On Apr 11, 2010, at 9:11 , Darryl Thayer wrote:

> Where are people getting 24 or 32 or 48 volt CFLs?   Are  there any LED now 
> suitable at these voltages? 


Others have commented on the general state of things DC - I have a slightly 
different perspective coming form a telecom background and tend to use DC for 
critical systems.  If you run your emergency lighting, control systems, and 
alarms on DC you get value for money in my book.  24V nominal is probably the 
best compromise, as 12V has an awful lot of voltage drop and 48V gets you into 
a different realm with the NEC (note that 24V nominal fits in the <30V category 
with battery charging and equalization and opens up a whole lot of options 
there.)

As to LED lighting, I concur that it is best suited to certain things - notably 
task lighting and low level (e.g. emergency egress) as well as low temperature 
(refrigerated cases, walk-in freezers, etc.) applications.  A wide range of 
commercially available architectural LED lighting is available that runs on 12V 
or 24V (if you read between the lines - look for drivers or PSUs in the product 
listings) and actually dominates certain segments like display case lighting 
and track lighting.  I'll be cruising LightFair with a sharp eye towards LEDs 
next month.








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