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SOX 90W

  • Price:

    Negotiable

  • minimum:

  • Total supply:

  • Delivery term:

    The date of payment from buyers deliver within days

  • seat:

    Zhejiang

  • Validity to:

    Long-term effective

  • Last update:

    2020-01-09 19:46

  • Browse the number:

    283

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Company Profile
Lanxi Delphi Lighting Co., Ltd.
By certification [File Integrity]
Contact:

derfseo(Mr.)  

Email:

Telephone:

Phone:

Area:

Zhejiang

Address:

No.38 Chuangye Road, Lanxi Economic Development Zone, Lanxi, Zhejiang, China

Website:

http://www.dephilux.com/ http://derfseo.zqjbyjx.com/

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Product Details

Benefits

● High luminous efficacy leads to low energy consumption


Features

● Uniform sodium distribution in the discharge tube by means of dimples for a more stable discharge, higher efficacy and better lumen maintenance and lamp life.

● Monochromatic yellow color with non-existent color rendering.


Application 

● Road lighting, railway marshalling yards and crossings, airports, harbours and docks, quarries, foundries and rolling mills.

● Security and orientation lighting.


Versions

SOX


Dimentional Drawing

Product

D (Max)

C (Max)

SOX 35W BY22d

53 mm

311 mm

SOX 55W BY22d

53 mm

425 mm

SOX 90W BY22d

66 mm

525 mm

SOX 135W BY22d

66 mm

765 mm


Approval and Application

Order Code

Full Product Name

Energy Consumption   kWh/1000 h

Energy Efficiency   Label (EEL)

928145500008

SOX 35W BY22d

40 kWh

A+

928146000018

SOX 55W BY22d

61 kWh

A++

928146500008

SOX 90W BY22d

100 kWh

A++

928147000008

SOX 135W BY22d

148 kWh

A++


Approval and Application

General Information

Mercury (Hg) Content (Nom)

0 mg

Cap-Base

BY22D

Controls and Dimming


Life To 30% Failures (Nom)

8000 h

Dimmable

No

Life To 40% Failures (Nom)

10000 h

Luminaire Design Requirements


Life To 8% Failures (Nom)

6000 h

Bulb Temperature (Max)

150 °C

Light Technical


Correlated Color Temperature (Nom) 1800 K


What is a Low Pressure Sodium Light:

Low Pressure Sodium Vapor (LPS) lights are a specific type of gas-discharge light. The bulb principally contains solid sodium metal inside a borosilicate glass tube that vaporizes once the lamp is turned on. During start (while the sodium is still in solid form) the lamp emits a dim reddish/pink glow. Once the metal is vaporized the emissions become the characteristic bright yellow associated with sodium vapor lamps. The spectrum of visible emissions from an LPS light is actually very close together (589 and 589.6 nm, virtually monochromatic) resulting in the colors of illuminated objects being nearly indistinguishable.


Basic Characteristics

The reason for the remarkably high efficacy of the low pressure sodium discharge is not so much because its discharge converts electrical energy into visible light particularly efficiently, moreover it is due to the fact that the wavelength of light it radiates happens to be very close to the peak sensitivity of the human eye under normal viewing conditions. Figure S2 shows the energy balance of a typical low pressure sodium lamp, which reveals that in fact only about 30% of the input power is converted into visible light. This percentage is comparable with other modern discharge lamps. Figure S3 meanwhile illustrates its spectrum superimposed on the sensitivity curve of the human eye, which shows the proximity of its radiation to the most effective wavelengths.


The lamp has been subjected to continual improvements in materials and manufacturing technology over the years, which has allowed it to unfailingly maintain its position as the most efficient light source available. Figure S4 illustrates the elevating efficacy of each of the principal light source technologies over time, and there is no technical reason why low pressure sodium should stop here. Whether or not manufacturers find it commercially interesting to make the necessary investments in further improvements is another matter however! That fact alone is responsible for the flattening of the LPS line since the 1990s, when all further research on this technology effectively ceased.


  


http://www.dephilux.com/