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M-250R2 and a Black Transformer
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here's the streetview
Yep! A black transformer! That M-250R2 is an early incarnation as well. It has a metallic NEMA tag, so that tells me this was probably one of the earliest M-250R2s from either 1985 or 1986. Route 37 starts to the left and there's a driveway to a house on the right. Kinda cool how they installed traffic signals facing the driveway.
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[url= enter http address here ] type decscription here [/url]
Maybe since you don't have much space at your house to store your collection maybe you could store some at his place for safekeeping?
Providence is using 139W Cree LEDs IIRC. For 250W and 400W HPS. They're decently bright. Not sure of the wattage of the side street lights (50 and 100W HPS) but they're also Cree and are actually really bright. A lot of residents in Providence complained about the LEDs being too bright, but the plan in Prov is to dim the lights down with the wireless controls (same as RIDOT) once the whole city is LED, which I think is about now. Providence's LEDs are the same bluish white color as RIDOT's lights.
Cranston has those tall green DTL PCs on their AEL Autobahns (the Autobahns with the round area for the LEDs and the option for the drop lens, which Cranston didn't use). I don't think the DTL PCs are dimmable, which is weird since that PRISM organization requires the use of "solid state LED) lighting technology with dimming controls". I'm happy Cranston is using pretty much "normal" photocells though. Those hi-tech wireless PCs creep me out a bit. Too much technology packed into something that once was so innocent lol. Those CIMCON PCs have GPS tracking in them! The idea is that they can know where street lights are when they need to be serviced but something tells me it's also to prevent theft to some small degree lol. Bottom line, if you steal an LED from Providence or RIDOT, pull out the PC and leave it on-site lol. Since even when power is disconnected, the PCs have battery backup to keep communication with the system!
The CIMCON wireless nodes that RIDOT and Providence are using come on wicked late into the evening. Some come on around 4:45 this time of year but most don't come on until after 5PM, when it's nearly black out. Haven't seen the Cranston LEDs at dusk yet to see how early/late they come on. The PCs are tall and green. I THINK they're DTL because they're AEL fixtures so it only makes sense that they'd order the PCs with the fixtures. But I guess they could be Ripley.
BTW, did you know Ripley's ownership merged with Sun-Tech? Ryan got a couple letters in the mail (I guess since he's ordered form Ripley in the past) but I haven't see anything on either website making it public. I hope it doesn't mean they're going to "crappify" Ripley's photocells, as they make some of the most decent PCs today.
I knew they had fixed the lights because about 15 of the lights in that interchange are dayburners and they were back one day, same day I noticed the new shiny light gray transformer, which is bigger than the black one and lacks the cooling fins. So the dayburners got a month's vacation. About half the interchange is still dark though. They must feed the lighting from multiple sources. I've been going around on streetview looking for old transformers that connect to "nothing" on neighboring streets. I've found a few. Notice the conduit going down this pole. The transformer looks small though.
And I found this transformer that only feeds that light on the pole and a feed running underground, I assume to the freeway lighting. (...) idea here. There seems to be a feed at each corner of the interchange. A really mess to troubleshoot I'm sure. And even odder, the lights are all 120V, for freeway lighting! They were 240V in the MV days but NECo used all 120V HPS. Seems like a very inefficient method for freeway lighting. They must use some heavy-gauge underground cable!