022715_001.JPG
File information
Filename:culvercitymercsnite.JPG
Album name:Silverliner14B / southern california edison street lights (includes city owned lts)
Rating (2 votes):33333
Company and Date Manufactured:GE, Westinghouse, Joslyn, etc.
Model Number:M-400, M-400 split door, M-400R2, Form 400, OV-20, Joslyn spacehsips and clamshells, etc
Wattage:400w
Lamp Type:Mercury Vapor
Filesize:66 KiB
Date added:Jan 01, 2010
Dimensions:1000 x 750 pixels
Displayed:254 times
Color Space:sRGB
Contrast:2
DateTime Original:0000:00:00 00:00:00
Exposure Bias:-1.7 EV
Exposure Mode:1
Exposure Program:Program Creative
Exposure Time:1 sec
FNumber:f/2.8
Flash:No Flash
Focal length:5.9 mm
ISO:64
Light Source:Unknown: 0
Make:Olympus Optical Co.,ltd
Max Aperture:f/2.8
Model:C730UZ
URL:http://www.galleryoflights.org/mb/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=184
Favorites:Add to Favorites

Comment 1 to 9 of 9
Page: 1

Medved   [Jan 01, 2010 at 12:16 PM]
400W mercs run on 3.25A, what would be the chain supply current (and not 6.6A; I guess they do not use special lamps)
Silverliner14B   [Jan 01, 2010 at 03:18 PM]
I thought 400w mercury lamps operate at 3.2A? Anyway, they actually operate on series isolation ballasts that convert 6.6A into the voltage/current required by the lamps. Due to the high voltage of the series circuits, the isolation ballasts are remote from the fixtures in the pole transformer bases.
Medved   [Jan 01, 2010 at 05:43 PM]
@Silverliner: You are correct, i messed it up somehow, is is corrected now...
But what is the advantage of series connection, if each lantern has to have it's own ballast? Why not to use e.g. 244V parallel supply and serial reactor ballast instead (it would be lighter, more reliable and safer to relamp, i guess)?
NiMo   [Jan 01, 2010 at 06:01 PM]
@ silverliner, Series ballasts are not always remote mounted. When we had series MV lighting here in Buffalo, the Westinghouse, Line Materials, and GE M-400 and M-400A1 replacement luminaires had the transformers fixture mounted. In fact, the M-400A luminaires with the series ballasts were housing mounted.
Mercury Man   [Jan 02, 2010 at 03:27 AM]
What a beautiful sight to see all those mercs steadfastly lighting the roadway! I love driving through an area lit by mercs...it reminds me of the 70s, when many mercs were still in service.
GullWhiz   [Jan 02, 2010 at 03:35 AM]
Dave, is this the area where you showed me in Google Maps with those OV-20s?
Silverliner14B   [Jan 02, 2010 at 05:06 AM]
@Medved, it seems there was a big infrastructure for series systems here in Southern California, most of the remaining incandescent and mercury lights are series.

@NiMo, there are some cobraheads with integral series isolation ballasts on wooden utility poles in LA. I was just referring to underground wiring and freestanding metal light poles, I should have been a little clearer in my description.

@GullWhiz, no this is a different area.
GullWhiz   [Jan 02, 2010 at 06:12 AM]
Our HPS and some MV and incandescent lighting in Frederick MD are in series!
mercuryvaporrocks   [Jul 25, 2010 at 05:29 PM]
There's a post office in New Kensington that has series wired mercury vapor lights.

Comment 1 to 9 of 9
Page: 1